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THE VIRGIN OF THE SUN

By H. Rider Haggard





First Published in 1922.




                              DEDICATION

  My Dear Little,

  Some five-and-thirty years ago it was our custom to discuss many
  matters, among them, I think, the history and romance of the
  vanished Empires of Central America.

  In memory of those far-off days will you accept a tale that deals
  with one of them, that of the marvellous Incas of Peru; with the
  legend also that, long before the Spanish Conquerors entered on
  their mission of robbery and ruin, there in that undiscovered land
  lived and died a White God risen from the sea?

                                        Ever sincerely yours,
                                                   H. Rider Haggard.
  Ditchingham,
  Oct. 24, 1921.

  James Stanley Little, Esq.





                        THE VIRGIN OF THE SUN



                             INTRODUCTORY

There are some who find great interest, and even consolation, amid the
worries and anxieties of life in the collection of relics of the past,
drift or long-sunk treasures that the sea of time has washed up upon
our modern shore.

The great collectors are not of this class. Having large sums at their
disposal, these acquire any rarity that comes upon the market and add
it to their store which in due course, perhaps immediately upon their
deaths, also will be put upon the market and pass to the possession of
other connoisseurs. Nor are the dealers who buy to sell again and thus
grow wealthy. Nor are the agents of museums in many lands, who
purchase for the national benefit things that are gathered together in
certain great public buildings which perhaps, some day, though the
thought makes one shiver, will be looted or given to the flames by
enemies or by furious, thieving mobs.

Those that this Editor has in mind, from one of whom indeed he
obtained the history printed in these pages, belong to a quite
different category, men of small means often, who collect old things,
for the most part at out-of-the-way sales or privately, because they
love them, and sometimes sell them again because they must. Frequently
these old things appeal, not because of any intrinsic value that they
may have, not even for their beauty, for they may be quite
unattractive even to the cultivated eye, but rather for their
associations. Such folk love to reflect upon and to speculate about
the long-dead individuals who have owned the relics, who have supped
their soup from the worn Elizabethan spoon, who have sat at the
rickety oak table found in a kitchen or an out-house, or upon the
broken, ancient chair. They love to think of the little children whose
skilful, tired hands wrought the faded sampler and whose bright eyes
smarted over its innumerable stitches.

Who, for instance, was the May Shore ("Fairy" broidered in a bracket
underneath, was her pet name), who finished yonder elaborate example
on her tenth birthday, the 1st of May--doubtless that is where she got
her name--in the year 1702, and on what far shore does she keep her
birthdays now? None will ever know. She has vanished into the great
sea of mystery whence she came, and there she lives and has her being,
forgotten upon earth, or sleeps and sleeps and sleeps. Did she die
young or old, married or single? Did she ever set /her/ children to
work other samplers, or had she none? was she happy or unhappy, was
she homely or beautiful? Was she a sinner or a saint? Again none will
ever know. She was born on the 1st of May, 1692, and certainly she
died on some date unrecorded. So far as human knowledge goes that is
all her history, just as much or as little as will be left of most of
us who breathe to-day when this earth has completed two hundred and
eighteen more revolutions round the sun.

But the kind of collector alluded to can best be exemplified in the
individual instance of him from whom the manuscript was obtained, of
which a somewhat modernized version is printed on these pages. He has
been dead some years, leaving no kin; and under his will, such of his
motley treasures as it cared to accept went to a local museum, while
the rest and his other property were sold for the benefit of a
mystical brotherhood, for the old fellow was a kind of spiritualist.
Therefore, there is no harm in giving his plebeian name, which was
Potts. Mr. Potts had a small draper's shop in an undistinguished and
rarely visited country town in the east of England, which shop he ran
with the help of an assistant almost as old and peculiar as himself.
Whether he made anything out of it or whether he lived upon private
means is now unknown and does not matter. Anyway, when there was
something of antiquarian interest or value to be bought, generally he
had the money to pay for it, though at times, in order to do so, he
was forced to sell something else. Indeed these were the only
occasions when it was possible to purchase anything, indifferent
hosiery excepted, from Mr. Potts.

Now, I, the Editor, who also love old things, and to whom therefore
Mr. Potts was a sympathetic soul, was aware of this fact and entered
into an arrangement with the peculiar assistant to whom I have
alluded, to advise me of such crises which arose whenever the local
bank called Mr. Potts's attention to the state of his account. Thus it
came about that one day I received the following letter:--

  Sir,

  The Guv'nor has gone a bust upon some cracked china, the ugliest
  that ever I saw though no judge. So if you want to get that old
  tall clock at the first price or any other of his rubbish, I think
  now is your chance. Anyhow, keep this dark as per agreement.

                                                Your obedient,
                                                              Tom.

(He always signed himself Tom, I suppose to mystify, although I
believe his real name was Betterly.)

The result of this epistle was a long and disagreeable bicycle ride in
wet autumn weather, and a visit to the shop of Mr. Potts. Tom, alias
Betterly, who was trying to sell some mysterious undergarments to a
fat old woman, caught sight of me, the Editor aforesaid, and winked.
In a shadowed corner of the shop sat Mr. Potts himself upon a high
stool, a wizened little old man with a bent back, a bald head, and a
hooked nose upon which were set a pair of enormous horn-rimmed
spectacles that accentuated his general resemblance to an owl perched
upon the edge of its nest-hole. He was busily engaged in doing
nothing, and in staring into nothingness as, according to Tom, was his
habit when communing with what he, Tom, called his "dratted speerits."

"Customer!" said Tom in a harsh voice. "Sorry to disturb you at your
prayers, Guv'nor, but not having two pair of hands I can't serve a
crowd," meaning the old woman of the undergarments and myself.

Mr. Potts slid off his stool and prepared for action. When he saw,
however, who the customer was he bristled--that is the only word for
it. The truth is that although between us there was an inward and
spiritual sympathy, there was also an outward and visible hostility.
Twice I had outbid Mr. Potts at a local auction for articles which he
desired. Moreover, after the fashion of every good collector he felt
it to be his duty to hate me as another collector. Lastly, several
times I had offered him smaller sums for antiques upon which he set a
certain monetary value. It is true that long ago I had given up this
bargaining for the reason that Mr. Potts would never take less than he
asked. Indeed he followed the example of the vendor of the Sibylline
books in ancient Rome. He did not destroy the goods indeed after the
fashion of that person and demand the price of all of them for the one
that remained, but invariably he put up his figure by 10 per cent. and
nothing would induce him to take off one farthing.

"What do /you/ want, sir?" he said grumpily. "Vests, hose, collars, or
socks?"

"Oh, socks, I think," I replied at hazard, thinking that they would be
easiest to carry, whereupon Mr. Potts produced some peculiarly
objectionable and shapeless woollen articles which he almost threw at
me, saying that they were all he had in stock. Now I detest woollen
socks and never wear them. Still, I made a purchase, thinking with
sympathy of my old gardener whose feet they would soon be scratching,
and while the parcel was being tied up, said in an insinuating voice,
"Anything fresh upstairs, Mr. Potts?"

"No, sir," he answered shortly, "at least, not much, and if there were
what's the use of showing them to you after the business about that
clock?"

"It was 15 you wanted for it, Mr. Potts?" I asked.

"No, sir, it was 17 and now it's 10 per cent. on to that; you can
work out the sum for yourself."

"Well, let's have another look at it, Mr. Potts," I replied humbly,
whereon with a grunt and a muttered injunction to Tom to mind the
shop, he led the way upstairs.

Now the house in which Mr. Potts dwelt had once been of considerable
pretensions and was very, very old, Elizabethan, I should think,
although it had been refronted with a horrible stucco to suit modern
tastes. The oak staircase was good though narrow, and led to numerous
small rooms upon two floors above, some of which rooms were panelled
and had oak beams, now whitewashed like the panelling--at least they
had once been whitewashed, probably in the last generation.

These rooms were literally crammed with every sort of old furniture,
most of it decrepit, though for many of the articles dealers would
have given a good price. But at dealers Mr. Potts drew the line; not
one of them had ever set a foot upon that oaken stair. To the attics
the place was filled with this furniture and other articles such as
books, china, samplers with the glass broken, and I know not what
besides, piled in heaps upon the floor. Indeed where Mr. Potts slept
was a mystery; either it must have been under the counter in his shop,
or perhaps at nights he inhabited a worm-eaten Jacobean bedstead which
stood in an attic, for I observed a kind of pathway to it running
through a number of legless chairs, also some dirty blankets between
the moth-riddled curtains.

Not far from this bedstead, propped in an intoxicated way against the
sloping wall of the old house, stood the clock which I desired. It was
one of the first "regulator" clocks with a wooden pendulum, used by
the maker himself to check the time-keeping of all his other clocks,
and enclosed in a chaste and perfect mahogany case of the very best
style of its period. So beautiful was it, indeed, that it had been an
instance of "love at first sight" between us, and although there was
an estrangement on the matter of settlements, or in other words over
the question of price, now I felt that never more could that clock and
I be parted.

So I agreed to give old Potts the 20 or, to be accurate, 18 14s.
which he asked on the 10 per cent. rise principle, thankful in my
heart that he had not made it more, and prepared to go. As I turned,
however, my eye fell upon a large chest of the almost indestructible
yellow cypress wood of which were made, it is said, the doors of St.
Peter's at Rome that stood for eight hundred years and, for aught I
know, are still standing, as good as on the day when they were put up.

"Marriage coffer," said Potts, answering my unspoken question.

"Italian, about 1600?" I suggested.

"May be so, or perhaps Dutch made by Italian artists; but older than
that, for somebody has burnt 1597 on the lid with a hot iron. Not for
sale, not for sale at all, much too good to sell. Just you look inside
it, the old key is tied to the spring lock. Never saw such poker-work
in my life. Gods and goddesses and I don't know what; and Venus
sitting in the middle in a wreath of flowers with nothing on, and
holding two hearts in her hands, which shows that it was a marriage
chest. Once it was full of some bride's outfit, sheets and linen and
clothes, and God knows what. I wonder where she has got to to-day.
Some place where the moth don't eat clothes, I hope. Bought it at the
break-up of an ancient family who fled to Norfolk on the revocation of
the Edict of Nantes--Huguenot, of course. Years ago, years ago!
Haven't looked into it for many years, indeed, but think there's
nothing there but rubbish now."

Thus he mumbled on while he found and untied the old key. The spring
lock had grown stiff from disuse and want of oil, but at length it
turned and reopened the chest revealing the poker-work glories on the
inner side of the lid and elsewhere. Glories they were indeed, never
had I seen such artistry of the sort.

"Can't see it properly," muttered Potts, "windows want washing,
haven't been done since my wife died, and that's twenty years ago.
Miss her very much, of course, but thank God there's no spring-
cleaning now. The things I've seen broken in spring-cleaning! yes, and
lost, too. It was after one of them that I told my wife that now I
understood why the Mahomedans declare that women have no souls. When
she came to understand what I meant, which it took her a long time to
do, we had a row, a regular row, and she threw a Dresden figure at my
head. Luckily I caught it, having been a cricketer when young. Well,
she's gone now, and no doubt heaven's a tidier place than it used to
be--that is, if they will stand her rummagings there, which I doubt.
Look at that Venus, ain't she a beauty? Might have been done by Titian
when his paints ran out, and he had to take to a hot iron to express
his art. What, you can't see her well? Wait a bit and I'll get a
lantern. Can't have a naked candle here--things too valuable; no money
could buy them again. My wife and I had another row about naked
candles, or it may have been a paraffin lamp. You sit in that old
prayer-stool and look at the work."

Off he went crawling down the dusky stairs and leaving me wondering
what Mrs. Potts, of whom now I heard for the first time, could have
been like. An aggravating woman, I felt sure, for upon whatever points
men differ, as to "spring-cleaning" they are all of one mind. No doubt
he was better without her, for what did that dried-up old artist want
with a wife?

Dismissing Mrs. Potts from my mind, which, to tell the truth, seemed
to have no room for her shadowy and hypothetical entity, I fell to
examining the chest. Oh! it was lovely. In two minutes the clock was
deposed and that chest became the sultana in my seraglio of beauteous
things. The clock had only been the light love of an hour. Here was
the eternal queen, that is, unless there existed a still better chest
somewhere else, and I should happen to find it. Meanwhile, whatever
price that old slave-dealer Potts wanted for it, must be paid to him
even if I had to overdraw my somewhat slender account. Seraglios, of
whatever sort, it must be remembered, are expensive luxuries of the
rich indeed, though, if of antiques, they can be sold again, which
cannot be said of the human kind for who wants to buy a lot of antique
frumps?

There were plenty of things in the chest, such as some odds and ends
of tapestry and old clothes of a Queen Anne character, put here, no
doubt, for preservation, as moth does not like this cypress wood. Also
there were some books and a mysterious bundle tied up in a curious
shawl with stripes of colour running through it. That bundle excited
me, and I drew the fringes of the shawl apart and looked in. So far as
I could see it contained another dress of rich colours, also a thick
packet of what looked like parchment, badly prepared and much rotted
upon one side as though by damp, which parchment appeared to be
covered with faint black-letter writing, done by some careless scribe
with poor ink that had faded very much. There were other things, too,
within the shawl, such as a box made of some red foreign wood, but I
had not time to investigate further for just then I heard old Potts's
foot upon the stair, and thought it best to replace the bundle. He
arrived with the lantern and by its light we examined the chest and
the poker work.

"Very nice," I said, "very nice, though a good deal knocked about."

"Yes, sir," he replied with sarcasm, "I suppose you'd like to see it
neat and new after four hundred years of wear, and if so, I think I
can tell you where you can get one to your liking. I made the designs
for it myself five years ago for a fellow who wanted to learn how to
manufacture antiques. He's in quod now and his antiques are for sale
cheap. I helped to put him there to get him out of the way as a danger
to Society."

"What's the price?" I asked with airy detachment.

"Haven't I told you it ain't for sale. Wait till I'm dead and come and
buy it at my auction. No, you won't, though, for it's going somewhere
else."

I made no answer but continued my examination while Potts took his
seat on the prayer-stool and seemed to go off into one of his fits of
abstraction.

"Well," I said at length when decency told me that I could remain no
longer, "if you won't sell it's no use my looking. No doubt you want
to keep it for a richer man, and of course you are quite right. Will
you arrange with the carrier about sending the clock, Mr. Potts, and I
will let you have a cheque. Now I must be off, as I've ten miles to
ride and it will be dark in an hour."

"Stop where you are," said Potts in a hollow voice. "What's a ride in
the dark compared with a matter like this, even if you haven't a lamp
and get hauled before your own bench? Stop where you are, I'm
listening to something."

So I stopped and began to fill my pipe.

"Put that pipe away," said Potts, coming out of his reverie, "pipes
mean matches; no matches here."

I obeyed, and he went on thinking till at last what between the chest
and the worm-eaten Jacobean bed and old Potts on the prayer-stool, I
began to feel as if I were being mesmerized. At length he rose and
said in the same hollow voice:

"Young man, you may have that chest, and the price is 50. Now for
heaven's sake don't offer me 40, or it will be 100 before you leave
this room."

"With the contents?" I said casually.

"Yes, with the contents. It's the contents I'm told you are to have."

"Look here, Potts," I said, exasperated, "what the devil do you mean?
There's no one in this room except you and me, so who can have told
you anything unless it was old Tom downstairs."

"Tom," he said with unutterable sarcasm, "Tom! Perhaps you mean the
mawkin that was put up to scare birds from the peas in the garden, for
it has more in its head than Tom. No one here? Oh! what fools some men
are. Why, the place is thick with them."

"Thick with whom?"

"Who? why, ghosts, of course, as you would call them in your
ignorance. Spirits of the dead I name them. Beautiful enough, too,
some of them. Look at that one there," and he lifted the lantern and
pointed to a pile of old bed posts of Chippendale design.

"Good day, Potts," I said hastily.

"Stop where you are," repeated Potts. "You don't believe me yet, but
when you are as old as I am you will remember my words and believe--
more than I do and see--clearer than I do, because it's in your soul,
yes, the seed is in your soul, though as yet it is choked by the
world, the flesh, and the devil. Wait till your sins have brought you
trouble; wait till the fires of trouble have burned the flesh away;
wait till you have sought Light and found Light and live in Light,
then you will believe; /then/ you will see."

All this he said very solemnly, and standing there in that dusky room
surrounded by the wreck of things that once had been dear to dead men
and women, waving the lantern in his hand and staring--at what was he
staring?--really old Potts looked most impressive. His twisted shape
and ugly countenance became spiritual; he was one who had "found Light
and lived in Light."

"You won't believe me," he went on, "but I pass on to you what a woman
has been telling me. She's a queer sort of woman; I never saw her like
before, a foreigner and dark-hued with strange rich garments and
something on her head. There, that, /that/," and he pointed through
the dirty window-place to the crescent of a young moon which appeared
in the sky. "A fine figure of a woman," he went on, "and oh! heaven,
what eyes--I never saw such eyes before. Big and tender, something
like those of the deer in the park yonder. Proud, too, she is, one who
has ruled, and a lady, though foreign. Well, I never fell in love
before, but I feel like it now, and so would you, young man, if you
could see her, and so I think did someone else in his day."

"What did she say to you?" I asked, for by now I was interested
enough. Who wouldn't be when old Potts took to describing beautiful
women?

"It's a little difficult to tell you for she spoke in a strange
tongue, and I had to translate it in my head, as it were. But this is
the gist of it. That you were to have that chest and what was in it.
There's a writing there, she says, or part of a writing for some has
gone--rotted away. You are to read that writing or to get it read and
to print it so that the world may read it also. She said that 'Hubert'
wishes you to do so. I am sure the name was Hubert, though she also
spoke of him with some other title which I do not understand. That's
all I can remember, except something about a city, yes, a City of Gold
and a last great battle in which Hubert fell, covered with glory and
conquering. I understood that she wanted to talk about that because it
isn't in the writing, but you interrupted and of course she's gone.
Yes, the price is 50 and not a farthing less, but you can pay it when
you like for I know you're as honest as most, and whether you pay it
or not, you must have that chest and what's in it and no one else."

"All right," I said, "but don't trust it to the carrier. I'll send a
cart for it to-morrow morning. Lock it now and give me the key."



In due course the chest arrived, and I examined the bundle for the
other contents do not matter, although some of them were interesting.
Pinned inside the shawl I found a paper, undated and unsigned, but
which from the character and style of the writing was, I should say,
penned by a lady about sixty years ago. It ran thus:--

 "My late father, who was such a great traveller in his young days
  and so fond of exploring strange places, brought these things home
  from one of his journeys before his marriage, I think from South
  America. He told me once that the dress was found upon the body of
  a woman in a tomb and that she must have been a great lady, for
  she was surrounded by a number of other women, perhaps her
  servants who were brought to be buried with her here when they
  died. They were all seated about a stone table at the end of which
  were the remains of a man. My father saw the bodies near the ruins
  of some forest city, in the tomb over which was heaped a great
  mound of earth. That of the lady, which had a kind of shroud made
  of the skins of long-wooled sheep wrapped about it as though to
  preserve the dress beneath, had been embalmed in some way, which
  the natives of the place, wherever it was, told him showed that
  she was royal. The others were mere skeletons, held together by
  the skin, but the man had a long fair beard and hair still hanging
  to his skull, and by his side was a great cross-hilted sword that
  crumbled to fragments when it was touched, except the hilt and the
  knob of amber upon it which had turned almost black with age. I
  think my father said that the packet of skins or parchment of
  which the underside is badly rotted with damp was set under the
  feet of the man. He told me that he gave those who found the tomb
  a great deal of money for the dress, gold ornaments, and emerald
  necklace, as nothing so perfect had been found before, and the
  cloth is all worked with gold thread. My father told me, too, that
  he did not wish the things to be sold."

This was the end of the writing.

Having read it I examined the dress. It was of a sort that I had never
seen before, though experts to whom I have shown it say that it is
certainly South American of a very early date, and like the ornaments,
probably pre-Inca Peruvian. It is full of rich colours such as I have
seen in old Indian shawls which give a general effect of crimson. This
crimson robe clearly was worn over a skirt of linen that had a purple
border. In the box that I have spoken of were the ornaments, all of
plain dull gold: a waist-band; a circlet of gold for the head from
which rose the crescent of the young moon and a necklace of emeralds,
uncut stones now much flawed, for what reason I do not know, but
polished and set rather roughly in red gold. Also there were two
rings. Round one of these a bit of paper was wrapped upon which was
written, in another hand, probably that of the father of the writer of
the memorandum:--

 "Taken from the first finger of the right hand of a lady's mummy
  which I am sorry, in our circumstances, it was quite impossible to
  carry away."

This ring is a broad band of gold with a flat bezel upon which
something was once engraved that owing to long and hard wear now
cannot be distinguished. In short, it appears to be a signet of old
European make but of what age and from what country it is impossible
to determine. The other ring was in a small leathery pouch,
elaborately embroidered in gold thread or very thin wire, which I
suppose was part of the lady's costume. It is like a very massive
wedding ring, but six or eight times as thick, and engraved all over
with an embossed conventional design of what look like stars with rays
round them, or possibly petalled flowers. Lastly there was the sword-
hilt, of which presently.

Such were the trinkets, if so they may be called. They are of little
value intrinsically except for their weight in gold, because, as I
have said, the emeralds are flawed as though they have been through a
fire or some other unknown cause. Moreover, there is about them
nothing of the grace and charm of ancient Egyptian jewellery;
evidently they belonged to a ruder age and civilization. Yet they had,
and still have, to my imagining, a certain dignity of their own.

Also--here I became infected with the spirit of the peculiar Potts--
without doubt these things were rich in human associations. Who had
worn that dress of crimson with the crosses worked on it in gold wire
(they cannot have been Christian crosses), and the purple-bordered
skirt underneath, and the emerald necklace and the golden circlet from
which rose the crescent of the young moon? Apparently a mummy in a
tomb, the mummy of some long-dead lady of a strange and alien race.
Was she such a one as that old lunatic Potts had dreamed he saw
standing before him in the filthy, cumbered upper-chamber of a ruinous
house in an England market town, I wondered, one with great eyes like
to those of a doe and a regal bearing?

No, that was nonsense. Potts had lived with shadows until he believed
in shadows that came out of his own imagination and into it returned
again. Still, she was a woman of some sort, and apparently she had a
lover or a husband, a man with a great fair beard. How at this date,
which must have been remote, did a golden-bearded man come to
foregather with a woman who wore such robes and ornaments as these?
And that sword hilt, worn smooth by handling and with an amber knob?
Whence came it? To my mind--this was before expert examination
confirmed my view--it looked very Norse. I had read the Sagas and I
remembered a tale recovered in them of some bold Norsemen who about
the years eight or nine hundred had wandered to the coast of what is
known now to be America--I think a certain Eric was their captain.
Could the fair-haired man in the grave have been one of these?

Thus I speculated before I looked at the pile of parchments so
evidently prepared from sheep skins by one who had only a very
rudimentary knowledge of how to work such stuff, not knowing that in
those parchments was hid the answer to many of my questions. To these
I turned last of all, for we all shrink from parchments; their
contents are generally so dull. There was a great bundle of them that
had been lashed together with a kind of straw rope, fine straw that
reminded me of that used to make Panama hats. But this had rotted
underneath together with all the bottom part of the parchments, many
sheets of them, of which only fragments remained, covered with dry
mould and crumbling. Therefore the rope was easy to remove and beneath
it, holding the sheets in place, was only some stout and comparatively
modern string--it had a red thread in it that marked it as navy cord
of an old pattern.

I slipped these fastenings off and lifted a blank piece of skin set
upon the top. Beneath appeared the first sheet of parchment, closely,
very closely covered with small "black-letter" writing, so faint and
faded that even if I were able to read black-letter, which I cannot,
of it I could have made nothing at all. The thing was hopeless.
Doubtless in that writing lay the key to the mystery, but it could
never be deciphered by me or any one else. The lady with the eyes like
a deer had appeared to old Potts in vain; in vain had she bidden him
to hand over this manuscript to me.

So I thought at the time, not knowing the resources of science.
Afterwards, however, I took that huge bundle to a friend, a learned
friend whose business in life it was and is, to deal with and to
decipher old manuscripts.

"Looks pretty hopeless," he said, after staring at these. "Still,
let's have a try; one never knows till one tries."

Then he went to a cupboard in his muniment room and produced a bottle
full of some straw-coloured fluid into which he dipped an ordinary
painting brush. This charged brush he rubbed backwards and forwards
over the first lines of the writing and waited. Within a minute,
before my astonished eyes, that faint, indistinguishable script turned
coal-black, as black as though it had been written with the best
modern ink yesterday.

"It's all right," he said triumphantly, "it's vegetable ink, and this
stuff has the power to bring it up as it was on the day when it was
used. It will stay like that for a fortnight and then fade away again.
Your manuscript is pretty ancient, my friend, time of Richard II, I
should say, but I can read it easily enough. Look, it begins, 'I,
Hubert de Hastings, write this in the land of Tavantinsuyu, far from
England where I was born, whither I shall never more return, being a
wanderer as the rune upon the sword of my ancestor, Thorgrimmer,
foretold that I should be, which sword my mother gave me on the day of
the burning of Hastings by the French,' and so on." Here he stopped.

"Then for heaven's sake, do read it," I said.

"My dear friend," he answered, "it looks to me as though it would mean
several months' work, and forgive me for saying that I am paid a
salary for my time. Now I'll tell you what you have to do. All this
stuff must be treated, sheet by sheet, and when it turns black it must
be photographed before the writing fades once more. Then a skilled
person--so-and-so, or so-and-so, are two names that occur to me--must
be employed to decipher it again, sheet by sheet. It will cost you
money, but I should say that it was worth while. Where the devil is,
or was, the land of Tavantinsuyu?"

"I know," I answered, glad to be able to show myself superior to my
learned friend in one humble instance. "Tavantinsuyu was the native
name for the Empire of Peru before the Spanish Invasion. But how did
this Hubert get there in the time of Richard II? That is some
centuries earlier than Pizarro set foot upon its shores."

"Go and find out," he answered. "It will amuse you for quite a long
while and perhaps the results may meet the expenses of decipherment,
if they are worth publishing. I expect they are not, but then, I have
read so many old manuscripts and found most of them so jolly dull."

Well, that business was accomplished at a cost that I do not like to
record, and here are the results, more or less modernised, since often
Hubert of Hastings expressed himself in a queer and archaic fashion.
Also sometimes he used Indian words as though he had talked the tongue
of these Peruvians, or rather the Chanca variety of it, so long that
he had begun to forget his own language. Myself I have found his story
very romantic and interesting, and I hope that some others will be of
the same opinion. Let them judge.

But oh, I do wonder what was the end of it, some of which doubtless
was recorded on the rotted sheets though of course there can have been
no account of the great battle in which he fell, since Quilla could
not write at all, least of all in English, though I suppose she
survived it and him.

The only hint of that end is to be found in old Potts's dream or
vision, and what is the worth of dreams and visions?




                                BOOK I



                              CHAPTER I

                        THE SWORD AND THE RING

I, Hubert of Hastings, write this in the land of Tavantinsuyu, far
from England, where I was born, whither I shall never more return,
being a wanderer as the rune upon the sword of my ancestor,
Thorgrimmer, foretold that I should be, which sword my mother gave me
on the day of the burning of Hastings by the French. I write it with a
pen that I have shaped from a wing feather of the great eagle of the
mountains, with ink that I have made from the juices of certain herbs
which I discovered, and on parchment that I have split from the skins
of native sheep, with my own hands, but badly I fear, though I have
seen that art practised when I was a merchant of the Cheap in London
Town.

I will begin at the beginning.

I am the son of a fishing-boat owner and was a trader in the ancient
town of Hastings, and my father was drowned while following his trade
at sea. Afterwards, being the only child left of his, I took on his
business, and on a certain day went out to sea to net fish with two of
my serving men. I was then a young man of about three and twenty years
of age and not uncomely. My hair, which I wore long, was fair in
colour and curled. My eyes, set wide apart, were and still are large
and blue, although they have darkened somewhat and sunk into the head
in this land of heat and sunshine. My nose was wide-nostrilled and
large, my mouth also was over-large, although my mother and some
others used to think it well-shaped. In truth, I was large all over
though not so tall, being burly, with a great breadth of chest and
uncommon thickness through the body, and very strong; so strong that
there were few who could throw me when I was young.

For the rest, like King David, I, who am now so tanned and weather
worn that at a little distance were my hair and beard hidden I might
almost be taken for one of the Indian chiefs about me, was of a ruddy
and a pleasant countenance, perhaps because of my wonderful health,
who had never known a day of sickness, and of an easy nature that
often goes with health. I will add this, for why should I not--that I
was no fool, but one of those who succeed in that upon which they set
their minds. Had I been a fool I should not to-day be the king of a
great people and the husband of their queen; indeed, I should not be
alive.

But enough of myself and my appearance in those years that seem as far
off as though they had never been save in the land of dreams.

Now I and my two serving men, sailors both of them like myself and
most of the folk of Hastings set out upon a summer eve, purposing to
fish all night and return at dawn. We came to our chosen ground and
cast out the net, meeting with wonderful fortune since by three in the
morning the big boat was full of every kind of fish. Never before,
indeed, had we made so large a haul.

Looking back at that great catch, as here in this far land it is my
habit to do upon everything, however small, that happened to me in my
youth before I became a wanderer and an exile, I seem to see in it an
omen. For has it not always been my lot in life to be kissed of
fortune and to gather great store, and then of a sudden to lose it all
as I was to lose that rich multitude of fishes?

To-day, when I write this, once more I have great wealth of pomp and
love and power, of gold also, more than I can count. When I go forth,
my armies, who still look on me as half a god, shout their welcome and
kiss the air after their heathen fashion. My beauteous queen bows down
to me and the women of my household abase themselves into the dust.
The people of the Ancient City of Gold turn their faces to the wall
and the children cover their eyes with their hands that they may not
look upon my splendour as I pass, while maidens throw flowers for my
feet to tread. Upon my judgment hangs life or death, and my lightest
word is as though it were spoken from heaven. These and many other
things are mine, the trappings of power, the prerogative of the Lord-
from-the-Sea who brought victory to the Chanca people and led them
back to their ancient home where they might live safe, far from the
Inca's rage.

And yet often, as I sit alone in my splendour upon the roof of the
ancient halls or wander through the starlit palace gardens, I call to
mind that great catch of fishes in the English sea and of what
followed after. I call to mind also my prosperity and wealth as one of
the first merchants of London Town and what followed after. I call to
mind, too, the winning of Blanche Aleys, the lady so far above me in
rank and station and what followed after. Then it is that I grow
afraid of what may follow after this present hour of peace and love
and plenty.

Certainly one thing will follow, and that is death. It may come late
or it may come soon. But yesterday a rumour reached me through my
spies that Kari Upanqui, the Inca of Tavantinsuyu, he who once was as
my brother, but who now hates me because of his superstitions, and
because I took a Virgin of the Sun to be my wife, gathers a great host
to follow on the path we trod many years ago when the Chancas fled
from the Inca tyranny back to their home in the ancient City of Gold
and to smite us here. That host, said the rumours, cannot march till
next year, and then will be another year upon its journey. Still,
knowing Kari, I am sure that it will march, yes, and arrive, after
which must befall the great battle in the mountain passes wherein, as
of old, I shall lead the Chanca armies.

Perchance I am doomed to fall in that battle. Does not the rune upon
Wave-Flame, the sword of Thorgrimmer my ancestor, say of him that
holds it that,

 "Conquering, conquered shall he be,
  And far away shall sleep with me"?

Well, if the Chancas conquer, what care I if I am conquered? 'Twould
be a good death and a clean, to fall by Kari's spear, if I knew that
Kari and his host fell also, as I swear that fall they shall, St.
Hubert helping me. Then at least Quilla and her children would live on
in peace and greatness since they can have no other foe to fear.

Death, what is death? I say that it is the hope of every one of us and
most of all the exile and the wanderer. At the best it may be glory;
at the worst it must be sleep. Moreover, am I so happy that I should
fear to die? Quilla cannot read this writing, and therefore I will
answer, No. I am a Christian, but she and those about her, aye, my own
children with them, worship the moon and the host of heaven. I am
white-skinned, they are the hue of copper, though it is true that my
little daughter, Gudruda, whom I named so after my mother, is almost
white. There are secrets in their hearts that I shall never learn and
there are secrets in mine from which they cannot draw the veil because
our bloods are different. Yet God knows, I love them well enough, and
most of all that greatest of women, Quilla.

Oh! the truth is that here on earth there is no happiness for man.

It is because of this rumour of the coming of Kari with his host that
I set myself to this task, that I have long had in my mind, to write
down something of my history, both in England and in this land which,
at any rate for hundreds of years, mine is the first white foot to
press. It seems a foolish thing to do since when I have written who
will read, and what will chance to that which I have written? I shall
leave orders that it be placed beneath my feet in the tomb, but who
will ever find that tomb again? Still I write because something in my
heart urges me to the task.



I return to the far-off days. Our boat being full with merry hearts we
set sail before a faint wind for Hastings beach. As yet there was
little light and much fog, still the landward breeze was enough to
draw us forward. Then of a sudden we heard sounds as of men talking
upon ships and the clank of spars and blocks. Presently came a puff of
air lifting the fog for a little and we saw that we were in the midst
of a great fleet, a French fleet, for the Lilies of France flew at
their mast-heads, saw, too, that their prows were set for Hastings,
though for the while they were becalmed, since the wind that was
enough for our light, large-sailed fishing-boat could not stir their
bulk. Moreover, they saw us, for the men-at-arms on the nearest ship
shouted threats and curses at us and followed the shouts with arrows
that almost hit us.

Then the fog closed down again, and in it we slipped through the
French fleet.

It may have been the best part of an hour later that we reached
Hastings. Before the boat was made fast to the jetty, I sprang to it
shouting:

"Stir! stir! the French are upon you! To arms! We have slipped through
a whole fleet of them in the mist."

Instantly the sleepy quay seemed to awaken. From the neighbouring fish
market, from everywhere sailormen and others came running, followed by
children with gaping mouths, while from the doors of houses far away
shot women with scared faces, like ferreted rabbits from their
burrows. In a minute the crowd had surrounded me, all asking questions
at once in such a fashion that I could only answer them with my cry
of:

"Stir! the French are upon you. To arms, I say. To arms!"

Presently through the throng advanced an old white-bearded man who
wore a badge of office, crying as he came, "Make way for the bailiff!"

The crowd obeyed, opening a path, and soon we were face to face.

"What is it, Hubert of Hastings?" he asked. "Is there fire that you
shout so loudly?"

"Aye, Worship," I answered. "Fire and murder and all the gifts that
the French have for England. The Fleet of France is beating up for
Hastings, fifty sail of them or more. We crept through them in the
fog, for the wind which would scarce move them served our turn and
beyond an arrow or two, they took no note of a fishing-boat."

"Whence come they?" asked the bailiff, bewildered.

"I know not, but those in another boat we passed in the midst shouted
that these French were ravaging the coast and heading for Hastings to
put it to fire and sword. Then that boat vanished away, I know not
where, and that is all I have to tell save that the French will be
here within an hour."

Without staying to ask more questions, the bailiff turned and ran
towards the town, and presently the alarm bells rang out from the
towers of All Saints and St. Clement's, while criers summoned all men
to the market-place. Meanwhile I, not without a sad look at my boat
and the rich catch within, made my way into the town, followed by my
two men.

Presently I reached an ancient, timbered house, long, low, and
rambling, with a yard by its side full of barrels, anchors, and other
marine stores such as rope, that had to do with the trade I carried on
at this place.

I, Hubert, with a mind full of fears, though not for myself, and a
stirring of the blood such as was natural to my age at the approach of
my first taste of battle, ran fast up to that house which I have
described, and paused for a moment by the big elm tree that grew in
front of the door, of which the lower boughs were sawn off because
they shut out the light from the windows. I remember that elm tree
very well, first because when I was a child starlings nested in a hole
in the trunk, and I reared one in a wicker cage and made a talking
bird of it which I kept for several years. It was so tame that it used
to go about sitting on my shoulder, till at last, outside the town a
cat frightened it thence, and before I could recapture it, it was
taken by a hawk, which hawk I shot afterwards with an arrow out of
revenge.

Also this elm is impressed upon me by the fact that on that morning
when I halted by it, I noted how green and full of leaf it was. Next
morning, after the fire, I saw it again, all charred and blackened,
with its beautiful foliage withered by the heat. This contrast
remained upon my memory, and whenever I see any great change of
fortune from prosperity to ruin, or from life to death, always I
bethink me of that elm. For it is by little things which we ourselves
have seen and not by those written of or told by others, that we
measure and compare events.

The reason that I ran so hard and then paused by the elm, was because
my widowed mother lived in that house. Knowing that the French meant
mischief for a good reason, because one of their arrows, or perhaps a
quarrel from a cross-bow, whistled just past my head out there upon
the sea, my first thought was to get her away to some place of safety,
no easy task seeing that she was infirm with age. My second, that
which caused me to pause by the tree, was how I should break the news
to her in such a fashion that she would not be over-frightened. Having
thought this over I went on into the house.

The door opened into the sitting-room that had a low roof of plaster
and big oak beams. There I found my mother kneeling by the table upon
which food was set for breakfast: fried herrings, cold meat, and a jug
of ale. She was saying her prayers after her custom, being very
religious though in a new fashion, since she was a follower of a
preacher called Wycliffe, who troubled the Church in those days. She
seemed to have gone to sleep at her prayers, and I watched her for a
moment, hesitating to waken her. My mother, as even then I noted, was
a very handsome woman, though old, for I was born when she had been
married twenty years or more, with white hair and well-cut features
that showed the good blood of which she came, for she was better bred
than my father and quarrelled with her kin to marry him.

At the sound of my footsteps she woke up and saw me.

"Strange," she said, "I slept at my prayers who did so little last
night, as has become a habit with me when you are out a-fishing, for
which God forgive me, and dreamed that there was some trouble forward.
Scold me not, Hubert, for when the sea has taken the father and two
sons, it is scarcely wonderful that I should be fearful for the last
of my blood. Help me to rise, Hubert, for this water seems to gather
in my limbs and makes them heavy. One day, the leech says, it will get
to the heart and then all will be over."

I obeyed, first kissing her on the brow, and when she was seated in
her armed chair by the table, I said,

"You dream too well, Mother. There is trouble. Hark! St. Clement's
bells are talking of it. The French come to visit Hastings. I know for
I sailed through their fleet just after dawn."

"Is it so?" she asked quietly. "I feared worse. I feared lest the
dream meant that you had gone to join your brothers in the deep. Well,
the French are not here yet, as thank God you are. So eat and drink,
for we of England fight best on full bellies."

Again I obeyed who was very hungry after that long night and needed
food and ale, and as I swallowed them we heard the sound of folk
shouting and running.

"You are in haste, Hubert, to join the others on the quay and send a
Frenchman or two to hell with that big bow of yours?" she said
inquiringly.

"Nay," I answered, "I am in haste to get you out of this town, which I
fear may be burnt. There is a certain cave up yonder by the Minnes
Rock where I think you might lie safe, Mother."

"It has come down to me from my fathers, Hubert, that it was never the
fashion of the women of the north to keep their men to shield them
when duty called them otherwhere. I am helpless in my limbs and heavy,
and cannot climb, or be borne up yonder hill to any cave. Here I stop
where I have dwelt these five-and-forty years, to live or die as God
pleases. Get you to your duty, man. Stay. Call those wenches and bid
them fly inland to their folk, out Burwash way. They are young and
fleet of foot, and no Frenchman will catch them."

I summoned the girls who were staring, white-faced, from the attic
window-place. In three minutes they were gone, though it is true that
one of them, the braver, wished to bide with her mistress.

I watched them start up the street with other fugitives who were
pouring out of Hastings, and came back to my mother. As I did so a
great shout told me that the French fleet had been sighted.

"Hubert," she said, "take this key and go to the oak chest in my
sleeping room, lift out the linen at the top and bring me that which
lies wrapped in cloth beneath."

I did so, returning with a bundle that was long and thin. With a knife
she cut the string that tied it. Within were a bag of money and a
sword in an ancient scabbard covered with a rough skin which I took to
be that of a shark, which scabbard in parts was inlaid with gold.

"Draw it," said my mother.

I did so, and there came to light a two-edged blade of blue steel,
such as I had never seen before, for on the blade were engraved
strange characters whereof I could make nothing, although as it
chanced I could read and write, having been taught by the monks in my
childhood. The hilt, also, that was in the form of a cross, had gold
inlaid upon it; at the top of it, a large knob or apple of amber, much
worn by handling. For the rest it was a beauteous weapon and well
balanced.

"What of this sword?" I asked.

"This, Son. With the black bow that you have," and she pointed to the
case that leaned against the table, "it has come down in my family for
many generations. My father told me that it was the sword of one
Thorgrimmer, his ancestor, a Norseman, a Viking he called him, who
came with those who took England before the Norman time; which I can
well believe since my father's name, like mine, till I married, was
Grimmer. This sword, also, has a name and it is Wave-Flame. With it,
the tale tells, Thorgrimmer did great deeds, slaying many after their
heathen fashion in his battles by land and sea. For he was a wanderer,
and it is said of him that once he sailed to a new land far across the
ocean, and won home again after many strange adventures, to die at
last here in England in some fray. That is all I know, save that a
learned man from the north once told my father's father that the
writing on the sword means:--

 "He who lifts Wave-Flame on high
  In love shall live and in battle die;
  Storm-tossed o'er wide seas shall roam
  And in strange lands shall make his home.
  Conquering, conquered shall he be,
  And far away shall sleep with me.

"Those were the words which I remember because of the jingle of them;
also because such seems to have been the fate of Thorgrimmer and the
sword that his grandson took from his tomb."

Here I would have asked about this grandson and the tomb, but having
no time, held my peace.

"All my life have I kept that sword," went on my mother, "not giving
it to your father or brothers, lest the fate written on it should
befall them, for those old wizards of the north, who fashioned such
weapons with toil and skill, could foresee the future--as at times I
can, for it is in my blood. Yet now I am moved to bid you take it,
Hubert, and go where its flame leads you and dree your gloom, whatever
it may be, for I know you will use it like Thorgrimmer's self."

She paused for a moment, then went on:

"Hubert, perhaps we part for the last time, for I think that my hour
is at hand. But let not that trouble you, since I am glad to go to
join those who went before, and others with them, perchance
Thorgrimmer's self. Hearken, Hubert. If aught befalls me, or this
place, stay not here. Go to London town and seek out John Grimmer, my
brother, the rich merchant and goldsmith who dwells in the place
called Cheap. He knew you as a child and loved you, and lacking
offspring of his own will welcome you for both our sakes. My father
would not give John the sword lest its fate should be on him, but I
say that John will be glad to welcome one of our race who holds it in
his hand. Take it then, and with it that bag of gold, which may prove
of service ere all be done.

"Aye, and there is one more thing--this ring which, so says the tale,
came down with the sword and the bow, and once had writing on it like
the sword, though that is long since rubbed away. Take it and wear it
till perchance, in some day to come, you give it to another as I did."

Wondering at all this tale which, after her secret fashion, my mother
had kept from me till that hour, I set the ring upon my finger.

"I gave yonder ring to your father on the day that we were betrothed,"
went on my mother, "and I took it back again from his corpse after he
had been found floating in the sea. Now I pass it on to you who soon
will be all that is left of both of us."

"Hark!" she continued, "the crier summons all men with their arms to
the market-place to fight England's foes. Therefore one word more
while I buckle the sword Wave-Flame on to you, as doubtless his women
folk did on to Thorgrimmer, your ancestor. My blessing on you, Hubert.
Be you such a one as Thorgrimmer was, for we of the Norse blood desire
that our loves and sons should prove not backward when swords are
aloft and arrows fly. But be you more than he, be you a Christian
also, remembering that however long you live, and the Battle-maidens
have not marked you yet, at last you must die and give account.

"Hubert, you are such a one as women will love; one, too, who, I fear
me, will be a lover of women, for that weakness goes with strength and
manhood by Nature's laws. Be careful of women, Hubert, and if you may,
choose those who are not false and cling to her who is most true. Oh,
you will wander far; I read it in your eyes that you will wander far,
yet shall your heart stay English. Kiss me and begone! Lad, are you
forgetting your spare arrows and the bull-hide jerkin that was your
father's? You will want them both to-day. Farewell, farewell! God and
His Christ be with you--and shoot you straight and smite you hard.
Nay, no tears, lest my eyes should be dimmed, for I'll climb to the
attic and watch you fight."



                              CHAPTER II

                           THE LADY BLANCHE

So I went, with a sore heart, for I remembered that when my father and
brothers were drowned, although I was then but a little one, my mother
had foreseen it, and I feared much lest it might be thus in her own
case also. I loved my mother. She was a stern woman, it was true, with
little softness about her, which I think came with her blood, but she
had a high heart, and oh! her last words were noble. Yet through it
all I was pleased, as any young man would have been, with the gift of
the wonderful sword which once had been that of Thorgrimmer, the sea-
rover, whose blood ran in my body against which it lay, and I hoped
that this day I might have chance to use it worthily as Thorgrimmer
did in forgotten battles. Having imagination, I wondered also whether
the sword knew that after its long sleep it had come forth again to
drink the blood of foes.

Also I was pleased with another thing, namely, that my mother had told
me that I should live my life and not die that day by the hand of
Frenchmen; and that in my life I should find love, of which to tell
truth already I knew a little of a humble sort, for I was a comely
youth, and women did not run away from me, or if they did, soon they
stopped. I wanted to live my life, I wanted to see great adventures
and to win great love. The only part of the business which was not to
my taste was that command of my mother's, that I should go to London
to sit in a goldsmith's shop. Still, I had heard that there was much
to be seen in London, and at least it would be different from
Hastings.

The street outside our doors was crowded with folk, some of the men
making their way to the market-place, about whom hung women and
children weeping; others, old people, wives and girls and little ones
fleeing from the town. I found the two sailormen who had been with me
on the boat, waiting for me. They were brawny fellows named Jack
Grieves and William Bull, who had been in our service since my
childhood, good fishermen and fighters both; indeed one of them,
William Bull, had served in the French wars.

"We knew that you were coming, Master, so we bided here for you," said
William, who having once been an archer was armed with a bow and a
short sword, whereas Jack had only an axe, also a knife such as we
used on the smacks for cleaning fish.

I nodded, and we went on to the market-place and joined the throng of
men, a vast number of them, who were gathered there to defend Hastings
and their homes. Nor were we too soon, for the French ships were
already beaching within a few yards of the shore or on it, their
draught being but small, while the sailors and men-at-arms were
pushing off in small boats or wading to the strand.

There was great confusion in the market-place, for as is common in
England, no preparation had been made against attack though such was
always to be feared.

The bailiff ran about shouting orders, as did others, but proper
officers were lacking, so that in the end men acted as the fancy took
them. Some went down towards the beach and shot with arrows at the
Frenchmen. Others took refuge in houses, others stood irresolute,
waiting, knowing not which way to turn. I and my two men were with
those who went on to the beach where I loosed some arrows from my big
black bow, and saw a man fall before one of them.

But we could do little or nothing, for these Frenchmen were trained
soldiers under proper command. They formed themselves into companies
and advanced, and we were driven back. I stopped as long as I dared,
and drawing the sword, Wave-Flame, fought with a Frenchman who was in
advance of the others. What is more, making a great blow at his head
which I missed, I struck him on the arm and cut it off, for I saw it
fall to the ground. Then others rushed up at me and I fled to save my
life.

Somehow I found myself being pressed up the steep Castle Hill with a
number of Hastings folk, followed by the French. We reached the Castle
and got into it, but the old portcullis would not close, and in sundry
places the walls were broken down. Here we found a number of women who
had climbed for refuge, thinking that the place would be safe. Among
these was a beautiful and high-born maiden whom I knew by sight. Her
father was Sir Robert Aleys who, I believe, was then the Warden of the
Castle of Pevensey, and she was named the lady Blanche. Once, indeed,
I had spoken with her on an occasion too long to tell. Then her large
blue eyes, which she knew well how to use, had left me with a swimming
head, for she was very fair and very sweet and gracious, with a most
soft voice, and quite unlike any other woman I had ever seen, nor did
she seem at all proud. Soon her father, an old knight, who had no name
for gentleness in the countryside, but was said to be a great lover of
gold, had come up and swept her away, asking her what she did, talking
with a common fishing churl. This had happened some months before.

Well, there I found her in the Castle, alone it seemed, and knowing me
again, which I thought strange, she ran to me, praying me to protect
her. More, she began to tell me some long tale, to which I had not
time to listen, of how she had come to Hastings with her father, Sir
Robert, and a young lord named Deleroy, who, I understood, was some
kinsman of hers, and slept there. How, too, she had been separated
from them in the throng when they were attempting to return to
Pevensey which her father must go to guard, because her horse was
frightened and ran away, and of how finally men took her by the arm
and brought her to this castle, saying that it was the safest place.

"Then here you must bide, Lady Blanche," I answered, cutting her
short. "Cling to me and I will save you if I can, even if it costs me
my life."

Certainly she did cling to me for all the rest of that terrible day,
as will be seen.

From this height we saw Hastings beginning to burn, for the Frenchmen
had fired the town in sundry places, and being built of wood, it burnt
furiously. Also we saw and heard horrible scenes and sounds of rapine,
such as chance in this Christian world of ours where a savage foe
finds peaceful folk of another race at his mercy. In the houses people
were burnt; in the streets they were being murdered, or worse. Yes,
even children were murdered, for afterwards I saw the bodies of some
of them.

Awhile later through the wreaths of smoke we perceived companies of
the French advancing to attack the Castle. There may have been three
hundred of them in all, and we did not count more than fifty men, some
of us ill-armed, together with a mob of aged people and many women and
children. What had become of the other men I do not know, but orders
had been shouted from all quarters, and some had gone this way and
some that. Some, too, I think, had fled, lacking leaders.

The French having climbed the hill, began to attack our ill-fenced
gateways, bringing up beams of timber to force them in. Those of us
who had bows shot some of them, though, their armour being good, for
the most part the arrows glanced. But few had bows. Moreover, whenever
we showed ourselves they poured such a rain of quarrels and other
shafts upon us that we could not face it, lacking mail as we did, and
a number of us were killed or wounded. At last they forced the
easternmost gate which was the weakest, and got in there and over a
place in the wall were it was broken. We fought them as well as we
could; myself I cut down two with the sword, Wave-Flame, hewing right
through the helm of one, for the steel of that sword was good. Here,
too, Jack Grieves was killed by my side by a pike thrust, and died
calling to me to fight on for old England and Hastings town; after
which he said something about beer and breathed his last.

The end of it was that those who were left were driven out of the
Castle together with the women and children, the murdering French
killing every man who fell wounded where he lay, and trying to make
prisoner any women they thought young and fair enough. Especially did
they seek to capture the lady Blanche because they saw that she was
beautiful and of high station. But by good fortune more than aught
else, I saved her from this fate.

As it chanced we were among the last to leave the Castle, whence, to
tell the truth, I was loath to go, for by now my blood was up, and
with a few others fought till I was driven out. I prayed the lady
Blanche to run forward with the other women. But she would not,
answering that she trusted no one else, but would stay to die with me,
as though that would help either of us.

Thus it came about that a tall French knight who had set his eyes on
her, outclimbed his fellows upon the slope of the hill, for they were
weary and gathering to re-form, and catching her round the middle,
strove to drag her away. I fell on him and we fought. He had fine
armour and a shield while I had none, but I held the long sword while
he only wielded a battle-axe. I knew that if he could get in a blow
with that battle-axe, I was sped, since the bull's hide of my jerkin
would never stand against it. Therefore it was my business to keep out
of his reach. This, being young and active, for the most part I made
shift to do, especially as he could not move very quickly in his mail.
The end of it was that I cut him on the arm through a joint in his
harness, whereon he rushed at me, swearing French oaths.

I leapt on one side and as he passed, smote with all my strength. The
blow fell between neck and shoulder, from behind as it were, and such
was the temper of that sword named Wave-Flame that it shore through
his mail deep into the flesh beneath, to the backbone as I believe. At
least he went down in a heap--I remember the rattle of his armour as
he fell, and there lay still. Then we fled on down the steep path, I
holding the bloody sword with one hand and Lady Blanche with the
other, while she thanked me with her eyes.

At length we were in the town again, running up my own street. On
either side of us the houses burned, and behind us came another body
of the French. The reek got into our eyes and we stumbled over dead or
fainting people.

Looking to the left I caught sight of the elm tree of which I have
spoken, that grew in front of our door, and saw that the house behind
it was burning. Yes, and I saw more, for at the attic window, which
was open, the flames making an arch round her, sat my mother.
Moreover, she was singing for I heard her voice and the wild words she
sang, though this was a strange thing for a woman to do in the hour of
such a death. Further, she saw and knew me, for she waved her hands to
me, then pointed towards the sea, why, I did not guess at the time. I
stopped, purposing to try to rescue her though the front of the house
was flaming, and the attempt must have ended in my death. But at that
moment the roof fell in, causing the fire to spout upwards and
outwards. This was the last that I saw of my mother, though afterwards
we found her body and gave it burial with those of many other victims.

There was no time to stay, for the conquering French were pouring up
the street behind us, shooting as they came and murdering any laggards
whom they could catch. On we went up the steep slope of the Minnes
Rock. I would have fled on into the open country, but the lady Blanche
had no strength left. Twice she sank to the ground, stricken with
terror and weariness, and each time prayed me not to leave her; nor
indeed did I wish to do so. The end of it was that William Bull and I
between us half carried her with much toil to the cave of which I had
spoken to my mother. The task was heavy and slow, since always we must
scramble over sheer ground. What is more, a party of the French,
seeing our plight, followed us. Perhaps some of them guessed who the
lady was, for there were many spies in Hastings who might have told
them, and desired to capture and hold her to ransom.

At the least they came on after us and a few others, women all of
them, who had joined our company, being unable to travel further, or
trusting to William Bull and myself to protect them.

We reached the cave, and thrusting the women along it, William and I
stood in the mouth and waited. He had no bow and all my arrows were
gone save three, but of these I, who was noted for my archery,
determined to make the best use I could. So I drew them out, and
having strung the bow, sat down to get my breath. On came the French,
shouting and jabbering at us to the effect that they would cut our
throats and carry off /la belle dame/ to be their sport.

"She shall be mine!" yelled a big fellow with a flattened nose and a
wide mouth who was ahead of the others, and not more than fifty yards
away.

I rose, and praying my patron, good St. Hubert after whom I was named
because I first saw light upon his day, the 23rd of November, to give
me skill, I drew the great bow to my ear, aimed, and loosed. Nor did
St. Hubert, a lover of fine shooting, fail me in my need, for that
arrow rushed out and found its home in the big mouth of the Frenchman,
through which it passed, pinning his foul tongue to his neck bone.

Down he went, and cheered by the sight I refitted and loosed at the
next. Him, too, the arrow caught, so that he fell almost on the other.

I set the third and last arrow on the string and waited a space.
Behind these two was a squat, broad man, a knight I suppose, for he
wore armour, and had a shield with a cock painted on it. This man,
frightened by the fate of his companions, yet not minded to give up
the venture for those in rear of him urged him on, bent himself almost
double, and holding the shield over his helm which was closed, so as
to protect his head and body, came on at a good pace.

I waited till he was within five-and-twenty yards or so, hoping that
the roughness of the ground would cause him to stumble and the shield
to shift so that I could get a chance at him behind it. But I did not,
so at last, again praying to St. Hubert, I drew the big bow till the
string touched my ear, and let drive. The shaft, pointed with tempered
steel, struck the shield full in the centre, and by Heaven, pierced
it, aye, and the mail behind, aye, and the flesh it covered, so that
he, too, got his death.

"A great shot, Master," said William, "that no other bow in Hastings
could have sped."

"Not so ill," I answered, "but it is my last. Now we must fight as we
can with sword and axe until we be sped."

William nodded, and the women in the cave began to wail while I
unstrung my bow and set it in its case, from habit I think, seeing
that I never hoped to look upon it again.

Just then from the French ships in the harbour there came a great
blaring of trumpets giving some alarm, and the Frenchmen of a sudden,
ceasing from their attack, turned and ran towards the shore. I stepped
out of the cave with William and looked. There on the sea, drawing
near from the east before a good wind, I saw ships, and saw, too, that
from their masts flew the pennons of England, for the golden leopards
gleamed in the sun.

"It is our fleet, William," I said, "come to talk with these French."

"Then I would that it had come sooner," answered William. "Still,
better now than not at all."



Thus were we saved, through Hamo de Offyngton, the Abbot of Battle
Abbey, or so I was told afterwards, who collected a force by land and
sea and drove off the French after they had ravaged the Isle of Wight,
attacked Winchelsea, and burned the greater part of Hastings. So it
came about that in the end these pirates took little benefit by their
wickedness, since they lost sundry ships with all on board, and others
left in such haste that their people remained on shore where they were
slain by the mob that gathered as soon as it was seen that they were
deserted, helped by a company of the Abbot's men who had marched from
Battle. But with all this I had nothing to do who now that the fight
was over, felt weak as a child and could think of little save that I
had seen my mother burning.

Presently, however, that happened which woke me from my grief and
caused my blood which had grown sluggish to run again. For when she
knew that she was safe the lady Blanche came out of the cave and
addressed me as I stood there leaning against the rock with the red
sword Wave-Flame in my hand, as I had drawn it to make ready for the
last fight to the death. All sorts of sweet names she called me--a
hero, her deliverer, and I know not what besides.

In the end, as I made no answer, being dazed, also hurt by an axe blow
on the breast which I had not felt before, dealt by that Frenchman
whom I slew near the Castle, she did more. Throwing her arms about me
she kissed me thrice, on either cheek and on the lips, doubtless
because she was overwrought, and in her thankfulness forgot her
maidenly reserve, though as William Bull said afterwards, this
forgetfulness did not cause her to kiss him who had also helped her up
the hill.

Those kisses were like wine to me, for it is strange how, if we love
her, by the decree of Nature the touch of a beautiful woman's lips,
felt for the first time, affects us in our youth. Whatever else we
forget, that we always remember, however false those lips afterwards
be proved. For then the wax is soft and the die sinks deep, so deep
that no after-heats can melt its stamp and no fretting wear it out
while we live beneath the sun.

Now my young blood being awakened, I was minded to return those
kisses, and began to do so with a Jew's interest, when I heard a rough
voice swearing many strange oaths, and heard also the other women who
had sheltered with us in the cave begin to titter, for the moment
forgetting all their private woes, as those of their sex will do when
there is kissing in the wind.

"God's blood!" said the rough voice, "who is this that handles my
daughter as though they had been but an hour wed? Take those lips of
yours from her, fellow, or I'll cut them from your chops."

I looked round astonished, to see Sir Robert Aleys mounted on a grey
horse, and followed by a company of men-at-arms who appeared to be
under the command of a well-favoured, dark-eyed young captain with
long hair, and dressed more wondrously than any man I had ever seen
before. Had he put on Joseph's coat over his mail, he could not have
worn more colours, and I noted that the toes of his shoes curled up so
high that I wondered however he worked them through his stirrups, and
what would happen to him if by chance he were unhorsed.

Being taken aback I made no answer, but William Bull, who, if a rough
fellow, had a tongue in his head and a ready wit, spoke up for me.

"If you want to know," he said in his Sussex drawl, "I'll tell you who
he is, Sir Robert Aleys. He is my worshipful master, Hubert of
Hastings, ship-owner, householder, and trader of this town. Or at
least he was these things, but now it seems that his ships and house
are burnt and his mother with them; also that there will be no trade
in Hastings for many a day."

"Mayhap," answered Sir Robert, adding other oaths, "but why does he
buss my daughter?"

"Perchance because he must give as good as he got, which is a law
among honest merchants, noble Sir Robert. Or perchance because he has
a better right to buss her than any man alive, seeing that but for
him, by now she would be but stinking clay, or a Frenchman's leman."

Here the fine young captain cut in, saying,

"Whatever else this worshipful trader may need, he does not lack a
trumpeter."

"That is so, my Lord Deleroy," replied William, unmoved, "for when I
find a good song I like to sing it. Go now and look at those three men
who lie yonder on the slope, and see whether the arrows in them bear
my master's mark. Go also and look upon the Castle hill and find a
knight with his head well-nigh hewn from his shoulders, and see
whether yonder sword fits into the cut. Aye, and at others that I
could tell you of, slain, every one of them, to save this fair lady.
Aye, go you whose garments are so fine and unstained, and then come
back and talk of trumpeters."

"Pish!" said my Lord Deleroy with a shrug of his shoulders, "a lady
who is over-wrought and hangs to some common fellow, like one who
kisses the feet of a wooden saint that she thinks has saved her from
calamity!"

At these words I, who had been listening like a man in a dream, awoke,
as it were, for they stung me. Moreover, I had heard that this fine
Deleroy was one of those who owed his place and rank to the King's
favour, as he did his high name, being, it was reported, by birth but
a prince's bastard sprung from some relative of Sir Robert whom
therefore he called cousin.

"Sir," I said, "you know best whether I am more common than you are.
Let that be. At least I hold in my hand the sword of one who begat my
forefather hundreds of years ago, a certain Thorgrimmer who was great
in his time. Now I have had my fill of fighting to-day, and you,
doubtless through no fault of your own, have had none; you also are
clad in mail and I, a common fellow, have none. Deign then to descend
from that horse and take a turn with me though I be tired, and thus
prove my commonness upon my body. Of your nobility do this, seeing
that after all we are of one flesh."

Now, stung in his turn, he made as though he would do what I prayed,
when for the first time, after glancing at her father who sat still--
puzzled, it would seem--the lady Blanche spoke.

"Be not mad, Cousin," she said. "I tell you that this gentleman has
saved my life and honour, twice at least to-day. Is it wonderful,
then, if I thanked him in the best fashion that a woman can, and thus
brought your insults on him?"

He hesitated, though one of his curled-up shoes was out of the
stirrup, when suddenly Sir Robert broke in in his big voice, saying:

"God's truth, Cousin, I think that you will do well to leave this
young cock alone, since I like not the look of that red spur of his,"
and he glanced at the sword Wave-Flame. "Though he be weary, he may
have a kick or two in him yet."

Then he turned to me and added:

"Sir, you have fought well; many a man has earned knighthood for less,
and if a fair maid thanked you in her own fashion, you are not to
blame. I, her father, also thank you and wish you all good fortune
till we meet again. Farewell. Daughter, make shift to share this horse
with me, and let us away out of this stricken town to Pevensey, where
perchance it will please those French to call to-morrow."

A minute later they were gone, and I noted with a pang that as they
went the lady Blanche, having waved her good-bye to me, talked fast to
her cousin Deleroy and that he held her hand to steady her upon her
father's horse.



                             CHAPTER III

                        HUBERT COMES TO LONDON

When the lady Blanche was out of sight, followed by the women who had
sheltered with us in the cave, William and I went to a stream we knew
of not far away and drank our fill. Then we walked to the three whom I
had shot with my big bow, hoping to regain the arrows, for I had none
left. This, however, could not be done though all the men were dead,
for one of the shafts, the last, was broken, and the other two were so
fixed in flesh and bone that only a surgeon's saw would loose them.

So we left them where they were, and before the men were buried many
came to marvel at the sight, thinking it a wonderful thing that I
should have killed these three with three arrows, and that any bow
which arm might bend could have driven the last of them through an
iron shield and a breastplate behind it.

This armour, I should tell, William took for himself, since it was of
his size. Also on the morrow, returning to the Castle Hill, I stripped
the knight whom I had slain with the sword, Wave-Flame, of his
splendid Milan mail, whereof the /plastron/, or breast-plate, was
inlaid with gold, having over it a /camail/ of chain to cover the
joints, through which my good sword had shorn into his neck. The
cognizance on his shield strangely enough was three barbed arrows, but
what was the name of the knight who bore it I never learned. This
mail, which must have cost a great sum, the Bailiff of Hastings
granted me to keep, since I had slain its wearer and borne myself well
in the fight. Moreover, I took the three arrows for my own cognizance,
though in truth I had no right to any, being in those days but a
trader. (Little did I know then how well this mail was to serve me in
the after years.)

By now night was coming on, and as we could see from the cave mouth
that the part of Hastings which lies towards the village of St.
Leonards seemed to have escaped the fire, thitherward we went by the
beach to avoid the heat and falling timbers in the burning town. On
our way we met others and from them heard all that had befallen. It
would seem that the French loss in life was heavier than our own,
since many of them were cut off when they tried to fly to their ships,
and some of these could not be floated from the beach or were rammed
and sunk with all aboard by the English vessels. But the damage done
to Hastings was as much as could scarcely be made good in a
generation, for the most of it was burnt or burning. Also many, like
my own mother, had perished in the fire, being sick or aged or in
childbed, or for this reason and that forgotten and unable to move.
Indeed on the beach were hundreds of folk in despair, nor was it only
the women and children who wept that evening.

For my part, with William I went beyond the burning to the house of a
certain old priest who was my confessor, and the friend of my father
before me, and there we found food and slept, he returning thanks to
God for my escape and offering me consolation for the loss of my
mother and goods.

I rested but ill that night, as those do who are over-weary. Moreover,
this had been my first taste of battle, and again and again I saw
those men falling before my sword and arrows. Very proud was I to have
slain them, wicked ravishers as they were, and very glad that from my
boyhood I had practised myself with sword and bow till I could fence
with any, and was perhaps the most skilled marksman in Hastings,
having won the silver arrow at the butts at the last meeting, and from
archers of all ages. Yet the sight of their deaths haunted me who
remembered how well their fate might have been my own, had they got in
the first shot or blow.

Where had they gone to, I wondered? To the priest's Heaven or Hell?
Were they now telling their sins to some hard-faced angel while he
checked the count from his book, reminding them of many that they had
forgotten? Or were they fast asleep for ever and ever as a shrewd
thinker whom I knew had told me secretly he was sure would be the fate
of all of us, whatever the priests might teach and believe. And where
was my mother whom I had loved and who loved me well, although
outwardly she was so stern a woman, my mother whom I had seen burned
alive, singing as she burned? Oh! it was a vile world, and it seemed
strange that God should cause men and women to be born that they might
come to such cruel ends. Yet who were we to question His decrees of
which we knew neither the beginning nor the finish?

Anyway, I was glad I was not dead, for now that all was over I
trembled and felt afraid, which I had never done during the fighting,
even when my hour seemed very near.

Lastly there was this high-born lady, Blanche Aleys, with whom fortune
had thrown me so strangely that day. Those blue eyes of hers had
pierced my heart like darts, and do what I would I might not rid my
mind of the thought of her, or my ears of the sound of her soft voice,
while her kisses seemed still to burn upon my lips. It wrung me to
think that perhaps I should never see her again, or that if I did I
might not speak with her, being so far beneath her in condition, and
having already earned the wrath of her father, and, as I guessed, the
jealousy of that scented cousin of hers whom they said the King loved
like a brother.

What had my mother told me? To leave this place and go to London,
there to find my uncle, John Grimmer, goldsmith and merchant, who was
my godfather, and to ask him to take me into his business. I
remembered this uncle of mine, for some seven or eight years before,
when I was a growing lad, because there was a plague in London he had
come down to Hastings to visit us. He only stayed a week, however,
because he said that the sea air tied up his stomach and that he would
rather risk the plague with a good stomach than leave it behind him
with a bad one--though I think it was his business he thought of, not
his stomach.

He was a strange old man, not unlike my mother, but with a nose more
hooked, small dark eyes, and a bald head on which he set a cap of
velvet. Even in the heat of summer he was always cold and wore a
frayed fur robe, complaining much if he came into a draught of air.
Indeed he looked like a Jew, though a good Christian enough, and
laughed about it, because he said that this appearance of his served
him well in his trade, since Jews were always feared, and it was held
to be impossible to overreach them.

For the rest I only recalled that he examined me as to my book
learning which did not satisfy him, and went about valuing all our
goods and fishing-boats, showing my mother how we were being cheated
and might earn more than we did. When he departed he gave me a gold
piece and said that Life was nothing but vanity, and that I must pray
for his soul when he was dead as he was sure it would need such help,
also that I ought to put the gold piece out to interest. This I did by
buying with it a certain fierce mastiff dog I coveted that had been
brought on a ship from Norway, which dog bit some great man in our
town, who hauled my mother before the bailiff about it and caused the
poor beast to be killed, to my great wrath.

Now that I came to think of it, I had liked my Uncle John well enough
although he was so different from others. Why should I not go to him?
Because I did not wish to sit in a shop in London, I who loved the sea
and the open air; also because I feared he might ask me what I had
done with that gold piece and make a mock of me about the dog. Yet my
mother had bidden me go, and it was her last command to me, her dying
words which it would be unlucky to disobey. Moreover, our boats and
house were burnt and I must work hard and long before these could be
replaced. Lastly, in London I should see no more of the lady Blanche
Aleys, and there could learn to forget the lights in her blue eyes. So
I determined that I would go, and at last fell asleep.

Next morning I made my confession to the old priest that, amongst
other matters, he might shrive me of the blood which I had shed,
though this he said needed no forgiveness from God or man, being, as I
think, a stout Englishman at heart. Also I took counsel with him as to
what I should do, and he told me it was my duty to obey my mother's
wishes, since such last words were often inspired from on high and
declared the will of Heaven. Further he pointed out that I should do
well to avoid the lady Blanche Aleys who was one far above me in
degree, the following of whom might bring me to trouble, or even to
death; moreover, that I might mend my broken fortunes through the help
of my uncle, a very rich man as he had heard, to whom he would write a
letter about me.

Thus this matter was settled.

Still some days went by before I left Hastings, since first I must
wait until the ashes of our house were cool enough to search in them
for my mother's body. Those who found her at length said that she was
not so much burned as might have been expected, but as to this I am
uncertain, since I could not bring myself to look upon her who desired
to remember her as she had been in life. She was buried by the side of
my father, who was drowned, in the churchyard of St. Clement's, and
when all had gone away I wept a little on her grave.

The rest of that day I spent making ready for my journey. As it
chanced when the house was burnt the outbuildings which lay on the
farther side of the yard behind escaped the fire, and in the stable
were two good horses, one a grey riding-gelding and the other a mare
that used to drag the nets to the quay and bring back the fish, which
horses, although frightened and alarmed, were unharmed. Also there was
a quantity of stores, nets, salt, dried fish in barrels, and I know
not what besides. The horses I kept, but all the rest of the gear,
together with the premises, the ground on which the house had stood,
and the other property I made over to William, my man, who promised me
to pay me their value when he could earn it in better times.

Next morning I rode away for London upon the grey horse, loading the
armour of the knight I had killed and such other possessions as
remained to me upon the mare which I led with a rope. Save William
there was none to say me good-bye, for the misery in Hastings was so
great that all were concerned with their own affairs or in mourning
their dead. I was not sorry that it fell out thus, since I was so full
of sadness at leaving the place where I was born and had lived all my
life, that I think I should have shed tears if any who had been my
friends had spoken kind words to me, which would have been unmanly.
Never had I felt so lonely as when from the high ground I gazed back
to the ruins of Hastings over which still hung a thin pall of smoke.
My courage seemed to fail me altogether; I looked forward to the
future with fear, believing that I had been born unlucky, that it held
no good for me who probably should end my days as a common soldier or
a fisherman, or mayhap in prison or on the gallows. From childhood I
had suffered these fits of gloom, but as yet this was the blackest of
them that I had known.

At length, the sun that had been hidden shone out and with its coming
my temper changed. I remembered that I who might so easily have been
dead, was sound, young, and healthy, that I had sword, bow, and armour
of the best, also twenty or more of gold pieces, for I had not counted
them, in the bag which my mother gave me with Wave-Flame. Further, I
hoped that my uncle would befriend me, and if he did not, there were
plenty of captains engaged in the wars who might be glad of a squire,
one who could shoot against any man and handle a sword as well as
most.

So putting up a prayer to St. Hubert after my simple fashion, I pushed
on blithely to the crest of a long rise and there came face to face
with a gay company who, hawk on wrist and hound at heel, were, I
guessed, on their way to hunt in the Pevensey marshes. While they were
still a little way off I knew these to be no other than Sir Robert
Aleys, his daughter Blanche, and the King's favourite, young Lord
Deleroy, with their servants, and was minded to turn aside to avoid
them. Then I remembered that I had as much right to the King's Highway
as they, and my pride aiding me, determined to ride on taking no note
of them, unless first they took note of me. Also they knew me, for my
ears being very sharp, I heard Sir Robert say in his big voice:

"Here comes that young fisherman again. Pass him in silence,
Daughter"; heard, too, Lord Deleroy drawl it, "It seems that he has
been gathering gear from the slain, and like a good chapman bears it
away for secret sale."

Only the lady Blanche answered neither the one nor the other, but rode
forward with her eyes fixed before her, pretending to talk to the hawk
upon her wrist, and now that she was rested and at ease, looking even
more beautiful than she had done on the day of the burning.

So we met and passed, I glancing at them idly and guiding my horses to
the side of the road. When there were perhaps ten yards between us I
heard Lady Blanche cry:

"Oh, my hawk!" I looked round to see that the falcon on her wrist had
in some way loosed itself, or been loosed, and being hooded, had
fallen to the ground where one of the dogs was trying to catch and
kill it. Now there was great confusion, the eyes of all being fixed
upon the hawk and the dog, in the midst of which the lady Blanche very
quietly turned her head, and lifting her hand as though to see how the
hawk had fallen from it, with a swift movement laid her fingers
against her lips and threw a kiss to me.

As swiftly I bowed back and went on my way with a beating heart. For a
few moments I was filled with joy, since I could not mistake the
meaning of this signalled kiss. Then came sorrow like an April cloud,
since my wound which was in the way of healing was all re-opened. I
had begun to forget the lady Blanche, or rather by an effort of the
will, to thrust her from my thought, as my confessor had bidden me.
But now on the wings of that blown kiss thither she had flown back
again, not to be frighted out for many a day.

That night I slept at an inn at Tonbridge, a comfortable place where
the host stared at the gold piece from the bag which I tendered in
payment, and at first would not take what was due to him out of it,
because it bore the head of some ancient king. However, in the end a
merchant of Tonbridge who came in for his morning ale showed him that
it was good, so that trouble passed.

About two in the afternoon I came to Southwark, a town that to me
seemed as big as Hastings before it was burned, where was a fine inn
called the Tabard at which I stopped to bait my horses and to take a
bite and drink of ale. Then I rode on over the great Thames where
floated a multitude of ships and boats, crossing it by London Bridge,
a work so wonderful that I marvelled that it could be made by the hand
of man, and so broad that it had shops on either side of the roadway,
in which were sold all sorts of merchandise. Thence I inquired my way
to Cheapside, and came there at last thrusting a path through a
roaring multitude of people, or so it seemed to me who never before
had seen so many men and women gathered together, all going on their
way and, it would appear, ignorant of each other.

Here I found a long and crowded thoroughfare with gabled houses on
either side in which all kinds of trades were carried on. Down this I
wandered, being cursed at more than once because my pack mare, growing
frightened, dragged away from me and crossed the path of carts which
had to stop till I could pull her free. After the third of these
tangles I halted by the side of the footway behind a wain with barrels
on it, and looked about me bewildered.

To my left was a house somewhat set back from the general line that
had a little patch of garden ground in front of it in which grew some
untended and thriftless-looking shrubs. This house seemed to be a
place of business because from an iron fastened to the front of it
hung a board on which was painted an open boat, high at the prow and
stern, with a tall beak fashioned to the likeness of a dragon's head
and round shields all down the rail.

While I was staring at this sign and wondering emptily what kind of a
boat it was and of what nation were the folk who had sailed in her, a
man came down the garden path and leaned upon the gate, staring in
turn at me. He was old and strange-looking, being clad in a rusty gown
with a hood to it that was pulled over his head, so that I could only
see a white, peaked beard and a pair of brilliant black eyes which
seemed to pierce me as a shoemaker's awl pierces leather.

"What do you, young man," he asked in a high thin voice, "cumbering my
gate with those nags of yours? Would you sell that mail you have on
the pack-horse? If so I do not deal in such stuff, though it seems
good of its kind. So get on with it elsewhere."

"Nay, sir," I answered, "I have naught to sell who in this hive of
traders seek one bee and cannot find him."

"Hive of traders! Truly the great merchants of the Cheap would be
honoured. Have they stung you, then, already, young bumpkin from the
countryside, for such I write you down? But what bee do you seek?
Stay, now, let me guess. Is it a certain old knave named John Grimmer,
who trades in gold and jewels and other precious things and who, if he
had his deserts, should be jail?"

"Aye, aye, that's the man," I said.

"Surely he also will be honoured," exclaimed the old fellow with a
cackle. "He's a friend of mine and I will tell him the jest."

"If you would tell me where to find him it would be more seasonable."

"All in good time. But first, young sir, where did you get that fine
armour? If you stole it, it should be better hid."

"Stole it!" I began in wrath. "Am I a London chapman----?"

"I think not, though you may be before all is done, for who knows what
vile tricks Fortune will play us? Well, if you did not steal it,
mayhap you slew the wearer and are a murderer, for I see black blood
on the steel."

"Murderer!" I gasped.

"Aye, just as you say John Grimmer is a knave. But if not, then
perchance you slew the French knight who wore it on Hastings Hill, ere
you loosed the three arrows at the mouth of the cave near Minnes
Rock."

Now I gaped at him.

"Shut your mouth, young man, lest those teeth of yours should fall
out. You wonder how I know? Well, my friend John Grimmer, the
goldsmith knave, has a magic crystal which he purchased from one who
brought it from the East, and I saw it in that crystal."

As he spoke, as though by chance he pushed back the hood that covered
his head, revealing a wrinkled old face with a mocking mouth which
drooped at one corner, a mouth that I knew again, although many years
had passed since I looked upon it as a boy.

"You are John Grimmer!" I muttered.

"Yes, Hubert of Hastings, I am that knave himself. And now tell me,
what did you do with the gold piece I gave you some twelve summers
gone?"

Then I was minded to lie, for I feared this old man. But thinking
better of it, I answered that I had spent it on a dog. He laughed
outright and said:

"Pray that it is not an omen and that you may not follow the gold
piece to the dogs. Well, I like you for speaking the truth when you
are tempted to do otherwise. Will you be pleased to shelter for a
while beneath the roof of John Grimmer, the merchant knave?"

"You mock me, sir," I stammered.

"Perhaps, perhaps! But there's many a true word spoken in jest; for if
you do not know it now you will learn it afterwards that we are all
knaves, each in his own fashion, who if we do not deceive others, at
least deceive ourselves, and I perhaps more than most. Vanity of
vanities! All is vanity."

Then, waiting for no reply, he drew a silver whistle from under his
dusty robe and blew it, whereon--so swiftly that I marvelled whether
he were waiting--a stout-built serving man appeared to whom he said:

"Take these horses to the stable and treat them as though they were my
own. Unload the pack beast, and when it has been cleaned, set the mail
and the other gear upon it in the room that has been made ready for
this young master, Hubert of Hastings, my nephew."

Without a word the man led off the horses.

"Be not afraid," chuckled John Grimmer, "for though I am a knave, dog
does not eat dog and what is yours is safe with me and those who serve
me. Now enter," and he led the way into the house, opening the iron-
studded oak door with a key from his pouch.

Within was a shop where I saw precious things such as furs and gold
ornaments lying about.

"The crumbs to catch the birds, especially the ladybirds," he said
with a sweep of his hand, then took me through the shop into a passage
and thence to a room on the right. It was not a large room but more
wonderfully furnished than any I had ever seen. In the centre was a
table of black oak with cunningly carved legs, on which stood cups of
silver and a noble centre piece that seemed to be of gold. From the
ceiling, too, hung silver lamps that already had been lit, for the
evening was closing in, and gave a sweet smell. There was a hearth
also with what was rare, a chimney, upon which burned a little fire of
logs, while the walls were hung with tapestries and broidered silks.

Whilst I stared about me, my uncle took off his cloak beneath which he
was clothed in some rich but rather threadbare stuff, only retaining
the velvet skullcap that he wore. Then he bade me do the same, and
when I had laid my outer garment aside, looked me all over in the
lamplight.

"A proper young man," he muttered to himself, "and I'd give all I have
to be his age and like him. I suppose those limbs and sinews of his
came from his father, for I was ever thin and spare, as was my father
before me. Nephew Hubert, I have heard all the tale of your dealings
with the Frenchmen, on whom be God's curse, at Hastings yonder; and I
say that I am proud of you, though whether I shall stay so is another
matter. Come hither."

I obeyed, and taking me by my curling hair with his delicate hand, he
drew down my head and kissed me on the brow, muttering, "Neither chick
nor child for me and only this one left of the ancient blood. May he
do it honour."

Then he motioned to me to be seated and rang a little silver bell that
stood upon the table. As in the case of the man without, it was
answered instantly from which I judged that Master Grimmer was well
served. Before the echoes of the bell died away a door opened, the
tapestry swung aside, and there appeared two most comely serving
maids, tall and well-shaped both of them, bearing food.

"Pretty women, Nephew, no wonder that you look at them," he said when
they had gone away to fetch other things, "such as I like to have
about me although I am old. Women for within and men for without, that
is Nature's law, and ill will be the day when it is changed. Yet
beware of pretty women, Nephew, and I pray you kiss not those as you
did the lady Blanche Aleys at Hastings, lest it should upset my
household and turn servants into mistresses."

I made no answer, being confounded by the knowledge that my uncle
showed of me and my affairs, which afterwards I discovered he had, in
part at any rate, from the old priest, my confessor, who had written
to commend me to him, telling my story and sending the letter by a
King's messenger, who left for London on the morrow of the Burning.
Nor did he wait for any, for he bade me sit down and eat, plying me
with more meats than I could swallow, all most delicately dressed,
also with rare wines such as I had never tasted, which he took from a
cupboard where they were kept in curious flasks of glass. Yet as I
noted, himself he ate but little, only picking at the breast of a fowl
and drinking but the half of a small silver goblet filled with wine.

"Appetite, like all other good things, for the young," he said with a
sigh as he watched my hearty feasting. "Yet remember, Nephew, that if
you live to reach it, a day will come when yours will be as mine is.
Vanity of vanities, saith the preacher, all is vanity!"

At length, when I could eat no more, again he rang the silver bell and
those fair waiting girls dressed alike in green appeared and cleared
away the broken meats. After they were gone he crouched over the fire
rubbing his thin hands to warm them, and said suddenly:

"Now tell me of my sister's death and all the rest of your tale."

So as well as I was able I told him everything from the hour when I
had first sighted the French fleet on board my fishing-boat to the
end.

"You are no fool," he said when I had finished, "who can talk like any
clerk and bring things that have happened clearly to the listener's
eye, which I have noted few are able to do. So that's the story. Well,
your mother had a great heart, and she made a great end, such an one
as was loved of our northern race, and that even I, the old merchant
knave, desire and shall not win, who doubtless am doomed to die a
cow's death in the straw. Pray the All-Father Odin--nay, that is
heresy for which I might burn if you or the wenches told it to the
priests--pray God, I mean, that He may grant you a better, as He did
to old Thorgrimmer, if the tale be true, Thorgrimmer whose sword you
wear and have wielded shrewdly, as that French knight knows in hell
to-day."

"Who was Odin?" I asked.

"The great god of the North. Did not your mother tell you of him? Nay,
doubtless she was too good a Christian. Yet he lives on, Nephew. I say
that Odin lives in the blood of every fighting man, as Freya lives in
the heart of every lad and girl who loves. The gods change their
names, but hush! hush! talk not of Odin and of Freya, for I say that
it is heresy, or pagan, which is worse. What would you do now? Why
came you to London?"

"Because my mother bade me and to seek my fortune."

"Fortune--what is fortune? Youth and health are the best fortune,
though, if they know how to use it, those who have wealth as well may
go further than the rest. Also beauteous things are pleasant to the
sight and there is joy in gathering them. Yet at the last they mean
nothing, for naked we came out of the blackness and naked we return
there. Vanity of vanities, all is vanity!"



                              CHAPTER IV

                                 KARI

Thus began my life in London in the house of my uncle, John Grimmer,
who was called the Goldsmith. In truth, however, he was more than
this, since not only did he fashion and trade in costly things; he
lent out moneys to interest upon security to great people who needed
it, and even to the king Richard and his Court. Also he owned ships
and did much commerce with Holland, France, yes, and with Spain and
Italy. Indeed, although he appeared so humble, his wealth was very
large and always increased, like a snowball rolling down a hill;
moreover, he owned much land, especially in the neighbourhood of
London where it was likely to grow in value.

"Money melts," he would say, "furs corrupt with moth and time, and
thieves break in and steal. But land--if the title be good--remains.
Therefore buy land, which none can carry away, near to a market or a
growing town if may be, and hire it out to fools to farm, or sell it
to other fools who wish to build great houses and spend their goods in
feeding a multitude of idle servants. Houses eat, Hubert, and the
larger they are, the more they eat."

No word did he say to me as to my dwelling on with him, yet there I
remained, by common consent, as it were. Indeed on the morrow of my
coming a tailor appeared to measure me for such garments as he thought
I should wear, by his command, I suppose, as I was never asked for
payment, and he bade me furnish my chamber to my own liking, also
another room at the back of the house that was much larger than it
seemed, which he told me was to be mine to work in, though at what I
was to work he did not say.

For a day or two I remained idle, staring at the sights of London and
only meeting my uncle at meals which sometimes we ate alone and
sometimes in the company of sea-captains and learned clerks or of
other merchants, all of whom treated him with great deference and as I
soon guessed, were in truth his servants. At night, however, we were
always alone and then he would pour out his wisdom on me while I
listened, saying little. On the sixth day, growing weary of this
idleness, I made bold to ask him if there was aught that I could do.

"Aye, plenty if you have a mind to work," he answered. "Sit down now,
and take pen and paper and write what I shall tell you."

Then he dictated a short letter to me as to shipping wine from Spain,
and when it was sanded, read it carefully.

"You have it right," he said, seeming pleased, "and your script is
clear if boyish. They taught you none so ill yonder at Hastings where
I thought you had only learned to handle ropes and arrows. Work? Yes,
there is plenty of it of the more private sort which I do not give to
this scribe or to that who might betray my secrets. For know," he went
on in a stern voice, "there is one thing which I never pardon, and it
is betrayal. Remember that, nephew Hubert, even in the arms of your
loves, if you should be fool enough to seek them, or in your cups."

So he talked on, and while he did so went to an iron chest that he
unlocked, and thence drew out a parchment roll which he bade me take
to my workroom and copy there. I did so, and found that it was an
inventory of his goods and estates, and oh! before I had done I wished
that there were fewer of them. All the long day I laboured, only
stopping for a bite at noon, till my head swam and my fingers ached.
Yet as I did so I felt proud, for I guessed that my uncle had set me
this task for two reasons: first, to show his trust in me, and,
secondly, to acquaint me with the state of his possessions, but as it
were in the way of business. By nightfall I had finished and checked
the copy which with the original I hid in my robe when the green-robed
waiting maid summoned me to eat.

At our meal my uncle asked me what I had seen that day and I replied--
naught but figures and crabbed writing--and handed him the parchments
which he compared item by item.

"I am pleased with you," he said at last, "for heresofar I find but a
single error and that is my fault, not yours; also you have done two
days' work in one. Still, it is not fit that you who are accustomed to
the open air should bend continually over deeds and inventories.
Therefore, to-morrow I shall have another task for you, for like
yourself your horse needs exercise."

And so he had, for with two stout servants riding with me and guiding
me, he sent me out of London to view a fair estate of his upon the
borders of the Thames and to visit his tenants there and make report
of their husbandry, also of certain woods where he proposed to fell
oak for shipbuilding. This I did, for the servants made me known to
the tenants, and got back at night-fall, able to tell him all which he
was glad to learn, since it seemed that he had not seen this estate
for five long years.

On another day he sent me to visit ships in which goods of his were
being laden at the wharf, and on another took me with him to a sale of
furs that came from the far north where I was told the snow never
melts and there is always ice in the sea.

Also he made me known to merchants with whom he traded, and to his
agents who were many, though for the most part secret, together with
other goldsmiths who held moneys of his, and in a sense were partners,
forming a kind of company so that they could find great sums in sudden
need. Lastly, his clerks and dependents were made to understand that
if I gave an order it must be obeyed, though this did not happen until
I had been with him for some time.

Thus it came about that within a year I knew all the threads of John
Grimmer's great business, and within two it drifted more and more into
my hands. The last part of it with which he made me acquainted was
that of lending money to those in high places, and even to the State
itself, but at length I was taught this also and came to know sundry
of these men, who in private were humble borrowers, but if they met us
in the street passed us with the nod that the great give to their
inferiors. Then my uncle would bow low, keeping his eyes fixed upon
the ground and bid me do the same. But when they were out of hearing
he would chuckle and say,

"Fish in my net, goldfish in my net! See how they shine who presently
must wriggle on the shore. Vanity of vanities! All is vanity, and
doubtless Solomon knew such in his day."

Hard I worked, and ever harder, toiling at the mill of all these large
affairs and keeping myself in health during such time as I could spare
by shooting at the butts with my big bow where I found that none could
beat me, or practising sword play in a school of arms that was kept by
a master of the craft from Italy. Also on holidays and on Sundays
after mass I rode out of London to visit my uncle's estates where
sometimes I slept a night, and once or twice sailed to Holland or to
Calais with his cargoes.

One day, it was when I had been with him about eighteen months, he
said to me suddenly.

"You plough the field, Hubert, and do not tithe the crop, but live
upon the bounty of the husbandman. Henceforward take as much of it as
you will. I ask no account."

So I found myself rich, though in truth I spent but little, both
because my tastes were simple and it was part of my uncle's policy to
make no show which he said would bring envy on us. From this time
forward he began to withdraw himself from business, the truth being
that age took hold of him and he grew feeble. The highest of the
affairs he left to me, only inquiring of them and giving his counsel
from time to time. Still, because he must do something, he busied
himself in the shop which, as he said, he kept as a trap for the
birds, chaffering in ornaments and furs as though his bread depended
upon his earning a gold piece, and directing the manufacture of
beautiful jewels and cups which he, who was an artist, designed to be
made by his skilled and highly paid workmen, some of whom were
foreigners.

"We end where we began," he would say. "A smith was I from my
childhood and a smith I shall die. What a fate for one of the blood of
Thorgrimmer! Yet I am selling you into the same bondage, or so it
would seem. But who knows? Who knows? We design, but God decrees."

It is to be noted that when old men cease from the occupation of their
lives, often enough within a very little time they also cease from
life itself. So it was with my uncle. Day by day he faded till at last
at the beginning of the third winter after I came to him he took to
his bed where he lay growing ever weaker till at length he died in the
hour of the birth of the new year.

To the last his mind remained clear and strong, and never more so than
on the night of his death. That evening after I had eaten I went to
his room as usual and found him reading a beautiful manuscript of the
book of the Wisdom of Solomon that is called Ecclesiastes, a work
which he preferred to all others, since its thoughts were his. "I
gathered me also silver and gold and the peculiar treasures of kings,"
he read aloud, whether to himself or to me I knew not, and went on,
"So I was great, and increased more than all that were before me.
. . . Then I looked on all the works that my hands had wrought, and on
the labour that I had laboured to do; and behold all was vanity and
vexation of spirit, and there was no profit under the sun."

He closed the book, saying,

"So shall you find, Nephew, you, and every man in the evil days of age
when you shall say, 'I have no pleasure in them.' Hubert, I am going
to my long home, nor do I grieve. In youth I met with sorrow, for
though I have never told you, I was married then and had one son, a
bright boy, and oh! I loved him and his mother. Then came the plague
and took them both. So having naught left and being by nature one of
those who could wean himself from women, which I fear that you are
not, Hubert, noting all the misery there is in the world and how those
who are called noble whom I hate, grind down the humble and the poor,
I turned myself to good works. Half of all my gains I have given and
still give to those who minister to poverty and sickness; you will
find a list of them when I am gone should you wish to continue the
bounty, as to which I do not desire to bind you in any way. For know,
Hubert, that I have left you all that is mine; the gold and the ships
with the movables and chattels to be your own, but the lands which are
the main wealth, for life and afterwards to be your children's, or if
you should die childless, then to go to certain hospitals where the
sick are tended."

Now I would have thanked him, but he waved my words aside and went on:

"You will be a very rich man, Hubert, one of the richest in all
London; yet set not your heart on wealth, and above all do not ape
nobility or strive to climb from the honest class of which you come
into the ranks of those idle and dissolute cut-throats and pick-brains
who are called the great. Lighten their pockets if you will, but do
not seek to wear their silken, scented garments. That is my counsel to
you."

He paused a while, picking at the bedclothes as the dying do, and
continued,

"You told me that your mother thought you would be a wanderer, and it
is strange that now my mind should be as hers was in this matter. For
I seem to see you far away amidst war and love and splendour, holding
Wave-Flame aloft as did that Thorgrimmer who begat us. Well, go where
you are called or as occasion drives, though you have much to keep you
at home. I would that you were wed, since marriage is an anchor that
few ships can drag. Yet I am not sure, for how know I whom you should
wed, and once that anchor is down no windlass will wind it up and
death alone can cut its chain. One word more. Though you are so young
and strong remember that as I am, so shall you be. To-day for me,
to-morrow for thee, said the wise old man, and thus it ever was and
is.

"Hubert, I do not know why we are born to struggle and to suffer and
at last be noosed with the rope of Doom. Yet I hope the priests are
right and that we live again, though Solomon thought not so; that is,
if we live where there is neither sin nor sorrow nor fear of death. If
so, be sure that in some new land we shall meet afresh, and there I
shall ask account of you of the wealth I entrusted to your keeping.
Think of me kindly at times, for I have learned to love you who are of
my blood, and while we live on in the hearts of those we love, we are
not truly dead. Come hither that I may bless you in your coming in and
going out while you still look upon the sun."

So he blessed me in beautiful and tender words, and kissed me on the
brow, after which he bade me leave him and send the woman to watch
him, because he desired to sleep.

When she looked at him at midnight just as the bells rang in the new
year, he was dead.

According to his wish John Grimmer, the last of that name, was buried
by the bones of his forgotten wife and child, who had left the world
over fifty years before, in the chancel of that church in the Cheap
which was within a stone's throw of his dwelling house. By his desire
also the funeral was without pomp, yet many came to it, some of them
of high distinction, although the day was cold and snowy. I noted,
moreover, the deference they showed to me who by now was known to be
his heir, even if they had never spoken with me before, as was the
case with certain of them, taking occasion to draw me aside and say
that they trusted that their ancient friendship with my honoured uncle
would be continued by myself.

Afterwards I looked up their names in his private book and found that
one and all of those who had spoken thus owed moneys to his estate.

When the will was sworn and I found myself the master of many legions,
or rather of more money, land, and other wealth than I had ever
dreamed of, at first I was minded to be rid of trade and to take up my
abode upon one or other of my manors, where I might live in plenty for
the rest of my days. In the end, however, I did not do so, partly
because I shrank from new faces and surroundings, and partly because I
was sure that such would not have been my uncle's wish.

Instead I set myself to play and outpass his game. He had died very
rich; I determined that I would die five or ten times richer; the
richest man in England if I could, not because I cared for money, of
which indeed I spent but little upon myself, but because the getting
of it and the power that it brought, seemed to me the highest kind of
sport. So bending my mind to the matter I doubled and trebled his
enterprises on this line and on that, and won and won again, for even
where skill and foresight failed, Fortune stood my friend with a such
strange persistence that at length I became superstitious and grew
frightened of her gifts. Also I took pains to hide my great riches
from the public eye, placing much of them in the names of others whom
I could trust, and living most modestly in the same old house, lest I
should become a man envied by the hungry and marked for plunder by the
spendthrift great.



It was during the summer following my uncle's death that I went to the
wharves to see to the unloading of a ship that came in from Venice,
bearing many goods from the East on my account, such as ivory, silks,
spices, glass, carpets, and I know not what. Having finished my
business and seen these precious things warehoused, I handed over the
checking of a list of them to another and turned to seek my horse.

Then it was that I saw a number of half-grown lads and other idlers
mobbing a man who stood among them wrapped in a robe of what looked
like tattered sheepskin, yet was not because the wool on it was of a
reddish hue and very long and soft, which robe was thrown over his
head hiding his face. At this man--a tall figure who stood there
patiently like a martyr at the stake--these lewd fellows were hurling
offal, such as fishes' heads and rotted fruits that lay in plenty on
the quay, together with coarse words. "Blackamoor" was one I caught.

Such sights were common enough, but there was a quiet dignity of
bearing about this victim which moved me, so that I went to the rabble
commanding them to desist. One of them, a rough bumpkin, not knowing
who I was, pushed me aside, bidding me mind my own business,
whereupon, being very strong, I dealt him such a blow between the eyes
that he went down like a felled ox and lay there half stunned. His
companions beginning to threaten me, I blew upon my whistle, whereon
two of my serving-men, without whom I seldom rode in those troublous
times, ran up from behind a shed, laying hands upon their short
swords, on seeing which the idlers took to their heels.

When they had gone I turned to look at the stranger, whose hood had
fallen back in the hustling, and saw that he was about thirty years of
age, and of a dark and noble countenance, beardless, but with straight
black hair, black flashing eyes, and an aquiline nose. Another thing I
noted about him was that the lobe of his ear was pierced and in a
strange fashion, since the gristle was stretched to such a size that a
small apple could have been placed within its ring. For the rest the
man's limbs were so thin as though from hunger, that everywhere his
bones showed, while his skin was scarred with cuts and scratches, and
on his forehead was a large bruise. He seemed bewildered also and very
weak, yet I think he understood that I was playing a friend's part to
him, for he bowed towards me in a stately, courteous way and kissed
the air thrice, but what this meant at the time I did not know.

I spoke to him in English, but he shook his head gently to show that
he did not understand. Then, as though by an afterthought, he touched
his breast several times, and after each touch, said in a voice of
strange softness, "Kari," which I took it he meant was his name. At
any rate, from that time forward I called him Kari.

Now the question was how to deal with him. Leave him there to be
mocked or to perish I could not, nor was there anywhere whither I
could send him. Therefore it seemed the only thing to do was to take
him home with me. So grasping his arm gently I led him off the quay
where our horses were and motioned to him to mount one that had been
ridden by a servant whom I bade to walk. At the sight of these horses,
however, a great terror took hold of him for he trembled all over, a
sweat bursting out upon his face, and clung to me as though for
protection, making it evident that he had never seen such an animal
before. Indeed, nothing would persuade him to go near them, for he
shook his head and pointed to his feet, thus showing me that he
preferred to walk, however weak his state.

The end of it was that walk he did and I with him from Thames side to
the Cheap, since I dared not leave him alone for fear lest he should
run away. A strange sight we presented, I leading this dusky wanderer
through the streets, and glad was I that night was falling so that few
saw us and those who did thought, I believe, that I was bringing some
foreign thief to jail.

At length we reached the Boat House as my dwelling was called, from
the image of the old Viking vessel that my uncle had carved and set
above the door, and I led him in staring about him with all his eyes,
which in his thin face looked large as those of an owl, taking him up
the stairs, which seemed to puzzle him much, for at every step he
lifted his leg high into the air, to an empty guest room.

Here besides the bed and other furniture was a silver basin with its
jug, one of the beautiful things that John Grimmer had brought I know
not whence. On these Kari fixed his eyes at once, staring at them in
the light of the candles that I had lit, as though they were familiar
to him. Indeed, after glancing at me as though for permission, he went
to the jug that was kept full of water in case of visitors of whom I
had many on business, lifted it, and after pouring a few drops of the
water on to the floor as though he made some offering, drank deeply,
thus showing that he was parched with thirst.

Then without more ado he filled the basin and throwing off his
tattered robe began to wash himself to the waist, round which he wore
another garment, of dirty cotton I thought, which looked like a
woman's petticoat. Watching him I noted two things, that his poor body
was as scratched and scarred as though by old thorn wounds, as were
his face and hands, also marked with great bruises as though from
kicks and blows, and secondly that hung about his neck was a wondrous
golden image about four inches in length. It was of rude workmanship
with knees bent up under the chin, but the face, in which little
emeralds were set for eyes, was of a great and solemn dignity.

This image Kari washed before he touched himself with water, bowing to
it the while, and when he saw me observing him, looked upwards to the
sky and said a word that sounded like /Pachacamac/, from which I took
it to be some idol that the poor man worshipped. Lastly, tied about
his middle was a hide bag filled with I knew not what.

Now I found a washball made of oil of olives mixed with beech ash and
showed him the use of it. At first he shrank from this strange thing,
but coming to understand its office, served himself of it readily,
smiling when he saw how well it cleansed his flesh. Further, I fetched
a shirt of silk with a pair of easy shoes and a fur-lined robe that
had belonged to my uncle, also hosen, and showed him how to put them
on, which he learned quickly enough. A comb and a brush that were on
the table he seemed to understand already, for with them he dressed
his tangled hair.

When all was finished in a fashion, I led him down the stairs again to
the eating-room where supper was waiting, and offered him food, at the
sight of which his eyes glistened, for clearly he was well-nigh
starving. The chair I gave him he would not sit on, whether from
respect for me or because it was strange to him, I do not know, but
seeing a low stool of tapestry which my uncle had used to rest his
feet, he crouched upon this, and thus ate of whatever I gave him, very
delicately though he was so hungry. Then I poured wine from Portugal
into a goblet and drank some myself to show him that it was harmless,
which, after tasting it, he swallowed to the last drop.

The meal being finished which I thought it was well to shorten lest he
should eat too much who was so weak, again he lifted up his eyes as
though in gratitude, and as a sign of thankfulness, or so I suppose,
knelt before me, took my hand, and pressed it against his forehead,
thereby, although I did not know it at the time, vowing himself to my
service. Then seeing how weary he was I conducted him back to the
chamber and pointed out the bed to him, shutting my eyes to show that
he should sleep there. But this he would not do until he had dragged
the bedding on to the floor, from which I gathered that his people,
whoever they might be, had the habit of sleeping on the ground.

Greatly did I wonder who this man was and from what race he sprang,
since never had I seen any human being who resembled him at all. Of
one thing only was I certain, namely, that his rank was high, since no
noble of the countries that I knew had a bearing so gentle or manners
so fine. Of black men I had seen several, who were called negroes, and
others of a higher sort called Moors; gross, vulgar fellows for the
most part and cut-throats if in an ill-humour, but never a one of them
like this Kari.

It was long before my curiosity was satisfied, and even then I did not
gather much. By slow degrees Kari learned English, or something of it,
though never enough to talk fluently in that tongue into which he
always seemed to translate in his mind from another full of strange
figures of thought and speech. When after many months he had mastered
sufficient of our language, I asked him to tell me his story which he
tried to do. All I could make of it, however, came to this.

He was, he said, the son of a king who ruled over a mighty empire far
far away, across thousands of miles of sea towards that part of the
sky where the sun sank. He declared that he was the eldest lawful son,
born of the King's sister, which seemed dreadful to my ideas though
perhaps he meant cousin or relative, but that there were scores of
other children of his father, which, if true, showed that this king
must be a very loose-living man who resembled in his domesticities the
wise Solomon of whom my uncle was so fond.

It appeared, further, according to the tale, that this king, his
father, had another son born of a different mother, and that of this
son he was fonder than of my guest, Kari. His name was Urco, and he
was jealous of and hated Kari the lawful heir. Moreover, as is common,
a woman came into the business, since Kari had a wife, the loveliest
lady in all the land, though as I understood, not of the same tribe or
blood as himself, and with this wife of his Urco fell in love. So
greatly did he desire her, although he had plenty of wives of his own,
that being the general of the King's troops, he sent Kari, with the
consent of their father, to command an army that was to fight a
distant savage nation, hoping that he would be killed, much as David
did in the matter of Uriah and Bathsheba, of whom the Bible tells the
story. But as it happened, instead of being killed like Uriah, Kari
conquered the distant nation, and after two years returned to the
King's court, where he found that his brother Urco had led astray his
wife whom he had taken into his household. Being very angry, Kari
recovered his wife by command of the King, and put her to death
because of her faithlessness.

Thereon the King, his father, a stern man, ordered him into banishment
because he had broken the laws of the land, which did not permit of
private vengeance over a matter of a woman who was not even of the
royal blood, however fair she might be. Before he went, however, Urco,
who was mad at the loss of his love, caused some kind of poison to be
given to Kari, which although it does not kill, for he dared not kill
him because of his station, deprives him who takes it of his reason,
sometimes for ever and sometimes for a year or more. After this, said
Kari, he remembered little or nothing, save long travellings in boats
and through forests, and then again upon a raft or boat on which he
was driven alone, for many, many days, drinking a jar of water which
he had with him, and eating some dried flesh and with it a marvellous
drug of his people, some of which remained to him in the leathern bag
that has power to keep the life in a man for weeks, even if he is
labouring hard.

At last, he declared, he was picked up by a great ship such as he had
never seen before, though of this ship he recalled little. Indeed he
remembered nothing more until he found himself upon the quay where I
discovered him, and of a sudden his mind seemed to return but he said
he believed that he had come ashore in a boat in which were fishermen,
having been thrown into it by the people on the ship which went on
elsewhere, and that he had walked up the shores of a river. This story
the bruises on his forehead and body seemed to bear out, but it was
far from clear, and by the time I learned it months afterwards of
course no traces of the fishermen or their boat could be found. I
asked him the name of the country from which he came. He answered that
it was called /Tavantinsuyu/. He added that it was a wonderful country
in which were cities and churches and great snow-clad mountains and
fertile valleys and high plains and hot forests through which ran wide
rivers.

From all the learned men whom I could meet, especially those who had
travelled far, I made inquiries concerning this country called
Tavantinsuyu, but none of them had so much as heard its name. Indeed,
they declared that my brown man must have come from Africa, and that
his mind being disordered, he had invented this wondrous land which he
said lay far away to the west where the sun sank.

So there I must leave this matter, though for my part I was sure that
Kari was not mad, whatever he might have been in the past. A great
dreamer he was, it is true, who declared that the poison which his
brother had given him had "eaten a hole in his mind" through which he
could see and hear things which others could not. Thus he was able to
read the secret motives of men and women with wonderful clearness, so
much so that sometimes I asked him, laughing, if he could not give me
some of that poison that I might see into the hearts of those with
whom I dealt. Of another thing, too, he was always certain, namely,
that he would return to his country Tavantinsuyu of which he thought
day and night, and that /I should accompany him/. At this I laughed
again and said that if so it would be after we were both dead.

By degrees he learned English quite well and even how to read and
write it, teaching me in return much of his own language which he
called /Quichua/, a soft and beautiful tongue, though he said that
there were also many others in his country, including one that was
secret to the King and his family, which he was not allowed to reveal
although he knew it. In time I mastered enough of this Quichua to be
able to talk to Kari in brief sentences of it when I did not wish
others to understand what I said.

To tell the truth, while I studied thus and listened to his marvellous
tales, a great desire arose in me to see this land of his and to open
up a trade with it, since there he declared gold was as plentiful as
was iron with us. I thought even of making a voyage of discovery to
the west, but when I spoke of it to certain sea-captains, even the
most venturesome mocked at me and said that they would wait for that
journey till they "went west" themselves, by which in their sea
parlance that they had learned in the Mediterranean, they meant until
they died.[*] When I told Kari this he smiled in his mysterious way
and answered that all the same, I and he should make that journey
together and this before we died, a thing that came about, indeed,
though, not by my own will or his.

[*] Of late there has been much dispute as to the origin of the phrase
    "to go west," or in other words, to die. Surely it arises from the
    custom of the Ancient Egyptians who, after death, were ferried
    across the Nile and entombed upon the western shore.--Ed.

For the rest when Kari saw my workmen fashioning gold and setting
jewels in it for sale to the nobles and ladies of the Court, he was
much interested and asked if he might be allowed to follow this craft,
of which he said he understood something, and thus earn the bread he
ate. I answered, yes, for I knew that it irked his proud nature to be
dependent on me, and gave him gold and silver with a little room
having a furnace in it where he could labour. The first thing he made
was an object about two inches across, round and with a groove at the
back of it, on the front of which he fashioned an image of the sun
having a human face and rays of light projecting all about. I asked
him what was its purpose, whereon he took the piece and thrust it into
the lobe of his ear where the gristle had been stretched in the
fashion that I have described, which it fitted exactly. Then he told
me that in his country all the nobles wore such ornaments and that
those who did so were called "ear-men" to distinguish them from the
common people. Also he told me many other things too long to set out,
which made me desire more than ever to see this empire with my eyes,
for an empire and no less he declared it to be.

Afterwards Kari made many such ornaments which I sold for brooches
with a pin set at the back of them. Also he shaped other things, for
his skill as a goldsmith was wonderful, such as cups and platters of
strange design and rich ornamentation which commanded a great price.
But on every one of them, in the centre or some other part of the
embossment, appeared this image of the sun. I asked him why. He
answered because the sun was his god and his people were Sun-
worshippers. I reminded him that he had said that a certain Pachacamac
whose image he wore about his neck was his god. To this he replied:

"Yes, Pachacamac is the god above gods, the Creator, the Spirit of the
World, but the Sun is his visible house and raiment that all may see
and worship," a saying that I thought had truth in it, seeing that all
Nature is the raiment of God.

I tried to instruct him in our faith, but although he listened
patiently and I think understood, he would not become a Christian,
making it very plain to me that he thought that a man should live and
die in the religion in which he was born and that from what he saw in
London he did not hold that Christians were any better than those who
worshipped the sun and the great spirit, Pachacamac. So I abandoned
this attempt, although there was danger to him while he remained a
heathen. Indeed twice or thrice the priests made inquiry concerning
his faith, being curious as to all that had to do with him. However, I
silenced them by pretending that I was instructing him as well as I
was able and that as yet he did not know enough English to hearken to
their holy expositions. Also when they became persistent I made gifts
to the monasteries to which they belonged, or if they were parish
priests, then to their curs or churches.

Still I was troubled about this matter, for some of these priests were
very fierce and intolerant, and I was sure that in time they would
push the business further.

One more thing I noticed about Kari, namely, that he shrank from women
and indeed seemed to hate them. The maids who had remained with me
since my uncle's death noticed this, by nature as it were, and in
revenge would not serve him. The end of it was that, fearing lest they
should do him some evil turn with the priests or otherwise, I sent
them away and hired men to take their place. This distaste of Kari for
women I set down to all that he had suffered at the hands of his false
and beautiful wife not wrongly as I think.



                              CHAPTER V

                        THE COMING OF BLANCHE

One day, it was the last of the year, the anniversary of the death of
my uncle whose goodness and wisdom I pondered on more and more as time
went by, having a little time to spare from larger affairs, I chanced
to be in the shop in the front of the house, which, as John Grimmer
had said, he kept as a trap to "snare the ladybirds," and I continued,
because I knew that he would not wish that anything should be changed.
Here I was pleasing myself by looking over such pieces as we had to
sell which the head craftsman was showing to me, since myself I knew
little of them, except as a matter of account.

Whilst I was thus engaged there entered the shop a very fine lady
accompanied by a still finer lordling arrayed so similarly that, at
first sight, in their hooded ermine cloaks it was difficult to know
which was man and which was woman. When they threw these aside,
however, for the shop was warm after the open air, I knew more than
that, since with a sudden stoppage of the heart I saw before me none
other than the lady Blanche Aleys and her relative, the lord Deleroy.

She, who in the old days of the Hastings burnings had been but a lily
bud, was now an open flower and beautiful exceedingly; indeed in her
own fashion the most beautiful woman that ever I beheld. Tall she was
and stately as a lily bloom, white as a lily also, save for those
wondrous blue eyes over which curled the dark lashes. In shape, too,
she was perfect, full-breasted, yet not too full, small-waisted, and
with delicate limbs, a very Venus, such an one as I had seen in
ancient marble brought in a ship from Italy and given, as I believe,
to the King, who loved such things, to be set up in his palace.

My lord also was yet handsomer than he had been, more set and manly,
though still he affected his coxcomb party-coloured dress with the
turned-up shoes of which the points were fastened by little golden
chains beneath the knee. Still he was a fine man with his roving black
eyes, his loose mouth and little pointed beard from which, as from his
hair, came an odour of scents. Seeing me in my merchant's gown, for I
remained mindful of my uncle's advice as regards attire, he spoke to
me as great men do to shop-keepers.

"Well met, Goldsmith," he said in his round, well-trained voice, "I
would make a new-year gift to the lady here, and I am told that you
have plate-wares of the best; gold cups and jewels of rich and rare
design, stamped all of them with the image of the sun which one would
wish to remember on such a day as this. But hearken, let John Grimmer
himself come to serve me for I would treat with no underlings, or take
me to him where he is."

Now I bowed before him, rubbing my hands, and answered, for so the
humour led me: "Then I fear that I must take my lord farther than my
lord would wish to travel just at present, though who knows?
Perchance, like the rest of us, he may take that journey sooner than
he thinks."

Now at the sound of my voice I saw the lady Blanche stare at me,
trying to catch sight of my face beneath the hood which I wore on this
cold day, while Deleroy started and said briefly:

"Your meaning?"

"It is plain, my lord. John Grimmer is dead and I know not where he
dwells at present since he took that secret with him. But I, who
unworthily carry on his trade, am at your lordship's service."

Then I turned and bade the shopman command Kari to come hither and
bring with him the choicest of our cups and jewels.

He went and I busied myself in setting stools for these noble
customers to rest on before the fire. As I did so by chance my hand
touched that of the lady Blanche, whereat once more she strove to peer
beneath my hood. It was as though the nature in her knew that touch
again, as by some instinct every woman does, if once the toucher's
lips have been near her own, though it be long ago. But I only turned
my head away and drew that hood the closer.

Now Kari came and with him the shopman, bearing the precious wares.
Kari wore a wool-lined robe, very plain, which yet became him so well
that with his fine-cut face and flashing eyes he looked like an
Eastern prince disguised. At him this fine pair stared, for never had
they seen such a man, but taking no note, with many bows he showed the
jewels one by one. Among these was a gem of great value, a large,
heart-shaped ruby that Kari had set in a surround of twisted golden
serpents with heads raised to strike and little eyes of diamonds. Upon
this brooch the lady Blanche fixed her gaze and discarding all others,
began to play with it, till at length the lord Deleroy asked the
price. I consulted with Kari, explaining that myself I did not handle
this branch of my business, then named it carelessly; it was a great
sum.

"God's truth! Blanche," said Deleroy, "this merchant thinks I am made
of gold. You must choose a cheaper ornament for your new year's gift,
or he will have to wait for payment."

"Which mayhap I should be willing to do from one of your quality, my
lord," I interrupted, bowing.

He looked at me and said:

"Can I have a word apart with you, merchant?"

Again I bowed and led him to the eating-room where he gazed about him,
amazed at the richness of the furnishings. He sat him down upon a
carven chair while I stood before him humbly and waited.

"I am told," he said at length, "that John Grimmer did other business
besides that of selling jewels."

"Yes, my lord, some foreign trade."

"And some home trade also. I mean that he lent money."

"At times, my lord, and on good security, if he chanced to have any at
command, and at a certain interest. Perhaps my lord will come to his
point."

"It is short and clear. Those of us who are at Court always want money
where it is needful if we would have advancement and earn the royal
favour of one who does not pay, at least in gold."

"Be pleased to state the amount and the security offered, my lord."

He did so. The sum was high and the security was bad.

"Are there any who would stand surety for my lord?"

"Yes, one of great estate, Sir Robert Aleys, who has wide lands in
Sussex."

"I have heard the name, and if my lord will bid his lawyers put the
matter in writing, I will cause the lands to be valued and give an
answer as quickly as may be."

"For a young man you are careful, merchant."

"Alas! such as I need to be who must guard our small earnings in these
troublous times of war and tumult. Such a sum as you speak of would
take all that John Grimmer and I have laid by after years of toil."

Again he looked at the furnishings of the room and shrugged his
shoulders, then said:

"Good, it shall be done for the need is urgent. To whom is the letter
to be sent?"

"To John Grimmer, at the Boat House, Cheapside."

"But you told me that John Grimmer was dead."

"And so he is, my lord, but his name remains."

Then we returned to the sop and as we went I said,

"If your lordship's lady should set her heart upon the ruby the cost
of it can stand over a while, since I know that it is hard for a
husband to disappoint a wife of what she desires."

"Man, she is my distant cousin, not my wife. I would she were, but how
can two high-placed paupers wed?"

"Perhaps it is for this reason that my lord wishes to borrow money."

Again he shrugged his shoulders, and as we entered the shop I threw
back the hood from off my head upon which I wore a merchant's cap of
velvet. The lady Blanche caught sight of me and started.

"Surely, surely," she began, "you are he who shot the three arrows at
the cave's mouth at Hastings."

"Yes, my lady, and did your hawk escape the dogs upon the London
road?"

"Nay, it was crippled and died, which was the first of many troubles,
for I think my luck rode away with you that day, Master Hubert of
Hastings," she added with a sigh.

"There are other hawks and luck returns," I replied, bowing. "Perhaps
this trinket will bring it back to you, my lady," and taking the
snake-surrounded ruby heart, I proffered it to her with another bow.

"Oh!" she said, her blue eyes shining with pleasure, "oh! it is
beautiful, but whence is the price to come for so costly a thing?"

"I think the matter is one that can wait."

At that moment the lord Deleroy broke in, saying,

"So you are the man who slew the French knight with an ancient sword,
and afterwards shot three other Frenchmen with three shafts, sending
one of them through shield and mail and body, a tale that was spoken
of afterwards, even in London. God's truth! you should be serving the
King in the wars, not yourself behind the counter."

"There are many ways of serving, my lord," I answered, "by pen and
merchandise as well as by steel and shafts. Now with me it is the turn
of the former, though perhaps the ancient sword and the great black
bow wait till their time comes again."

He stared at me and muttered, half to himself:

"A strange merchant and a grim, as those dead Frenchmen may have
thought. I tell you, Sir Trader, that your talk and the eyes of that
tall Moor of yours turn my back cold; it is as though someone walked
over my grave. Come, Blanche, let us begone ere our horses be chilled
as I am. Master Grimmer, or Hastings, you shall hear from me, unless I
can do my business otherwise, and for the trinket send me a note at
your leisure."

Then they went, but as the lady Blanche left the shop she caught her
robe and turned to free it, while she did so flashing at me one of her
sweet looks such as I remembered well.

Kari followed to the door and watched them mount their horses at the
gate, then he searched the ground with his eyes.

"What was it hooked her cloak?" I asked.

"A dream, or the air, Master, for there is nothing else to which it
could have hung. Those who would throw spears behind them must first
turn round."

"What think you of those two, Kari?"

"I think that they will not pay for your jewel, but perhaps this was
but a bait upon the hook."

"And what more, Kari?"

"I think that the lady is very fair and false, and that the great
lord's heart is as black as are his eyes. Also I think that they are
dear to each other and well matched. But it seems that you have met
them both before, Master, so you will know better about them than your
slave."

"Yes, I have met them," I answered sharply, for his words about
Blanche angered me, adding, "I have noted, Kari, that you have never a
good word for any one whom I favour. You are jealous-natured, Kari,
especially of women."

"You ask, I answer," he replied, falling into broken English, as was
his fashion when moved, "and it is true that those who have much love,
are much jealous. That is a fault in my people. Also I love not women.
Now I go make another piece for that which Master give the lady. Only
this time it all snake and no heart."

He went, taking the tray of jewels with him, and I, too, went to the
eating-room to think.

How strange was this meeting. I had never forgotten the lady Blanche,
but in a sense I had lived her memory down and mindful of my uncle's
counsel, had not sought to look upon her again, for which reason I
kept away from Hastings where I thought that I should find her. And
now here she was in London and in my house, brought thither by fate.
Nor was that all, since those blue eyes of hers had re-lighted the
dead fires in my heart and, seated there alone, I knew that I loved
her; indeed had never ceased to love her. She was more to me than all
my wealth, more than anything, and alas! between us there was still a
great gulf fixed.

She was not wed, it was true, but she was a highly placed lady, and I
but a merchant who could not even call myself a squire, or by law wear
garments made of certain stuffs which I handled daily in my trade. How
might that gulf be crossed?

Then as I mused there rose in my mind a memory of certain sayings of
my wise old uncle, and with it an answer to the question. Gold would
bridge the widest streams of human difference. These fine folk for all
their flauntings were poor. They came to me to borrow money wherewith
to gild their coronets and satisfy the importunate creditors at their
door, lest they should be pulled from their high place and forced back
into the number of the common herd as those who could no longer either
give or pay.

And after all, was this difference between them and me so wide? The
grandsire of Sir Robert Aleys, I had been told, gathered his wealth by
trade and usury in the old wars; indeed, it was said that he was one
who dealt in cattle, while Lord Deleroy was reported to be a bastard,
if of the bluest blood, so blue that it ran nigh to the royal purple.
Well, what was mine? On the father's side, Saxon descended from that
of Thanes who went down before the Normans and thereafter became
humble landed folk of the lesser sort. On the mother's, of the race of
the old sea-kings who slew and conquered through all the world they
knew. Was I then so far beneath these others? Nay, but like my father
and my uncle I was one who bought and sold and the hand of the dyer
was stained to the colour of his vat.

Thus stood the business. I, a stubborn man, not ill-favoured, to whom
Fortune had given wealth, was determined to win this woman who, it
seemed to me, looked upon me with no unkind eye since I had saved her
from certain perils. To myself then and there I swore I would win her.
The question was--how could it be done? I might enter the service of
the King and fight his battles and doubtless win myself a knighthood,
or more, which would open the closed gate.

Nay, it would take too long, and something warned me that time
pressed. That strange foreign man, Kari, said that Blanche was
enamoured of this Deleroy, and although I was wrath with him, setting
his words down to jealousy of any on whom I looked with kindness, I
knew well that Kari saw far. If I tarried, this rare white bird would
slip from my hand into another's cage. I must stir at once or let the
matter be. Well, I had wealth, so let wealth be my friend. Time enough
to try war when it failed me.



On the third day of the new year, which at this time of Court revelry
showed that the matter must indeed be pressing, I received those
particulars for which I had asked, together with a list of the lands
and tenements that Sir Robert Aleys was ready to put in pawn on behalf
of his friend and relative, the lord Deleroy. Why should he do this, I
wondered? There could only be one answer: because he and not Deleroy
was to receive the money, or most of it.

Nay, another came into my mind as probable. Because he looked upon
Deleroy as his heir, which, should he marry the lady Blanche, he would
become. If this were so I must act, and quickly, that is, if I would
ever see more of the lady Blanche, as perchance I might do by treading
this gold-paved road, but not otherwise. I studied the list of lands.
As it chanced I knew most of them, for they lay about Pevensey and
Hastings, and saw that they were scarcely worth the moneys which were
asked of me. Well, what of it? This matter was not one of trade and
large as the sum might be, I would risk it for the chance of winning
Blanche.

The end of it was that waiting for no valuings I wrote that on proof
of title clean and unencumbered and completion of all deeds, I would
pay over the gold to whoever might be appointed to receive it.

This letter of mine proved to be but the beginning of a long business
whereof the details may be left untold. On the very next day indeed I
was summoned to the house of Sir Robert Aleys which was near to the
palace and abbey of Westminster. Here I found the gruff old knight
grown greyer and having, as it seemed to me, a hunted air, and with
him the lord Deleroy and two foxy lawyers of whom I did not like the
look. Indeed, for the first, I suspected that I was being tricked and
had it not been for the lady Blanche, would have broken off the loan.
Because of her, however, this I did not do, but having stated my terms
anew, and the rate and dates of interest, sat for a long while saying
as little as possible, while the others unfolded parchments and talked
and talked, telling tales that often contradicted each other, till at
length the lord Deleroy, who seemed ill at ease, grew weary and left
the chamber. At last all was done that could be done at that sitting
and it being past the hour of dinner, I was taken in to eat,
consenting, because I hoped that I should see the lady Blanche.

A butler, or chamber-groom, led me to the dining-hall and sat me with
the lawyers at a table beneath the dais. Presently on this dais
appeared Sir Robert Aleys, his daughter Blanche, the lord Deleroy,
and perhaps eight or ten other fine folk whom I had never seen. She,
looking about her, saw me seated at the lower table, and spoke to her
father and Deleroy, reasoning with the latter, as it would appear.
Indeed, in a sudden hush I caught some of her words. They were, "If
you are not ashamed to take his money, you should not be ashamed to
sit at meat with him."

Deleroy stamped his foot, but the end of it was that I was summoned to
the high table where the lady Blanche made place for me beside her,
while Deleroy sat himself down between two splendid dames at the other
end of the board.

Here, then, I stayed by Blanche who, I noted, wore the ruby heart
encircled by serpents. Indeed, this was the first thing of which she
spoke to me, saying,

"It looks well upon my robe, does it not, and I thank you for it,
Master Hubert, who know surely that it is not my cousin Deleroy's
gift, but yours, since for it you will never see your money."

By way of answer I looked at the sumptuous plate and furnishings, the
profusion of the viands, and the number of the serving-men. Reading my
thought, she replied,

"Aye, but pledged, all of it. I tell you, Master Hubert, that we are
starved hounds, though we live in a kennel with golden bars. And now
they would pawn you that kennel also."

Then, while I wondered what to say, she began to talk of our great
adventure in bygone years, recalling every tiny thing that had
happened and every word that had been spoken between us, some of which
I had forgotten. Of one thing only she said nothing--the kisses with
which we parted. Amongst much else, she spoke of how the ancient sword
had shorn through the armour of the French knight, and I told her that
the sword was named Wave-Flame and that it had come down to me from my
ancestor, Thorgrimmer the Viking, and of what was written on its
blade, to all of which she listened greedily.

"And they thought you not fit to sit at meat with them, you whose race
is so old and who are so great a warrior, as you showed that day. And
it is to you that I owe my life and more than life, to you and not to
them."

So saying she shot a glance at me that pierced me through and through,
as my arrows had pierced the Frenchmen, and what is more beneath the
cover of the board for a moment let her slim hand rest upon my own.

After this for a while we were silent, for indeed I could not speak.
Then we talked on as we could do well enough, since there was no one
on my left where the board ended, and on Blanche's right was a fat old
lord who seemed to be deaf and occupied himself in drinking more than
he should have done. I told her much about myself, also what my mother
had said to me on the day of the Burning, and of how she had
prophesied that I should be a wanderer, words at which Blanche sighed
and answered:

"Yet you seem to be well planted in London and in rich soil, Master
Hubert."

"Aye, Lady, but it is not my native soil and for the rest we go where
Fate leads us."

"Fate! What does that word bring to my mind? I have it; yonder Moor of
yours who makes those jewels. He has the very eyes of Fate and I fear
him."

"That is strange, Lady, and yet not so strange, for about this man
there is something fateful. Ever he swears to me that I shall
accompany him to some dim land where he was born, of which land he is
a prince."

Then I told her all the story of Kari, to which she listened open-eyed
and wondering, saying when I had finished,

"So you saved this poor wanderer also, and doubtless he loves you
well."

"Yes, Lady, almost too well, seeing that at times he is jealous of me,
though God knows I did little for him save pick him from a crowd upon
the quay."

"Ah! I guess it, who saw him watching you the other day. Yet it is
strange, for I thought that only women could be jealous of men, and
men of women. Hush! they are mocking us because we talk so friendly."

I looked up, following her glance, and saw that Deleroy and the two
fine ladies between whom he sat, all of whom appeared to have had
enough of wine, were pointing at us. Indeed, in a silence, such as now
and again happens at feasts, I heard one of them say,

"You had best beware lest that fair white dove of yours does not slip
your hand and begin to coo in another's ear, my Lord Deleroy," and
heard his answer,

"Nay, I have her too fast, and who cares for a pining dove whereof the
feathers adorn another's cap?"

Whilst I was wondering what this dark talk might mean the company
broke up, the lady Blanche gliding away through a door at the back of
the dais, followed, as I noted, by Deleroy who seemed flushed and
angry.

Many times I visited that prodigal house which seemed to me to be the
haunt of folk who, however highly placed and greatly favoured at
Court, were as loose in their lives as they were in their talk.
Indeed, although I was no saint, I liked them not at all, especially
the men with their scented hair, turned-up shoes, and party-coloured
clothes. Nor as I thought, did Sir Robert Aleys like them, who,
whatever his faults, was a bluff knight of the older sort, who had
fought with credit in the French wars. Yet I noted that he seemed to
be helpless in their hands, or rather in those of Deleroy, the King's
favourite, who was the chief of all the gang. It was as though that
gay and handsome young man had some hold over the old soldier, yes,
and over his daughter also, though what this might be I could not
guess.

Now I will move on with the tale. In due course the parchments were
signed and delivered, and the money in good gold was paid over on my
behalf, after which the great household at Westminster became more
prodigal than before. But when the time came for the discharge of the
interest due not a groat was forthcoming. Then afterwards there was
talk of my taking over certain of the pledged lands in lieu of this
interest. Sir Robert suggested this and I assented, because Blanche
had told me that it would help her father. Only when the matter was
set on foot by my lawyers was it found that these lands were not his
to transfer, inasmuch as they had been already mortgaged to their
value.

Then there was a fierce quarrel between Sir Robert Aleys and the lord
Deleroy, at which I was present. Sir Robert with many oaths accused
his cousin of having forged his name when he was absent in France,
while Deleroy declared that what he did was done with due authority.
Almost they drew swords on each other, till at length Deleroy took
Aleys aside and with a fierce grin whispered something into his ear
which caused the old knight to sink down on a stool and call out,

"Get you gone, you false rogue! Get out of this house, aye, and out of
England. If I meet you again, by God's Blood I swear that King's
favourite or no King's favourite, I'll throat you like a hog!"

To which Deleroy mocked in answer:

"Good! I'll go, my gentle cousin, which it suits me well to do who
have certain business of the King's awaiting me in France. Aye, I'll
go and leave you to settle with this worthy trader who may hold that
you have duped him. Do it as you will, except in one fashion, of which
you know. Now a word with my cousin Blanche and another at the Palace
and I ride for Dover. Farewell, Cousin Aleys. Farewell, worthy
merchant for whose loss I should grieve, did I not know that soon you
will recoup yourself out of gentle pockets. Mourn not over me over
much, either of you, since doubtless ere so very long I shall return."

Now my blood flamed up and I answered:

"I pray you do not hurry, my lord, lest you should find me waiting for
you with a shield and a sword in place of a warrant and a pen."

He heard and called out, "Fore God, this chapman thinks himself a
knight!"

Then with a mocking laugh he went.



                              CHAPTER VI

                         MARRIAGE--AND AFTER

Sir Robert and I stood facing each other speechless with rage, both of
us. At length he said in a hoarse voice:

"Your pardon, Master Hastings, for the affronts that this bastard
lordling has put upon you, an honest man. I tell you that he is a
loose-living knave, as you would agree if you knew all his story, a
cockatrice that for my sins I have nurtured in my bosom. 'Tis he that
has wasted all my substance; 'tis he that has made free of my name, so
that I fear me you are defrauded. 'Tis he that uses my house as though
it were his own, bringing into it vile women of the Court, and men
that are viler still, however high their names and gaudy their
attire," and he choked with his wrath and stopped.

"Why do you suffer these things, sir?" I asked.

"Forsooth because I must," he answered sullenly, "for he has me and
mine by the throat. This Deleroy is very powerful, Master Hastings. At
a word from him whispered in the King's ear, I, or you, or any man
might find ourselves in the Tower accused of treason, whence we should
appear no more."

Then, as though he wished to get away from the subject of Deleroy and
his hold upon him, he went on:

"I fear me that your money, or much of it, is in danger for Deleroy's
bond is worthless, and since the land is already pledged without my
knowledge, I have nowhere to turn for gold. I tell you that I am an
honest man if one who has fallen into ill company, and this wickedness
cuts me deep, for I know not how you will be repaid."

Now a thought came to me, and as was my bold fashion in all business,
I acted on it instantly.

"Sir Robert Aleys," I said, "should it be pleasing to you and another,
I can see a way in which this debt may be cancelled without shame to
you and yet to my profit."

"Then in God's name speak it! For I see none."

"Sir, in bygone time, as it chanced I was able yonder at Hastings to
do some service to your daughter and in that hour she took my heart."

He started but motioned to me to continue.

"Sir, I love her truly and desire more than anything to make her my
wife. I know she is far above me in station, still although but a
merchant, I am of good descent as I can prove to you. Moreover, I am
rich, for this money that I have advanced to you, or to the lord
Deleroy, is but a small part of my wealth which grows day by day
through honest trade. Sir, if my suit were accepted I should be ready,
not only to help you further on certain terms, but by deed and will to
settle most of it upon the lady Blanche and upon our children. Sir,
what say you?"

Sir Robert tugged at his red beard and stared down at the floor.
Presently he lifted his head and I saw that his face was troubled, the
face of a man, indeed, who is struggling with himself, or, as I
thought, with his pride.

"A fair offer fairly put," he said, "but the question is, not what I
say, but what says Blanche."

"Sir, I do not know who have never asked her. Yet at times I have
thought that her mind towards me is not unkind."

"Is it so? Well, perhaps now that he--well, let that lie. Master
Hastings, you have my leave to try your fortune and I tell you
straight that I hope it will be good. With your wealth your rank may
be soon mended and you are an honest man whom I should be glad to
welcome as a son, for I have had enough of these Court knaves and
painted Jezebels. But if such is your fancy towards Blanche, my
counsel to you is that you put it quickly to the proof--aye, man, at
once. Mark my words, for such a swan as she is many snares are set
beneath the dirty waters of this Court."

"The sooner the better, sir."

"Good. I'll send her to you and, one word more--be not over shy, or
ready to take the first 'no' for an answer, or to listen to the tale
of bygone fancies, such as all women have."

Then suddenly he went, leaving me there wondering at his words and
manner, which I did not understand. This I understood, however, that
he desired that I should marry Blanche, which considering all things I
held somewhat strange, although I had the wealth she lacked.
Doubtless, I thought, it must be because his honour had been touched
on the matter of the trick that had been played upon him without his
knowledge. Then I ceased from these wonderings and gave my thought to
what I should say to Blanche.

I waited a long while and still she did not come, till at last I
believed that she was away from the house, or guessing my business,
had refused to see me. At length, however, she entered the room, so
silently that I who was staring at the great abbey through a window-
place never heard the door open or close. I think that some sense of
her presence must have drawn me, since suddenly I turned to see her
standing before me. She was clad all in white, having a round cap or
coronet upon her head beneath which her shining fair hair was looped
in braids. Her little coat, trimmed with ermine, was fastened with a
single jewel, that ruby heart embraced by serpents which I had given
her. She wore no other ornament. Thus seen she looked most lovely and
most sweet and all my heart went out in yearning for her.

"My father tells me that you wish to speak with me, so I have come,"
she said in her low clear voice, searching my face curiously with her
large eyes.

I bowed my head and paused, not knowing how to begin.

"How can I serve you, who, I fear, have been ill served?" she went on
with a little smile as though she found amusement in my confusion.

"In one way only," I exclaimed, "by giving yourself in marriage to me.
For that I seek, no less."

Now her fair face that had been pale became stained with red and she
let her eyes fall as though she were searching for something among the
rushes that strewed the floor.

"Hearken before you answer," I continued. "When first I spoke with you
on that bloody day at Hastings and you had but just come to womanhood,
I loved you and swore to myself that I would die to save you. I saved
you and we kissed and were parted. Afterwards I tried to put you out
of my heart, knowing that you were set far above me and no meat for
such as I, though still for your sake I wooed no other woman in
marriage. The years went by and fortune brought us together again, and
lo! the old love was stronger than before. I know that I am not worthy
of you who are so high and good and pure. Still----" and I stopped,
lacking words.

She moved uneasily and the red colour left her cheeks as though she
had been suddenly pained.

"Bethink you," she said with a touch of hardness in her voice, "can
one who lives the life I live and keeps my company, remain as holy and
unstained as you believe? If you would gather such a lily, surely you
should seek it in a country garden, not in the reek of London."

"I neither know nor care," I answered, whose blood was all afire. "I
know only that wherever you grow and from whatever soil, you are the
flower I would pluck."

"Bethink you again; an ugly slug might have smeared my whiteness."

"If so the honest sun and rain will recover and wash it and I am a
gardener who scatters lime to shrivel slugs."

"If to this one you will not listen, then hear another argument.
Perchance I do not love you. Would you win a loveless bride?"

"Perchance you can learn of love, or if not, I have enough to serve
for two."

"By my faith! it should not be difficult with a man so honest and so
well favoured. And yet--a further plea. My cousin Deleroy has cheated
you" (here her face hardened), "and I think I am offered to you by my
father in satisfaction of his honour, as men who have no gold offer a
house or a horse to close a debt."

"It is not so. I prayed you of your father. The loss, if loss there
be, is but a chance of trade, such as I face every day. Still, I will
be plain and tell you that I risked it with open eyes, expecting
nothing less, that I might come near to you."

Now she sat herself down in a chair, covering her face with her hands,
and I saw from the trembling of her body that she was sobbing. While I
wondered what to do, for the sight wrung me, she let fall her hands
and there were tears upon her face.

"Shall I tell you all my story, you good, simple gentleman?" she
asked.

"Nay, only two things. Are you the wife of some other man?"

"Not so, though perhaps--once I went near to it. What is the other
question?"

"Do you love some other man so that your heart tells you it is not
possible that you should ever love me?"

"No, I do not," she answered almost fiercely, "but by the Rood! I hate
one."

"Which is no affair of mine," I said, laughing. "For the rest, let it
sleep. Few are they that know life's wars who have no scar to hide,
and I am not one of them, though in truth your lips made the deepest
yonder by the cave at Hastings."

When she heard this she coloured to her brow and forgetting her tears,
laughed outright, while I went on:

"Therefore let the past be and if it is your will, let us set our eyes
upon the future. Only one promise would I ask of you, that never again
will you be alone with the lord Deleroy, since one so light-fingered
with a pen would, I think, steal other things."

"By my soul! the last thing I desire is to be alone with my cousin
Deleroy."

Now she rose from the chair and for a little while we stood facing
each other. Then she very slightly opened her arms and lifted her face
towards me.

Thus did Blanche Aleys and I become affianced, though afterwards, when
I thought the business over, I remembered that never once did she say
that she would marry me. This, however, troubled me little, since in
such matters it is what women do that weighs, not what they say. For
the rest I was mad with love of her, also both then and as the days
went by, more and more did she seem to be travelling on this same road
of Love. If not, indeed she acted well.

Within a month we were wed on a certain October day in the church of
St. Margaret's at Westminster. Once it was agreed all desired to push
on this marriage, and not least Blanche herself. Sir Robert Aleys said
that he wished to be gone from London to his estates in Sussex, having
had enough of the Court and its ways, desiring there to live quietly
till the end; I, being so much in love, was on fire for my bride, and
Blanche herself vowed that she was eager to become my wife, saying
that our courtship, which began on Hastings Hill, had lasted long
enough. For the rest, there was nothing to cause delay. I cancelled
Sir Robert's debt to me and signed a deed in favour of his daughter
and her offspring, whereof I gave a copy to his lawyer and there was
nought else to be done except to prepare my house for her which, with
money at command, was easy.

No great business was made of this marriage, since neither his kin nor
Sir Robert himself wished to noise it about that his only child, the
last of his House, was taking a merchant for her husband to save her
and him from wreck. Nor did I, the merchant, wish to provoke talk
amongst those of my own station, especially as it was known that I had
advanced moneys to these fine folks of the Court. So it came about
that few were asked to the ceremony that was fixed for an early hour,
and of these not many came, because on that day, although it was but
October, a great gale with storms of rain began to blow, the greatest
indeed that I had known in my life.

Thus it chanced that we were wed in an almost empty church while the
fierce wind, thundering against the windows, overcame the feeble voice
of the old priest, so that he looked like one acting in a show without
words. The darkness caused by the thick rain was so deep, also, that
scarce could I see my bride's lovely face or find the finger upon
which I must set the ring.

At length it was done and we went down the aisle to find our horses
whereon we must ride to my house in Cheapside, where there was to be a
feast for my dependents and such of my few friends as cared to come,
among whom were not numbered any grand folk from Westminster. As we
drew near the church door I noted among those who were present those
two gaudy ladies between whom Deleroy had sat at that meal after the
business of the loan was settled. Moreover, I heard one of them say:

"What will Deleroy do when he comes back to find his darling gone?"
and the other answer with a high laugh:

"Seek another, doubtless, or borrow more money from the merchant,
and----" Here I lost their talk in the rush of the wind through the
opened door.

In the porch was old Sir Robert Aleys.

"Mother of God!" he shouted, "may the rest of the lives of you two be
smoother than your nuptials. No Cheapside feast for me, I'm for home
in such fiend's weather. Farewell, son Hubert, and all joy to you.
Farewell, Blanche. Learn to be obedient as a wife and keep your eyes
for your husband's face, that is my counsel to you. Till we meet again
at Christmastide in Sussex, whither I ride to-morrow, farewell to both
of you."

Farewell, it was indeed, for never did either of us look on him again.

Wrapped close in our cloaks we battled through the storm and at
length, somewhat breathless, reached my house in the Cheap where the
garlands of autumn flowers and greenery that I had caused to be
wreathed from posts before the door were all torn away by the gale.
Here I welcomed my wife as best I could, kissing her as she crossed
the threshold and saying certain sweet words that I had prepared, to
which she smiled an answer. Then the women took her to her chamber to
make herself ready and afterwards came the feast, which was sumptuous
of its sort, though the evil weather kept some of the guests away.

Scarcely had it begun when Kari, who of late had been sad-faced and
brooding, and who did not eat with us, entered and whispered to me
that my Master of Lading from the docks prayed to see me at once on a
matter which would brook no delay. Making excuse to Blanche and the
company, I went out to see him in the shop and found the man much
disturbed. It seemed that a certain vessel of mine that I had
rechristened /Blanche/ in honour of my wife, which lay in the stream
ready to sail, was in great danger because of the tempest. Indeed, she
was dragging at her anchor, and it was feared that unless more anchors
could be let down she would come ashore and be wrecked against the
jetty-heads or otherwise. The reason why this had not been done, was
that only the master and one sailor were on board the vessel; the rest
were feasting ashore in honour of my marriage, and refused to row out
to her, saying that the boat would be swamped in the gale.

Now this ship, although not very large, was the best and staunchest
that I owned, being almost new; moreover, the cargo on board of her,
laden for the Mediterranean, was of great value, so great indeed that
its loss would have been very grievous to me. Therefore, it was plain
that I must see to the matter without delay, since from my servant's
account there was no hope that these rebellious sailors would listen
to any lesser man than myself. So, if I would save the ship and her
cargo, I must ride for the docks at once.

Going back to the eating-chamber, in a few words I told my wife and
the guests how the matter stood, praying the oldest man among the
latter to take my place by the bride, which he did unwillingly,
muttering that this was an unlucky marriage feast.

Then it was that Blanche rose, beseeching me earnestly and almost with
tears that I would take her with me to the docks. I laughed at her, as
did the company, but still she besought with much persistence, till I
began to believe that she must be afraid of something, though the
others cried that it was but love and fear lest I should come to harm.

In the end I made her drink a cup of wine with me, but her hand shook
so much that she spilled the cup and the rich red wine ran down her
breast, staining the whiteness of her robe, whereat some women among
the company murmured, thinking it a bad omen. At length with a kiss I
tore myself away, for I could bide no longer and the horses were
waiting presently. So I was riding for the docks as fast as the storm
would suffer, with tiles from the roofs, and when we were clear of
these the torn-off limbs of trees hurtling round me. Kari, I should
say, would have accompanied me, but I took a serving-man, bidding Kari
bide where he was in the house in case he might be of service.

At last we came safely to the docks where I found all as my cargo-
master had described. The ship /Blanche/ was in great peril and
dragging every minute towards a pierhead which, if she struck, would
stave her in and make an end of her. The men, too, were still feasting
in the inn with their wharfside trollops, and some of them half drunk.
I spoke to them, showing them their shame, and saying that if they
would not come, I and my man would take a boat and get aboard alone
and this upon my wedding day. Then they hung their heads and came.

We won to the ship safely though with much toil and danger, and there
found the master almost crazed with fear and doubt of the issue, and
the man with him injured by a falling block. Indeed, this poor captain
clung to the rail, watching the cable as it dragged the anchor and
fearing every moment lest it should part.

The rest is soon told. We got out two more anchors and did other
things such as sailors know, to help in such a case. When all was as
safe as it could be made, I and my man and four sailors started for
the quay, telling the master that I would return upon the morrow. The
wind and current aiding us, we landed safe and sound and at once I
rode back to Cheapside.

Now, though it is short to tell, all this had taken a long while, also
the way was far to ride in such a storm. Thus it came about that it
was nigh to ten o'clock at night when, thanking God, I dismounted at
the gate of my house and bade the servant take the horses to the
stable. As I drew near the door, it opened, which astonished me and,
as the light within showed, there stood Kari. What astonished me still
more, he had the great sword, Wave-Flame, in his hand, though not
drawn, which sword he must have fetched from where it was kept with
the French knight's armour and the shield that bore three arrows as a
cognizance.

Laying his finger on his lips he shut the door softly, then said in a
low voice:

"Master, there is a man up yonder with the lady."

"What man?" I asked.

"That same lord, Master, who came here with her once before to buy
jewels and borrow gold. Hearken. The feast being finished the guests
went away at fall of night, but the wife-lady withdrew herself into
the chamber that is called sun-room (the solar), that up the stairs,
which looks out on the street. About one hour gone there came a knock
at the door. I who was watching, opened, thinking it was you returned,
and there stood that lord. He spoke to me, saying:

"'Moor-man, I know that your master is from home, but that the lady is
here. I would speak with her.'

"Now I would have turned him away, but at that moment the lady
herself, who it seemed was watching, came down the stairs, looking
very white, and said:

"'Kari, let the lord come in. I have matters of your master's business
about which I must talk with him.' So, Master, knowing that you had
lent money to this lord, I obeyed, though I liked it not, and having
fetched the sword which I thought perchance might be needed, I
waited."

This was the substance of what he said, though his talk was more
broken since he never learned to speak English well and helped it out
with words of his own tongue, of which, as I have told, he had taught
me something.

"I do not understand," I exclaimed, when he had finished. "Doubtless
it is little or nothing. Yet give me the sword, for who knows? and
come with me."

Kari obeyed, and as I went up the stairs I buckled Wave-Flame about
me. Also Kari brought two candles of Italian wax lighted upon their
stands. Coming to the door of the solar I tried to open it, but it was
bolted.

"God's truth!" I said, "this is strange," and hammered on the panel
with my fist.

Presently it opened, but before entering it, for I feared some trick,
I stood without and looked in. The room was lit by a hanging lamp and
a fire burned brightly on the hearth, for the night was cold. In an
oak chair by the fire and staring into it sat Blanche still as any
statue. She glanced round and saw me in the light of the candles that
Kari held, and again stared into the fire. Half-way between her and
the door stood Deleroy, dressed as ever in fine clothes, though I
noted that his cape was off and hung over a stool near the fire as
though to dry. I noted also that he wore a sword and a dagger. I
entered the room, followed by Kari, shut the door behind me and shot
the bolt. Then I spoke, asking:

"Why are you here with my wife, Lord Deleroy?"

"It is strange, Master merchant," he answered, "but I was about to put
much the same question to you: namely, why is /my/ wife in your
house?"

Now, while I reeled beneath these words, without turning her head,
Blanche by the fire said:

"He lies, Hubert. I am not his wife."

"Why are you here, my Lord Deleroy?" I repeated.

"Well, if you would know, Master merchant, I bring a paper for you, or
rather a copy of it, for the writ itself will be served on you
to-morrow by the King's officers. It commits you to the Tower under
the royal seal for trading with the King's enemies, a treason that can
be proved against you, of which as you know, or will shortly learn,
the punishment is death," and as he spoke he threw a writing down upon
a side table.

"I see the plot," I answered coldly. "The King's unworthy favourite,
forger and thief, uses the King's authority to try to bring the King's
honest subject to bonds and death by a false accusation. It is a
common trick in these days. But let that be. For the third time I ask
you--why are you here with my new-wed wife and at this hour of the
night?"

"So courteous a question demands a courteous answer, Master merchant,
but to give it I must trouble you to listen to a tale."

"Then let it be like my patience, brief," I replied.

"It shall," he said with a mocking bow.

Then very clearly and quietly he set out a dreadful story, giving
dates and circumstances. Let that story be. The substance of it was
that he had married Blanche soon after she reached womanhood and that
she had borne him a child which died.

"Blanche," I said when he had done, "you have heard. Is this true?"

"Much of it is true," she answered in that strange, cold voice, still
staring at the fire. "Only the marriage was a false one by which I was
deceived. He who celebrated it was a companion of the Lord Deleroy
tricked out as a priest."

"Do not let us wrangle of this matter," said Deleroy. "A man who mixes
with the world like yourself, Master merchant, will know that women in
a trap rarely lack excuses. Still if it be admitted that this marriage
did not fulfil all formalities, then so much the better for Blanche
and myself. If she be your lawful wife and not mine, you, I learn,
have signed a writing in her favour under which she will inherit your
great wealth. That indenture I think you can find no opportunity to
dispute, and if you do I have a promise that the property of a certain
traitor shall pass to me, the revealer of his treachery. Let it
console you in your last moments, Master merchant, to remember that
the lady whom you have honoured with your fancy will pass her days in
wealth and comfort in the company of him whom she has honoured with
her love."

"Draw!" I said briefly as I unsheathed my sword.

"Why should I fight with a base, trading usurer?" he asked, still
mocking me, though I thought that there was doubt in his voice.

"Answer your own question, thief. Fight if you will, or die without
fighting if you will not. For know that until I am dead you do not
leave this room living."

"Until I dead too, O Lord," broke in Kari in his gentle voice, bowing
in his courteous foreign fashion.

As he did so with a sudden motion Kari shook the cloak back from his
body and for the first time I saw that thrust through his leathern
belt was a long weapon, half sword and half dagger, also that its
sharpened steel was bare.

"Oh!" exclaimed Deleroy, "now I understand that I am trapped and that
when you told me, Blanche, that this man would not return to-night and
that therefore we were safe together, you lied. Well, my Lady Blanche,
you shall pay for this trick later."

Whilst he spoke thus, slowly, as though to gain time, he was looking
about him, and as the last word left his lips, knowing that the door
was locked, he dashed for the window, hoping, I suppose, to leap
through the casement, or if that failed, to shout for help. But Kari,
who had set the candles he bore on a side table, that where the
writing lay, read his mind. With a movement more swift than that of a
polecat leaping on its prey, the swiftest indeed that ever I saw, he
sprang between him and the casement, so that Deleroy scarce escaped
pinning himself upon the steel that he held in his long, outstretched
arm. Indeed, I think it pricked his throat, for he checked himself
with an oath and drew his sword, a double-edged weapon with a sharp
point, as long as mine perhaps, but not so heavy.

"I see that I must finish the pair of you. Perchance, Blanche, you
will protect my back as a loving wife should do, until this lout is
done with," he said, swaggering to the last.

"Kari," I commanded, "hold the candles aloft that the light may be
good, and leave this man to me."

Kari bowed and took the copper taper stands, one in either hand, and
held them aloft. But first he placed his long dagger, not back in his
belt, but between his teeth with the handle towards his right hand.
Even then in some strange fashion I noted how terrible looked this
grim dark man holding the candles high with the knife gripped between
his white teeth.

Deleroy and I faced each other in the open space between the fire and
the door. Blanche turned round upon her stool and watched, uttering no
sound. But I laughed aloud for of the end I had no doubt. Had there
been ten Deleroys I would have slain them all. Still presently I found
there was cause to doubt, for when, parrying his first thrust, I drove
at him with all my strength, instead of piercing him through and
through the ancient sword, Wave-Flame, bent in my hand like a bow as
it is strung, telling me that beneath his Joseph's coat of silk
Deleroy wore a shirt of mail.

Then I cried: "/A-hoi!/" as Thorgrimmer my ancestor may have done when
he wielded this same sword, and while Deleroy still staggered beneath
my thrust I grasped Wave-Flame with both hands, wheeled it aloft, and
smote. He lifted his arm round which he had wound his cloak, to
protect his head, but the sword shore through cloak and arm, so that
his hand with the glittering rings upon it fell to the floor.

Again I smote for, as both of us knew, this business was to the death,
and Deleroy fell down dead, smitten through the brain.

Kari smiled gently, and lifting the cloak, shook it out and threw it
over what had been Deleroy. Then he took my sword and while I watched
him idly, cleansed it with rushes from the floor.

Next I heard a sound from the neighbourhood of the fire, and
bethinking me of Blanche turned to speak to her, though what I was
going to say God knows for I do not.

A terrible sight met my eyes and burned itself into my very soul so
that it could never be forgot. Blanche was leaning back in the oak
chair over which flowed her long, fair locks, and the front of her
robe was red. I remembered how she had spilt the wine at the feast and
thought I saw its stain, till presently, still staring, I noted that
it grew and knew it to be caused by another wine, that of her blood.
Also I noted that from the midst of it seen in the lamplight, just
beneath the snake-encircled ruby heart, appeared the little handle of
a dagger.

I sprang to her, but she lifted her hand and waved me back.

"Touch me not," she whispered, "I am not fit, also the thrust is
mortal. If you draw the knife I shall die at once, and first I would
speak. I would have you know that I love you and hoped to be a good
wife to you. What I said was true. That dead man tricked me with a
false marriage when I was scarcely more than a child, and afterwards
he would not mend it with an honest. Perchance he himself was wed, or
he had other reasons, I do not know. My father guessed much but not
all. I tried to warn you when you offered yourself, but you were deaf
and blind and would not see or listen. Then I gave way, liking you
well and thinking that I should find rest, as indeed I do; thinking
also that I should be wealthy and able to shut that villain's mouth
with gold. I never knew he was coming here or even that he had sailed
home from France, but he broke in upon me, having learned that you
were away, and was about to leave when you returned. He came for money
for which he believed that I had wed, and thinking to win me back from
one doomed by his lies to a traitor's death. You know the rest, and
for me there was but one thing to do. Be glad that you are no longer
burdened with me and go find happiness in the arms of a more fortunate
or a better woman. Fly, and swiftly, for Deleroy had many friends and
the King himself loved him as a brother--as well he may. Fly, I say,
and forgive--forgive! Hubert, farewell!"

Thus she spoke, ever more slowly and lower, till with the last word
her life left her lips.



Thus ended the story of my marriage with Blanche Aleys.




                               BOOK II



                              CHAPTER I

                            THE NEW WORLD

They were forever silent now, who, but a breath before, had been so
full of life and the stir of mortal passion; Deleroy dead beneath the
cloak upon the floor, Blanche dead in the oaken chair. We who remained
alive were silent also. I glanced at Kari's face; it was as that of a
stone statue on a tomb, only in it his large eyes shone, noting all
things and, as I imagined in my distraught fancy, filled with triumph
and foreknowledge. Considering it in that strange calm of the spirit
which sometimes supervenes on great and terrible events that for a
while crush its mortality from the soul and set it free to marvel at
the temporal pettiness of all we consider immediate and mighty, I
wondered what was the aspect of my own.

At the moment, I, who on this day had passed the portals of so many
emotions: that of the lover's longing for his bride won at last, only
to be lost again, that of acute and necessary business, that of the
ancient joy of battle and vengeance wreaked upon an evil man; that of
the unshuttering of my own eyes to the flame of a hellish truth, that
of the self-murder and turning to cold clay before those same eyes of
her whom I had hoped to clasp in honest love--I, I say, felt as though
I, too, were dead. Indeed all within was dead, only the shell of flesh
remained alive, and in my heart I echoed the words of my old uncle and
of a wiser than he who went before him--"Vanity of vanities! All is
vanity!"

It was Kari who spoke first, Kari as ever calm and even-voiced, saying
in his broken English of which but the substance is recorded:

"Things have happened, good things I hold, though you, Master, may
think otherwise for a little while. Yet in this rough land of savages
and small justice these things may bring trouble. That lord brought a
writing," and he nodded towards the document on the table, "and talked
of death for /you/, Master--not for himself. And the lady, while she
still lived, she say--'Fly, fly or die!' And now?" and he glanced at
the two bodies.

I looked at him vacantly for the numbness following the first shock
was passing away and all the eating agony of my loss began to fix its
fangs upon my heart.

"Whither can I fly?" I asked. "And why should I fly? I am an innocent
man and for the rest, the sooner I am dead the better."

"My Master must fly," answered Kari in swift, broken words, "because
he still live and is free. Also sorrow behind, joy before. Kari, who
hate women and read heart, Kari who drink this same bitter water long
ago, guess these things coming and think and think. No need that
Master trouble, Kari settle all and tell Master that if he do what he
say, everything come right."

"What am I to do?" I asked with a groan.

"Ship /Blanche/ on great river ready for sea. Master and Kari sail in
her before daybreak. Here leave everything: much land, much wealth--
what matter? Life more than these things which can get again. Come.
No, one minute, wait."

Then he went to the body of Deleroy and with wonderful swiftness took
off it the chain coat he wore beneath his tunic, which he put on his
own body. Also he took his sword and buckled it about him, while the
parchment writ he threw upon the fire. Then he extinguished the
hanging lamp and gave me one of the candles, taking the other himself.

At the door I held up my candle and by the light of it looked my last
upon the ashen face of Blanche, which face I knew must go with me
through all my life's days.

Kari locked the stout oaken door of the solar from the outside and
took me into my chamber, where was the armour of the knight whom I had
killed on Hastings Hill, which armour I had caused to be altered to
fit myself. Swiftly he buckled it on to me, throwing over all a long,
dark robe such as merchants wear. From the cupboard, too, he brought
the big black bow and a sheath of arrows, also a purseful of gold
pieces from where they were kept, and with them the leathern bag which
he had worn when I found him on the quay.

We went into the room where the feast had been held and there drank
some wine, though eat I could not. The cup from which I drank was, as
it chanced, the same in which I had pledged Blanche at the bride
feast. Now I pledged her spirit whereon I prayed God's mercy.

We left the house and in the stable saddled two horses, strong, quiet
beasts. Then by way of the back yard we rode out into the night, none
seeing us, for by now all were asleep, and in that weather the streets
were empty, even of such as walked them in darkness.

We reached the quay I know not how long afterwards whose mind was full
of thoughts that blotted out all else. How strange had been my life--
that was one of them. Within a few years I had risen to great wealth,
and won the woman I desired. And now where was the wealth and where
was the woman, and what was I? One flying his native land by night
with blood upon his hands, the blood of a King's favourite that, if he
were taken, would bring him to the noose. Oh! how great was the
contrast between the morn and the midnight of that day for me! "Vanity
of vanities. All is vanity!"

I think that my mind must have wandered, for when my soul was
swallowed in this deepest pit of hell, it seemed to me that he whom I
had worshipped as a heavenly patron, St. Hubert, appeared striding by
my horse with a shining countenance and said to me:

"Have good courage, Godson, and remember your mother's words--a
wanderer shall you be, but where'er you go the good bow and the good
sword shall keep you safe and I wander with you. Nor does all love die
with one woman's passing breath."

This phantasy, as it were, lanced the abscess of my pain and for a
while I was easier. Also something of hope came back to me. I no
longer desired to die but rather to live and in life, not in the tomb,
to find forgetfulness.

We reached the quay and placed the horses in a shed that served as
stables there, ridding them of their bits and saddles that they might
eat of the hay in the racks. The thought to do this came to me, which
showed that my mind was working again since still I could attend to
the wants of other creatures. Then we went to the quayside where was
made fast that boat in which I had come ashore some hours gone. There
was a moon which now and again showed between the drifting clouds, and
by the light of it I saw that the /Blanche/ lay safe at her anchors
not a bowshot away. The gale had fallen much with the rising of the
moon, as it often does, and so it came about that although the boat
was over-large for two men to handle rightly, Kari and I, by watching
our chance, were able to row it to the ship, on to which we climbed by
the ladder.

Here we found a sailor on watch who was amazed to see us, and with his
help, made the boat fast by the tow rope to the stern of the ship.

This done I caused the captain to be awakened and told him briefly
that as the gale had abated and tide and wind served, I desired to
sail at once. He stared at me, thinking me mad, whom he knew to have
been married but that day.

Surely, he said, I should wait for the light and to gather up those of
the ship's company who were still ashore. I answered that I would wait
for nothing, and when he asked why, was inspired to tell him that it
was because I went about the King's business, having letters from his
Grace to deliver to his Envoys in the South Seas that brooked of no
delay, since on them hung peace or war.

"Beware," I said to him, "how you, or any of you, dare to disobey the
King's orders, for you know that the fate of such is a short shrift
and a long rope."

Then that captain grew frightened and summoned the sailors, who by now
had slept off their drink, and to them he told my commands. They
murmured, pointing to the sky, but when they saw me standing there,
wearing a knight's armour and looking very stern with my hand upon my
sword, when also through Kari I promised them double pay for the
voyage, they, too, grew frightened, and having set some small sails,
got up the anchors.

So it came about that within little more than an hour of our boarding
of that ship she was running out towards the sea as fast as tide and
wind could drive her. I think that it was not too soon, for as the
quay vanished in the gloom I saw men with lanterns moving on it, and
thought to myself that perhaps an alarm had been given and they were
come to take me.

This captain was one who knew the river well, and with the help of
another sailor he steered us down its reaches safely. By dawn we had
passed Tilbury and at full light were off Gravesend racing for the
open sea. Now it was that behind us we perceived from the rushing
clouds that the gale, which had lulled during the night, was coming up
more strongly than ever and still easterly. The sailors grew afraid
again and together with the captain vowed that it was madness to face
the sea in such weather, and that we must anchor, or make the shore if
we could.

I refused to listen to them, whereat they seemed to give way.

At that moment Kari, who had gone forward, called to me. I went to him
and he pointed out to me men galloping along the bank and waving
kerchiefs, as though to signal to us to stop.

"I think, Master," said Kari, "that some have entered the sun-room at
your house."

I nodded and watched the men who galloped and waved. For some minutes
I watched them till suddenly I saw that the ship was altering her
course so that her bow pointed first one way and then another, as
though she were no longer being steered. We ran aft to learn the
cause, and found this.

That crew of dastards, every man of them and the captain with them,
had drawn up the boat in which Kari and I came aboard, that was still
tied to the ship's stern, and slid down the rope into her, purposing
to win ashore before it was too late. Kari smiled as though he were
not astonished, but in my rage I shouted at them, calling them curs
and traitors. I think that the captain heard my words for I saw him
turn his head and look away as though in shame, but not the others.
They were engaged in hunting for the oars, only to find them gone, for
it would seem that they had been washed or had fallen overboard.

Then they tried to set some kind of sail by aid of a boathook, but
while they were doing this, the boat, which had drifted side on to the
great waves raised by the gale upon the face of the broad river,
overturned. I saw some of the men clinging to the boat and one or two
scrambling on to her keel, but what chanced to them and the others I
do not know, who had rushed to the steering gear to set the ship upon
her course again, lest her fate should be that of the boat, or we
should go ashore and be captured by those who galloped on the bank, or
be drowned. This was the last I ever saw or heard of the crew of the
/Blanche/.

The ship's bow came round and, driven by the ever-increasing gale, she
rushed on her course towards the sea, bearing us with her, two weak
and lonely men.

"Kari," I said, "what shall we do? Try to run ashore, or sail on?"

He thought awhile then answered, pointing to those who galloped, now
but tiny figures on the distant bank:

"Master, yonder is death, sure death; and yonder," here he pointed to
the sea, "is death--perhaps. Master, you have a God, and I, Kari, have
another God, mayhap same God with different name. I say--Trust our
Gods and sail on, for Gods better than men. If we die in water, what
matter? Water softer than rope, but I think not die."

I nodded, for the reasoning seemed good. Rather would I be drowned
than fall into the hands of those who were galloping on the shore, to
be dragged back to London and a felon's doom.

So I pressed upon the tiller to bring the /Blanche/ more into mid-
channel, and headed for the sea. Wider and wider grew the estuary and
farther and farther away the shores as the /Blanche/ scudded on
beneath her small sails with the weight of the gale behind her, till
at last there was the open sea.

Within a few feet of the tiller was a deck-house, in which the crew
ate, built of solid oak and clamped with iron. Here was food in
plenty, ale, too, and with these we filled ourselves. Also, leaving
Kari to hold the tiller, I took off my armour and in place of it
clothed myself in the rough sea garments that lay about with tall
greased boots, and then sent him to do likewise.

Soon we lost sight of land and were climbing the great ocean billows,
whose foamy crests rolled and spurted wherever the eye fell. We could
set no course but must go where the gale drove us, away, away we knew
not whither. As I have said, the /Blanche/ was new and strong and the
best ship that ever I had sailed in upon a heavy sea. Moreover, her
hatches were closed down, for this the sailors had done after we
weighed, so she rode the waters like a duck, taking no harm. Oh! well
it was for me that from my childhood I had had to do with ships and
the sailing of them, and flying from the following waves thus was able
to steer and keep the /Blanche's/ poop right in the wind, which seemed
to blow first from one quarter and then from that.



Now over my memory of these events there comes a great confusion and
sense of amazement. All became fragmentary and disjointed, separated
also by what seemed to be considerable periods of time--days or weeks
perhaps. There was a sense of endless roaring seas before which the
ship fled on and on, driven by a screaming gale that I noted dimly
seemed to blow first from the northwest and then steadily from the
east.

I see myself, very distinctly, lashing the tiller to iron rings that
were screwed in the deck beams, and know that I did this because I was
too weak to hold it any longer and desired to set it so that the
/Blanche/ should continue to drive straight before the gale. I see
myself lying in the deck-house of which I have spoken, while Kari fed
me with food and water and sometimes thrust into my mouth little
pellets of I knew not what, which he took from the leathern bag he
wore about him. I remembered that bag. It had been on his person when
I rescued him at the quay, for I had seen it first as he washed
himself afterwards, half full of something, and wondered what it
contained. Later, I had seen it in his hand again when we left my
house after the death of Blanche. I noted that whenever he gave me one
of these pellets I seemed to grow strong for a while, and then to fall
into sleep, deep and prolonged.

After more days--or weeks, I began to behold marvels and to hear
strange voices. I thought that I was talking with my mother and with
my patron, St. Hubert; also that Blanche came to me and explained
everything, showing how little she had been to blame for all that had
happened to me and her. These things made me certain that I was dead
and I was glad to be dead, since now I knew there would be no more
pain or strivings; that the endeavours which make up life from hour to
hour had ceased and that rest was won. Only then appeared my uncle,
John Grimmer, who kept quoting his favourite text at me--"Vanity of
vanities. All is vanity," he said, adding: "Did I not tell you that it
was thus years ago? Now you have learned it for yourself. Only, Nephew
Hubert, don't think that you have finished with vanities yet, as I
have, for I say that there are plenty more to come for you."

Thus he seemed to talk on about this and other matters, such as what
would happen to his wealth and whether the hospitals would be quick to
seize the lands to which he had given it the reversion, till I grew
quite tired of him and wished that he would go away.

Then at length there was a great crash that I think disturbed him, for
he did go, saying that it was only another "vanity," after which I
seemed to fall asleep for weeks and weeks.

I woke up again for a warmth and brightness on my face caused me to
open my eyes. I lifted my hand to shield them from the brightness and
noted with a kind of wonder that it was so thin that the light shone
through it as it does through parchment, and that the bones were
visible beneath the skin. I let it fall from weakness, and it dropped
on to hair which I knew must be that of a beard, which set me
wondering, for it had been my fashion to go clean-shaven. How, then,
did I come by a beard? I looked about me and saw that I was lying on
the deck of a ship, yes, of the /Blanche/ itself, for I knew the shape
of her stern, also certain knots in one of the uprights of the deck-
house that formed a rude resemblance to a human face. Nothing of this
deck-house was left now, except the corner posts between which I lay,
and to the tops of these was lashed a piece of canvas as though to
keep off the sun and the weather.

With difficulty I lifted my head a little and looked about me. The
bulwarks of the ship had gone, but some of the uprights to which the
planks had been nailed remained, and between them I perceived tall-
stemmed trees with tufts of great leaves at the top of them, which
trees seemed to be within a few yards of me. Bright-winged birds flew
about them and in their crowns I saw apes such as the sailors used to
bring home from Barbary. It would seem, then, that I must be in a
river (in fact, it was a little bay or creek, on either side of which
these trees appeared).

Noting these and the creeping plants with beautiful flowers, such as I
had never seen, that climbed up them, and the sweet scents that
floated on the air, and the clear light, now I grew sure that I was
dead and had reached Paradise. Only then how came it that I still lay
on the ship, for never had I heard that such things also went to
Paradise? Nay, I must dream; it was nothing but a dream that I wished
were true, remembering as I did the terrors of that gale-tossed sea.
Or, if I did not dream, then I was in some new world.

While I mused thus I heard a sound of soft footsteps and presently saw
a figure bending over me. It was Kari, very thin and hollow-eyed,
much, indeed, as he had been when I found him on the quay in London,
but still Kari without doubt. He looked at me in his grave fashion,
then said softly:

"Master awake?"

"Yes, Kari," I said, "but tell me, where am I?"

He did not answer at once but went away and returned presently with a
bowl from which he bade me drink, holding it to my lips. I did so,
swallowing what seemed to be broth though I thought it strangely
flavoured, after which I felt much stronger, for whatever was in that
broth ran through my veins like wine. At last he spoke in his queer
English.

"Master," he said, "when we still in Thames River, you ask me whether
we should run ashore into the hands of the hunters who try to catch
us, or sail on. I answer, 'You have God and I have God and better fall
into hands of gods than into hands of men.' So we sail on into the big
storm. For long we sail, and though once it turn, always the
great wind blew, behind us. You grow weak and your mind leave you, but
I keep you alive with medicine that I have and for many days I stay
awake and steer. Then at last my mind leave me, too, and I know no
more. Three days ago I wake up and find the ship in this place. Then I
eat more medicine and get strength, also food from people on the shore
who think us gods. That all the story, except that you live, not die.
Your God and my God bring us here safe."

"Yes, Kari, but where are we?"

"Master, I think in that country from which I come; not in my own land
which is still far away, but still in that country. You remember," he
added with a flash of his dark eyes, "I always say that you and I go
there together one day."

"But what is the country, Kari?"

"Master, not know its name. It big and have many names, but you first
white man who ever come here, that why people think you God. Now you
go sleep again; to-morrow we talk."

I shut my eyes, being so very tired, and as I learned afterwards,
slept for twelve hours or more, to awake on the morning of the
following day, feeling wonderfully stronger and able to eat with
appetite. Also Kari brought me water and washed me, and clean clothes
which he had found in the ship that I put on.

Thus it went on for a long while and day by day I recovered strength
till at length I was almost as I had been when I married Blanche Aleys
in the church of St. Margaret at Westminster. Only now sorrow had
changed me within and without my face had grown more serious, while to
it hung a short yellow beard which, when I looked at my reflection,
seemed to become me well enough. That beard puzzled me much, since
such are not grown in a day, although it is true that as yet it was
not over-long. Weeks must have passed since it began to sprout upon my
chin and as we had been but three days in this place when I woke up,
those weeks without doubt were spent upon the sea.

Whither, then, had we come? Driving all the while before a great gale,
that for most of our voyage had blown from the east, as, if Kari were
right, we had done, this country must be very far away from England.
That it was so, indeed there could be no doubt, since here everything
was different. For example, having been a mariner from my childhood, I
had been taught and observed something of the stars, and noted that
the constellations had changed their places in the heavens, also that
some with which I was familiar were missing, while other new ones had
appeared. Further, the heat was great and constant, even at night
being more than that of our hottest summer day, and the air was full
of stinging insects, which at first troubled me much, though
afterwards I grew hardened to them. In short, everything was changed,
and I was indeed in a new world that was not told of in Europe, but
what world? What world? At least the sea joined it to the old, for
beneath me was still the /Blanche/, which timber by timber I had seen
built up upon the shores of Thames from oaks cut in my own woods.

As soon as I was strong enough, I went over the ship, or what was left
of her. It was a marvel that she had floated for so long, since her
hull was shattered. Indeed, I do not think she could have done so,
save for the fine wool that was packed into the lower part of her,
which wool seemed to have swollen when it grew wet and to have kept
the water out. For the rest she was but a hulk, since both her masts
were gone, and much of the deck with them. Still she had kept afloat
and driving into this creek, had beached herself upon the mud as
though it were the harbour that she sought.

How had we lived through such a journey? The answer seemed to be,
after we were too weak to find or take food, by means of the drug that
Kari cherished in his skin bag, and water of which there was plenty
left at hand in barrels, since the /Blanche/ had been provisioned for
a long voyage to Italy and farther. At least we had lived for weeks,
and weeks, being still young and very strong, and not having been
called upon to suffer great cold, since it would appear that although
the gale continued after the first few days of our flight before it,
the weather had turned warm.

During this time of my recovery, every morning Kari would go ashore,
which he did by means of planks set upon the mud, since we were within
a few feet of the bank of the creek into which a streamlet ran. Later
he would return, bringing with him fish and wildfowl, and corn of a
sort that I did not know, for its grains were a dozen times the size
of wheat, flat-sided, and if ripe, of a yellow colour, which he said
he had purchased from those who dwelt upon the land. On this good food
I feasted, washing it down with ale and wine from the ship's stores;
indeed never before did I eat so much, not even when I was a boy.

At length, one morning Kari made me put on my armour, the same which I
had taken from the French knight, and fled in from London, that he had
burnished till it shone like silver, and seat myself in a chair upon
what remained of the poop of the ship. When I asked him why, he
answered in order that he might show me to the inhabitants of that
land. In this chair he bade me sit and wait, holding the shield upon
my arm and the bare sword in my right hand.

As I had come to know that Kari never did anything without a reason
and remembered that I was in a strange country where, lacking him, I
should not have lived or could continue to do so, I fell into his
humour. Moreover, I promised that I would remain still and neither
speak, nor smile, nor rise from my chair unless he bade me. So there I
sat glittering in the hot sunshine which burned me through the armour.

Then Kari went ashore and was absent for some time. At length among
the trees and undergrowth I heard the sound of people talking in a
strange tongue. Presently they appeared on the bank of the creek, a
great number of them, very curious people, brown-skinned with long,
lank black hair and large eyes, but not over-tall in stature; men,
women and children together.

Among them were some who wore white robes whom I took to be their
gentlefolk, but the most of them had only cloths or girdles about
their middles. Leading the throng was Kari, who, as it appeared from
the bushes, waved his hand and pointed me out seated in the shining
armour on the ship, the visor up to show my face and the long sword in
my hand. They stared, then, with a low, sighing exclamation, one and
all fell upon their faces and rubbed their brows upon the ground.

As they lay there Kari addressed them, waving his arms and pointing
towards me from time to time. Afterwards I learned that he was telling
them I was a god, for which lie may his soul be forgiven.

The end of it was that he bade them rise and led certain of them who
wore the white robes across the planks to the ship. Here, while they
hung back, he advanced towards me, bowing and kissing the air till he
drew near, then he went upon his knees and laid his hands upon my
steel-clad feet. More, from the bosom of his robe he drew out flowers
which he placed upon my knees as though in offering.

"Now, Master," he whispered to me, "rise and wave your sword and shout
aloud, to show that you are alive and not an image."

So up I sprang, circling Wave-Flame about my head and roaring like any
bull of Bashan, for my voice was always loud and carried far. When
they saw the bright sword whirling through the air and heard these
bellowings, uttering cries of fear, those poor folk fled. Indeed most
of them fell from the plank into the mud, where one stuck fast and was
like to drown, had not Kari rescued him, which his brethren were in
too great haste to do.

After they had gone Kari came and said that everything went well and
that henceforward I was not a man but the Spirit of the Sea come to
earth, such a spirit as had never been dreamed of even by the wizards.



Thus then did Hubert of Hastings become a god among those simple
people, who had never before so much as heard of a white man, or seen
armour or a sword of steel.



                              CHAPTER II

                            THE ROCKY ISLE

For another week or more I remained upon the /Blanche/ waiting till my
full strength returned, also because Kari said I must do so. When I
asked him why, he replied for the reason that he wished news of my
coming to spread far and wide throughout the land from one tribe to
another, which it would do with great swiftness, flying, as he put it,
like a bird. Meanwhile, every day I sat upon the poop in the armour
for an hour or more, and both these people and others from afar came
to look at me, bringing me presents in such quantity that we knew not
what to do with them. Indeed, they built an altar and sacrificed wild
creatures to me, and birds, burning them with fire. Both those that I
had seen and the other folk from a long way off made this offering.

At last one night, when, having eaten, Kari and I were seated together
in the moonshine before we slept, I turned on him suddenly, hoping
thus to surprise the truth out of his secret heart, and said:

"What is your plan, Kari? For, know, I weary of this life."

"I was waiting for the Master to ask that question," he replied with
his gentle smile. (Again, I give not the very words he spoke in his
bad English, but the substance of them.) "Now will the Master be
pleased to listen? As I have told the Master, I believe that the gods,
his God and my God, have brought me back to that part of the world
which is unknown to the Master, where I was born. I believed this from
the first hour that my eyes opened on it after our swoon, for I knew
the trees and the flowers and the smell of the earth, and saw that the
stars in the heavens stood where I used to see them. When I went
ashore and mingled with the natives, I discovered that this belief was
right, since I could understand something of their talk and they could
understand something of mine. Moreover, among them was a man who came
from far away, who said that he had seen me in past years, wandering
like one mad, only that this man whom he had seen wore the image of a
certain god about his neck, whose name was too high for him to
mention. Then I opened my robe and showed him that which I wear about
my neck, and he fell down and worshipped it, crying out that I was the
very man."

"If so, it is marvellous," I said. "But what shall we do?"

"The Master can do one of two things. He can stop here, where these
simple people will make him their king and give him wives and all that
he desires, and so live out his life, since of return to the land
whence he came there is no hope."

"And if there were I would not go," I interrupted.

"Or," went on Kari, "he can try to travel to my country. But that is
very far away. Something of the journey which I made when I was mad
comes back and tells me that it is very, very far away. First, yonder
mountains must be crossed till another sea is reached, which is no
great journey, though rough. Then the coast of that sea must be
followed southward, for I know not how far, but, as I think, for
months or years of journeying, till at length the country of my people
is reached. Moreover, that journeying is hard and terrible, since the
road runs through forests and deserts where dwell savage tribes and
huge snakes and wild beasts, like those planted on the flag of your
country, and where famine and sicknesses are common. Therefore my
counsel to the Master is that he should leave it unattempted."

Now I thought awhile, and asked what he meant to do if I took this
counsel of his. To which he replied:

"I shall wait here awhile till I see the Master made a king among
these people and established in his rule. Then I shall start on that
journey alone, hoping that what I could do when I was mad I shall be
able to do again when I am not mad."

"I thought it," I said. "But tell me, Kari, if we were to make this
journey and perchance live to reach your people, how would they
welcome us?"

"I do not know, Master; but I think that of the master they would make
a god, as will all the other people of this country. Perhaps, too,
they will sacrifice this god that his strength and beauty may enter
into them. As for me, some of them will try to kill me and others will
cling to me. Who will conquer I do not know, and to me it matters
little. I go to take my own and to be avenged, and if in seeking
vengeance I die--well, I die in honour."

"I understand," I said. "And now, Kari, let us start as soon as
possible before I become as mad from staring at those trees and
flowers and those big-eyed natives, that you say would make me a king,
as you tell me you were when you left your country. Whether we shall
ever find that country I cannot say. But at least we shall have done
our best and, if we fail, shall perish seeking, as in this way or in
that it is the lot of all brave men to do."

"The Master has spoken," said Kari, even more quietly than usual,
though as he spoke I saw his dark eyes flash and a trembling as of joy
run down his body. "Knowing all, he has made his choice, and whatever
happens, being what it is, he will not blame me. Yet because the
Master has thus chosen, I say this--that if we reach my country, and
if, perchance, I become a king there, even more than before I shall be
the Master's servant."

"That is easy to promise now, Kari, but it will be time to talk of it
when we do reach your land," I said, laughing, and asked him when we
were to start.

He replied not yet awhile, as he must make plans, and that in the
meantime I must walk upon the shore so that my legs might grow strong
again. So there every day I walked in the cool of the morning and in
the evening, not going out of sight of the wreck. I went armed and
carrying my big bow, but saw no one, since the natives had been warned
that I should walk and must not be looked upon while I did so.
Therefore, even when I passed through one of their villages of huts
built of mud and thatched with leaves, it seemed to be deserted.

Still, in the end the bow did not come amiss, for one evening, hearing
a little noise in a big tree under which I was about to pass that
reminded me of the purring of a cat, I looked up and saw a great beast
of the tiger sort lying on the bough of the tree and watching me. Then
I drew the bow and sent an arrow through that beast, piercing it from
side to side, and down it came roaring and writhing, and biting at the
arrow till it died.

After this I returned to the ship and told Kari what had happened. He
said it was fortunate I had killed the beast, which was of a very
fierce kind, and if I had not seen it, would have leapt on me as I
passed under the tree. Also he sent natives to skin it who when they
saw that it was pierced through and through by the arrow, were amazed
and thought me an even greater god than before, their own bows being
but feeble and their arrows tipped with bone.



Three days after the killing of this beast we started on our journey
into a land unknown. For a long while before Kari and I had been
engaged in collecting all the knives we could find in the ship, also
arrows, nails, axes, tools of carpentering, clothes, and I know not
what else besides, which goods we tied up in bundles wrapped in
sailcloth, each bundle weighing from thirty to forty pounds, to serve
as presents to natives or to trade away with them. When I asked who
would carry them, Kari answered that I should see. This I did at dawn
on the following morning when there arrived upon the shore a great
number of men, quite a hundred indeed, who brought with them two
litters made of light wood jointed like reeds, only harder, in which
Kari said he and I were to be carried. Among these men he parcelled
out the loads which they were to bear upon their heads, and then said
that it was time for us to start in the litters.

So we started, but first I went down into a cabin and kneeling on my
knees, thanked God for having brought me safe so far, and prayed Him
and St. Hubert to protect me on my further wanderings, and if I died,
to receive my soul. This done I left the ship and while the natives
bowed themselves about me, entered my litter, which was comfortable
enough, having grass mats to lie on and other mats for curtains, very
finely woven, so that they would turn even the heaviest rain.

Then away we went, eight men bearing the pole to which each litter was
slung on their shoulders, while others carried the bundles upon their
heads. Our road ran through forest uphill, and on the crest of the
first hill I descended from the litter and looked back.

There in the creek below lay the wreck of the /Blanche/, now but a
small black blot showing against the water, and beyond it the great
sea over which we had travelled. Yonder broken hulk was the last link
which bound me to my distant home thousands of miles across the ocean,
that home, which my heart told me I should never see again, for how
could I win back from a land that no white foot had ever trod?

On the deck of this ship Blanche herself had stood and smiled and
talked, for once we visited it together shortly before our marriage,
and I remembered how I had kissed her in its cabin. Now Blanche was
dead by her own hand and I, the great London merchant, was an outcast
among savages in a country of which I did not even know the name,
where everything was new and different. And there the ship with her
rich cargo, after bearing us so bravely through weeks of tempest, must
lie until she rotted in the sun and rain and never again would my eyes
behold her. Oh! then it was that a sense of all my misery and
loneliness gripped my heart as it had not done before since I rode
away after killing Deleroy with the sword Wave-Flame, and I wondered
why I had been born, and almost hoped that soon I might die and go to
seek the reason.

Back into the litter I crept and there hid my face and wept like a
child. Truly I, the prosperous merchant of London town who might have
lived to become its mayor and magistrate and win nobility, was now an
outcast adventurer of the humblest. Well, so God had decreed, and
there was no more to say.

That night we encamped upon a hilltop past which rushed a river in the
vale below and were troubled with heat and insects that hummed and
bit, for to these as yet I was not accustomed, and ate of the food
that we had brought with us, dried flesh and corn.

Next morning with the light we started on again, up and down mountains
and through more forests, following the course of the river and the
shores of a lake. So it went on until on the third evening from high
land we saw the sea beneath us, a different sea from that which we had
left, for it seemed that we had been crossing an isthmus, not so wide
but that if any had the skill, a canal might be cut across it joining
those two great seas.

Now it was that our real travels began, for here, after staring at the
stars and brooding apart for a long while, Kari turned southwards.
With this I had nothing to do who did not greatly care which way he
turned. Nor did he speak to me of the matter, except to say that his
god and such memory as remained to him through his time of madness
told him that the land of his people lay towards the south, though
very far away.

So southwards we went, following paths through the forests with the
ocean on our right hand. After a week of this wearisome marching we
came to another tribe of natives of whose talk those with us could
understand enough to tell them our story. Indeed the rumour that a
white god had appeared in the land out of the sea had already reached
them, and therefore they were prepared to worship me. Here our people
left us, saying that they dared not go further from their own country.

The scene of the departure was strange, since every one of them came
and rubbed his forehead in the dust before me and then went away,
walking backwards and bowing. Still their going did not make a great
difference to us, since the new tribe was much as the old one, though
if anything, rather less clothed and more dirty. Also it accepted me
as a god without question and gave us all the food we needed.
Moreover, when we left their land men were provided to carry the
litters and the loads.

Thus, then, passing from tribe to tribe, we travelled on southward,
ever southwards, finding always that the rumour of the coming of "the
god" had gone before us. So gentle were all these people, that not
once did we meet with any who tried to harm us or to steal our goods,
or who refused us the best of what they had. Our adventures, it is
true, were many. Thus, twice we came to tribes that were at war with
other tribes, though on my appearance they laid down their arms, at
any rate, for a time, and bore our litters forward.

Again, sometimes we met tribes who were cannibals and then we suffered
much from want of meat, since we dared not touch their food unless it
were grain. In the town of the first of these cannibal people, being
moved with fury, I killed a man whom I found about to murder a child
and eat her, sweeping off his head with my sword. For this deed I
expected that they would murder us, but they did not. They only
shrugged their shoulders and saying that a god can do as he pleases,
took away the slain man and ate him.

Sometimes our road ran through terrible forests where the great trees
shut out the light of day, and a path must be hacked through the
undergrowth. Sometimes it was haunted by tigers or tree lions such as
I have spoken of, against which we must watch continuously, especially
at night, keeping the brutes off by means of fires. Sometimes we were
forced to wade great rivers, or worse still, to walk over them on
swaying bridges made of cables of twisted reeds that until I grew
accustomed to them caused my head to swim, though never did I permit
myself to show fear before the natives. Again, once we came to swampy
lands that were full of snakes which terrified me much, especially
after I had seen some natives whom they bit, die within a few minutes.

Other snakes there were also, as thick as a man's body, and four or
five paces in length, which lived in trees and killed their food by
coiling round it and pressing it to death. These snakes, it was said,
would take men in this fashion, though I never saw one of them do so.
At any rate, they were terrible to look on, and reminded me of their
forefather through whose mouth Satan talked with Mother Eve in the
Garden of Eden, and thus brought us all to woe.

Once, too, on the bank of a great river, I saw such a snake that at
the sight of it my knees knocked together. By St. Hubert, the beast
was sixty feet or more in length; its head was of the bigness of a
barrel, and its skin was of all the colours of the rainbow. Moreover,
it seemed to hold me with its eyes, for till it slipped away into the
river I could not move a foot.

Month after month we travelled thus, covering a matter of perhaps five
miles a day, since sometimes the country was open and we crossed it
with speed. Yet although our dangers were so many, strangely enough,
during all this time, even in that heat neither of us fell sick, as I
think because of the herb which Kari carried in his bag, that I found
was named /Coca/, whereof we obtained more as we went and ate from
time to time. Nor did we ever really suffer from starvation, since
when we were hungry we took more of this herb which supported us until
we could find food. These mercies I set down to the good offices of
St. Hubert watching from Heaven over me, his poor namesake and godson,
though perhaps the skill and courage of Kari which provided against
everything had something to do with them.

At length, in the ninth month of our travelling, as Kari reckoned it
by means of knots which he tied on pieces of native string, for I had
long lost count of time, we came to the borders of a great desert that
the natives said stretched southwards for a hundred leagues and more
and was without water. Moreover, to the east of this desert rose a
chain of mountains bordered by precipices up which no man could climb.
Here, therefore, it seemed as though our journey must end, since Kari
had no knowledge of how he crossed or went round this desert in his
madness of bygone years, if indeed he ever travelled that road at all,
a matter of which I was not certain.

For a week or more we remained among the tribe that lived in a
beautiful watered valley upon the borders of this desert, wondering
what we should do. For my part I was by now so tired of travelling
upon an endless quest that I should have been glad to stay among that
tribe, a very gentle and friendly people, who like all the rest
believed me to be a god, and make my home there till I died. But this
was not Kari's mind, which was set fiercely upon winning back to his
own country that he believed to lie towards the south.

Day by day we sat there regaining our strength upon the good food of
that valley, and staring first at the desert to the south, then at the
precipices on our left hand, and lastly at the ocean upon our right.
Now this people, I should say, drew their wealth from the sea as well
as from the land, since they were great fishermen and went out upon it
in rude boats or rafts made of a wooden frame to which were lashed
blown-up skins and bundles of dried reeds. Upon these boats, frail as
they seemed, such as further south were called balsas, they made
considerable journeys to distant islands where they caught vast
quantities of fish, some of which they used to manure their land.
Moreover, besides the oars, they rigged a square cotton sail upon the
balsas which enabled them to run before the wind without labour,
steering the craft by means of a paddle at the stern.

While we were there I observed that on the springing up of a wind from
the north, although it was of no great strength, the /balsas/ all came
to shore and were drawn up out of reach of the waves. When I inquired
why through Kari, the answer given was because the fishing season was
over, since that wind from the north would blow for a long time
without changing and those who went out in it upon the sea might be
driven southwards to return no more. They stated, indeed, that often
this had happened to venturesome men who had vanished away and been
lost.

"If you wish to travel south, there is a way of doing so," I said to
Kari.

At the time he made no answer, but on the following day asked me
suddenly if I dared attempt such a journey.

"Why not?" I answered. "It is as easy to die in the water as on land
and I weary of journeying through endless swamps and forests or of
crossing torrents and climbing mountain ridges."

The end of it was that for a knife and a few nails Kari purchased the
largest /balsa/ that these people had, provisioning it with as much
dried fish, corn and water in earthenware jars as it would carry
together with ourselves, and such of our remaining goods as we wished
to take with us. Then we announced that I, the god who had come out of
the sea, desired to return into the sea with himself, my servant.

So on a certain fine morning when the wind was blowing steadily but
not too strongly from the north, we embarked upon that /balsa/ while
the simple savages made obeisance with wonder in their eyes, hoisted
the square canvas, and sailed away upon what I suppose was one of the
maddest voyages ever made by man.

Although it was so clumsy the /balsa/ moved through the water at a
good rate, covering quite two leagues the hour, I should say, before
that strong and steady wind. Soon the village that we had left
vanished; then the mountains behind it grew dim and in time vanished
also, and there remained nothing but the great wilderness upon our
left and the vast sea around. Steering clear of the land so as to
avoid sunken rocks, we sailed on all that day and all the night that
followed, and when the light came again perceived that we were running
past a coastline that was backed by high mountains on some of which
lay snow. By the second evening these mountains had become tremendous,
and between them I saw valleys down which ran streams of water.

Thus we went on for three days and nights, the wind from the north
blowing all the while and the /balsa/ taking no hurt, by the end of
which time I reckon that we had travelled as far along the coast as we
had done in six months when we journeyed over land, at which I
rejoiced. Kari rejoiced also, because he said that the shape and
greatness of the mountains we were passing reminded him of those of
his own country, to which he believed that we were drawing near.

On the fourth morning, however, our troubles began, since the friendly
wind from the north grew steadily stronger, till at length it rose to
a gale. Soon our little rag of canvas was torn away, but still we
rushed on before the following seas at a very great speed.

Now I thought of trying to make the land, but found that we could not
do so with the oars, because of the current that set out towards the
ocean against which it was impossible to urge our clumsy craft.
Therefore we must content ourselves with trying to keep her head
straight with the steering oar, but even then we were often whirled
round and round.

About two hours after noon the sky clouded over, and there burst upon
us a great thunder-storm with torrents of rain; also the wind grew
stronger and stronger.

Now we could no longer steer or do anything except lie flat upon the
bottom of the /balsa/, gripping the cords with which it was tied
together, to save ourselves from being washed overboard, since often
the foaming crests of the waves broke upon us. Indeed, it was
marvellous that this frail craft should hang together at all, but
owing to the lightness of the reeds and the blown-up skins that were
tied in them, still she floated and, whirling round and round, sped
upon her southward path. Yet I knew that this could not endure for
very long, and committed my soul to God as well as I was able in my
half-drowned state, wishing that my miseries were ended.

The darkness came down, but still the thunder roared and the lightning
blazed, and by the flare of it I caught sight of snow-capped mountains
far away upon the coast, also of Kari clinging to the reeds of the
/balsa/ at my side, and from time to time kissing the golden image of
Pachacamac which hung about his neck. Presently he set his lips
against my ear and shouted:

"Be bold! Our gods are still with us in storm."

"Yes," I answered, "and soon we shall be with our gods--in peace."

After this I heard no more of him, and fell to thinking with such wits
as were left to me of how many perils we had passed since we saw the
shores of Thames, and that it seemed sad that all should have been for
nothing, since it would have been better to die at the beginning than
now at the end, after so much misery. Then the glare of the lightning
shone upon the handle of the sword Wave-Flame, which was still
strapped about me, and I remembered the rune written upon it which my
mother had rendered to me upon the morning of the fight against the
Frenchmen. How did it run?

  He who lifts Wave-Flame on high
  In love shall live and in battle die.
  Storm-tossed o'er wide seas shall roam
  And in strange lands shall make his home.
  Conquering, conquered shall he be
  And far away shall sleep with me.

It fitted well, though of the love I had known little and that most
unhappy, and the battle in which I must die was one with water. Also,
I had conquered nothing who myself was conquered by Fate. In short,
the thing could be read two ways, like all prophecies, and only one
line of it was true beyond a doubt--namely, that Wave-Flame and I
should sleep together.

Awhile later the lightning shone awesomely, like to the swords of a
whole army of destroying angels, so that the sky became alive with
fire. In its light for an instant I saw ahead of us great breakers,
and beyond them what looked like a dark mass of land. Now we were in
them, for the first of those hungry, curling waves got a hold of the
/balsa/ and tossed it up dizzily, then flung it down into a deep
valley of water. Another came and another, till my senses reeled and
went. I cried to St. Hubert, but he was a land saint and could not
help me; so I cried to Another greater than he.

My last vision was of myself riding a huge breaker as though it were a
horse. Then there came a crash and darkness.



Lo! it seemed to me as though one were calling me back from the depths
of sleep. With trouble I opened my eyes only to shut them again
because of the glare of the light. Then after a while I sat up, which
gave me pain, for I felt as if I had been beaten all over, and looked
once more. Above me shone the sun in a sky of deepest blue; before me
was the sea almost calm, while around were rocks and sand, among which
crawled great reptiles that I knew for turtles, as I had seen many of
them in our wanderings. Moreover, kneeling at my side, with the sword
that he had taken from the body of Deleroy still strapped about him,
was Kari, who bled from some wound and was almost white with encrusted
salt, but otherwise seemed unharmed. I stared at him, unable to open
my mouth from amazement, so it was he who spoke the first, saying, in
a voice that had a note of triumph in it:

"Did I not tell you that the gods were with us? Where is your faith, O
White Man! Look! They have brought me back to the land of which I am
Prince."

Now there was that in Kari's tone which in my weak state angered me.
Why did he scold me about faith? Why did he address me as "White Man"
instead of "Master"? Was it because he had reached a country where he
was great and I was nothing? I supposed so, and answered;

"And are these your subjects, O noble Kari?" and I pointed to the
crawling turtles. "And is this the rich and wondrous land where gold
and silver are as mud?" and I pointed to the barren rocks and sand
around.

He smiled at my jest, and answered more humbly:

"Nay, Master, yonder is my land."

Then I looked, following his glance, and saw many leagues way across
the water two snowclad peaks rising above a bank of clouds.

"I know those mountains," he went on; "without doubt they are one of
the gateways of my land."

"Then we might as well be in London for all the hope we have of
passing that gate, Kari. But tell me what has chanced."

"This, I think. A very great wave caught us and threw us right over
those rocks on to the shore. Look--there is the /balsa/," and he
pointed to a broken heap of reeds and pierced skins.

With his help I rose and went to it. Now none could know that it had
been a boat. Still, the /balsa/ it was and nothing else, and tied in
its tangled mass still remained those things which we had brought with
us, such as my black bow and armour, though all the jars were broken.

"It has borne us well, but will never bear us again," I said.

"That is so, Master. But if we were in my own country yonder I would
set its fragments in a case of gold and place them in the Temple of
the Sun as a memorial."

Then we went to a pool of rainwater that lay in a hollow rock near by,
and drank our fill, for we were very thirsty. Also among the ruins of
the /balsa/ we found some of the dried fish that was left to us, and
having washed it, filled ourselves. After this we limped to the crest
of the land behind and perceived that we were on a little island,
perhaps two hundred English acres in extent, whereon nothing grew
except some coarse grass. This island, however, was the haunt of great
numbers of seafowl which nested there, also of the turtles that I have
mentioned, and of certain beasts like seals or otters.

"At least we shall not starve," I said, "though in the dry season we
may die of thirst."



Now there on that island we remained for four long months. For food we
ate the turtles, which we cooked over fires that Kari made by
cunningly twirling a pointed piece of driftwood in the hollow of
another piece that he filled with the dust of dried grass. Had he
lacked that knowledge we must have starved or lived on raw flesh. As
it was, we had plenty with this meat and that of birds and their eggs,
also of fish that we caught in the pools when the tide was down. From
the shells of the turtles, by the help of stones, we built us a kind
of hut to keep off the sun and the rain, which in that hot place was
sufficient shelter; also, when the stench was out of them, we used
other shells in which to catch rainwater that we stored as best we
could against seasons of drought. Lastly, with my big bow which was
saved with the armour, I shot sea-otters, and from their pelts we made
us garments after rubbing the skins with turtle fat and handling them
to make them soft.

Thus, then, we lived from moon to moon upon that desert place, till I
thought I should go mad with loneliness and despair, for no help came
near us. There were the mountains of the mainland far away, but
between them and us stretched leagues of sea that we could not swim,
nor had we anything of which to make a boat.

"Here we must remain until we die!" at last I cried in my
wretchedness.

"Nay," answered Kari, "our gods are still with us and will save us in
their season."



This, indeed, they did in a strange fashion.



                             CHAPTER III

                       THE DAUGHTER OF THE MOON

For the fourth time since we were cast away on this island the huge
full moon shone in a sky of wondrous blue. Kari and I watched it rise
between the two snow-clad peaks far away that he had called a gateway
to his land, which was so near to us and yet it would seem more
distant than Heaven itself. Heaven we might hope to reach upon the
wings of spirit when we died, but to that country how could we come?

We watched that great moon climb higher and higher up a ladder of
little bar-like clouds, till wearying we let our eyes fall upon the
glittering pathway which its light made upon the bosom of the placid
sea. Suddenly Kari stared and stared.

"What is it?" I asked idly.

"I thought I saw something yonder far away where Quilla's footsteps
make the waters bright," he said, speaking in his own language in
which now we often talked together.

"Quilla's?" I exclaimed. "Oh! I forgot: that is the lady moon's name
in your tongue, is it not? Well, come, Quilla, and I will wed and
worship you, as 'tis said the ancients did, and never turn to look
upon another, be she woman, or goddess, or both. Only come and take me
from this accursed isle and in payment I'll die for you, if need be,
when first I've taught you how to love as star or woman never loved
before."

"Hush!" said Kari in a grave voice, when he had listened to this mad
stuff that burst through my lips from the spring of a mind distraught
by misery and despair.

"Why should I hush?" I asked. "Is it not pleasant to think of the moon
wearing a lovely woman's shape and descending to give a lonely mortal
love and comfort?"

"Because, Master, to me and my people the moon is a goddess who hears
prayer and answers it. Suppose, then, that she heard you and answered
you and came to you and claimed your love, what then?"

"Why, then, friend Kari," I raved on, "then I should welcome her, for
love goes a begging, ready as ripe fruit to be plucked by the first
hand if it be fair enough, ready to melt beneath the first lips if
they be warm enough. 'Tis said that it is the man who loves and the
woman who accepts the love. But that is not true. It is the man, Kari,
who waits to be loved and pays back just as much as is given to him,
and no more, like an honest merchant; for if he does otherwise, then
he suffers for it, as I have learned. Therefore, come, Quilla, and
love as a Celestial can and I swear that step by step I'll keep pace
with you in flesh and spirit through Heaven, or through Hell, since
love I must have, or death."

"I pray you, talk not so," said Kari again, in a frightened voice,
"since those words of yours come from the heart and will be heard. The
goddess is a woman, too, and what woman will turn from such a bait?"

"Let her take it, then. Why not?"

"Because, O friend, because /Quilla/ is wed to /Yuti/; the Moon is the
Sun's wife, and if the Sun grows jealous what will happen to the man
who has robbed the greatest of the world's gods?"

"I do not know and I do not care. If Quilla would but come and love
me, I'd take my chance of Yuti whom as a Christian I defy."

Kari shuddered at this blasphemy, then having once more scanned that
silver pathway on the waters, but without avail for the great fish or
drifting tree or whatever he had seen, was gone, prayed after his
fashion at night, to Pachacamac, Spirit of the Universe, or to the Sun
his servant, god of the world, I know not which, and rolling himself
in his rug of skins, crept into our little hut to sleep.

But as yet I did not sleep, for though Kari hated both, this talk of
love and women had stirred my blood and made me wakeful. So I took a
rough comb that I had fashioned from the shell of a turtle, and
dragged it through my long fair beard, which, growing fast, now hung
down far upon my breast, and through the curling hair that lay upon my
shoulders, for I had become as other wild men are, and sang to myself
there by the little fire which we kept burning day and night and tried
to think of happy things that never should I know again.

At length the fit passed and I grew weary and laid myself down by the
fire, for the night being so fine and warm I would not go into the
hut, and there sleep found me.

I dreamed in my sleep. I dreamed that a very beautiful woman who wore
upon her naked breast the emblem of the moon fashioned in crystal,
stood over me, looking down upon me with large dark eyes. And as she
looked she sighed. Thrice she sighed, each time more deeply than the
last. Then she knelt down by me--or so it seemed in my dream, and laid
a tress of her long dark hair against my yellow locks, as though she
would match them together. She did more, indeed--in my dream--for
lifting that tress of fragrant hair, she let it fall like thistledown
across my face and mouth, and then kissed the hair, for I felt her
breath reach me through its strands.

The dream ended thus, though I wished very much that it would go on,
and I felt as though it had gone away as such visions do. Awhile
later, as I suppose, I awoke quite suddenly, and opened my eyes.
There, near to me, glittering in the full light of the brilliant moon,
stood the woman of my dream, only now her naked breast was covered
with a splendid cloak broidered with silver, and on her dark locks was
a feathered headdress in front of which rose the crescent of the moon,
likewise fashioned in silver. Also in her hand she held a little
silver spear.

I stared at her, for move I could not. Then remembering my crazy talk
with Kari, uttered one word, only one. It was--/Quilla/.

She bowed her head and answered in a voice soft as the murmur of the
wind through rushes, speaking in the rich language called Quichua that
Kari had taught me. In this tongue, as I have told, we talked together
for practice during our journeys and on the island. So that now I knew
it well.

"So indeed am I named after my mother, the 'Moon,'" she said. "But how
did you know it, O Wanderer, whose skin is white as the foam of the
sea and whose hair is yellow as the fine gold in the temples?"

"I think you must have told me when you knelt over me just now," I
said.

I saw the red blood run to her brow, but she only shook her head, and
answered:

"Nay, my mother, the Moon, must have told you; or perchance you
learned it in the spirit. At least, Quilla am I named and you called
me aright."

Now I stood up and stared at her, overcome by the strangeness of the
business, and she stared at me. A marvellously beautiful woman she was
in her dazzling robe and headdress, and lighter coloured than any
native I had seen, almost white, indeed, in the moonlight save for the
copper tinge that marked her race; tall, too, yet not over-tall; slim
and straight as an arrow, but high-breasted and round-limbed, and with
a wild grace in her movements like to that of a hawk upon the wing.
Also to my fancy in her face there was something more than common
youthful beauty, something spiritual, such as great artists show upon
the carven countenances of saints.

Indeed she might well have been one whose human blood was mixed with
some other alien strain--as she had called herself, a daughter of the
Moon.

A question rose to my lips and burst from them; it was:

"Tell me, O Quilla, are you wife or maid?"

"Maid am I," she answered, "yet one who is promised as a wife," and
she sighed, then went on quickly as though this matter were something
of which she did not wish to talk, "And tell me, O Wanderer, are you
god or man?"

Now I grew cunning and answered,

"I am a Son of the Sea as you are a Daughter of the Moon."

She turned her head and glanced at the radiance which lay upon the
face of the deep, then said as though to herself:

"The moon shines upon the sea and the sea mirrors back the moon, yet
they are far apart and never may draw near."

"Not so, O Quilla. Out of the sea does the moon rise and, her course
run, into the sea's white arms she sinks to sleep at last."

Again the red blood ran to her brow and her great eyes fell, those
eyes of which never before had I seen the like.

"It seems that they speak our tongue in the sea, and prettily," she
murmured, adding, "But is it not from and into Heaven that the Moon
rises and departs?"

At that moment to my grief our talk came to an end, for out of the hut
crept Kari. He rose to his feet and stood there as ever calm and
dignified, looking first at Quilla and then at me.

"What did I tell you, Master?" he said in English. "Did I not say that
prayers such as yours are answered? Lo! here is that Child of the Moon
for whom you sought, clothed in beauty and bringing her gifts of love
and woe."

"Yes," I exclaimed, "and I am glad that she is here. For the rest,
were she but mine, I think I should not grudge her price whate'er it
be."

Quilla looked at Kari frowning over the spear that when he appeared
she had lifted, as though to defend herself, which in my case she had
not thought needful.

"So the sea breeds men of my own race also," she said, addressing him.
"Tell me, O Stranger, how did you and yonder white god come to this
isle?"

"Riding on the ocean billows, riding for thousands of leagues," he
answered. "And you, O Lady, how did you come to this isle?"

"Riding on the moonbeams," she replied, smiling, "I, the daughter of
the Moon, who am named Moon and wear her symbol on my brow."

"Did I not tell you so?" exclaimed Kari to me with a gloomy air.

Then Quilla went on:

"Strangers, I was out fishing with two of my maidens and we had
drifted far from land. As the sun sank I caught sight of the smoke of
your fire, and having been told that this isle was desert, my heart
drew me to discover who had lit it. So, though my maidens were afraid,
hither I sailed and paddled, and the rest you know. Hearken! I will
declare myself. I am the only child of Huaracha, King of the People of
the Chancas, born of his wife, a princess of the Inca blood who now
has been gathered to her Father, the Sun. I am here on a visit to my
mother's kinsman, Quismancu, the Chief of the Yuncas of the
Coastlands, to whom my father, the King, has sent an embassy on
matters of which I know nothing. Behind yonder rock is my /balsa/ and
with it are the two maidens. Say, is it your wish to bide here upon
this isle, or to return into the sea, or to accompany me back to the
town of Quismancu? If so, we must sail ere the weather breaks, lest we
should be drowned."

"Certainly it is my wish to accompany you, Lady, though a god of the
sea cannot be drowned," I said quickly before Kari could speak.
Indeed, he did not speak at all, he only shrugged his shoulders and
sighed, like one who accepts some evil gift from Fate because he must.

"So be it!" exclaimed Quilla. "Now I go to make ready the /balsa/ and
to warn the maidens lest they be frightened. When you are prepared you
will find us yonder behind the rock."

Then she bowed in a stately fashion an departed, walking with the
proud, light step of a deer.

From our little hut I took out my armour and with Kari's help, put it
on, because he declared that thus it would be more easily carried,
though I think he had other reasons in his mind.

"Yes," I answered, "unless the /balsa/ oversets, when I shall find
mail hard to swim in."

"The /balsa/ will not overset, sailing beneath the moon with that
Moon-lady for a pilot," he replied heavily. "Had the sun been up, it
might have been different. Moreover, the path into a net is always
wide and easy."

"What net?" I asked.

"One that is woven of women's hair, I think. Already, if I mistake
not, such a net has been about your throat, Master, and next time it
will stay there. Hearken now to me. The gods thrust us into high
matters. The Yuncas of whose chief this lady is a guest are a great
people whom my people have conquered in war, but who wait the
opportunity to rebel, if they have not already done so. The Chancas,
of those king she is the daughter, are a still greater people who for
years have threatened war upon my people."

"Well, what of it, Kari? With such questions this lady will have
nothing to do."

"I think she has much to do with them. I think that she knows more
than she seems to know, and that she is an envoy from the Chancas to
the Yuncas. To whom is she affianced, I wonder? Some Great One,
doubtless. Well, we shall learn in time; and meanwhile, I pray you,
Master, remember that she says she /is/ affianced, and that in this
land men are very jealous even of a white god who rises from the sea."

"Of course I shall remember," I answered sharply. "Have I not had
enough of women who are affianced?"

"By your prayer of the moon this night, which the moon answered so
well and quickly, one might think not. Also this daughter of hers is
fair, and perchance when she gave her hand she kept her heart. Listen
again, Master. Of me and of whom I am, say nothing, save that you
found me on this island where I dwelt a hermit when you rose from the
sea. As for my name, why, it is Zapana. Remember that if you breathe
my rank and history, however much sweet lips may try to cozen them out
of you, you bring me to my death, who now do not wish to die, having a
vengeance to accomplish and a throne to win. Therefore treat me as a
dog, as one of no account, and be silent even in your sleep."

"I will remember, Kari."

"That is not enough--swear it."

"Good. I swear it--by the moon."

"Nay, not by the moon, for the moon is woman and changes. Swear it by
this," and from beneath his skin robe he drew out the golden image of
Pachacamac. "Swear it by the Spirit of the Universe, of whom Sun and
Moon and Stars are but servants, the Spirit whom all men worship in
this shape or in that."

So to please him I laid my hand upon the golden symbol and swore.
Then, very hurriedly, we made up a tale of how, clad in my armour, I
had risen from the sea and found him on the island, and how knowing me
for a white god who once in ages past had visited that land and who,
as prophecy foretold, should return to it in days to come, he had
worshipped me and become my slave.

This done we went down to the rock, Kari walking after me and bearing
all our small possessions and with them Deleroy's sword. Passing round
the rock we saw the /balsa/ drawn up to the sand, and by it the lady
Quilla, who now had put off her fine robes and again was attired as a
fishing-girl as I had seen her in my dream, and with her two tall
girls in the same scanty garments. When these saw me in the glittering
armour, which in our long idle hours we had polished till it shone
like silver, with the shield upon my arm and the casque upon my head
and the great sword girded about my middle and the black bow in my
hand, they screamed with fear and fell upon their faces, while even
Quilla started back and glanced towards the boat.

"Fear not," I said. "The gods are kind to those who do them service,
though to those who would harm them they are terrible."

Kari also went to them and whispered in their ears what tale I know
not. In the end they rose trembling, and having motioned to me to be
seated in it, with the help of Kari pushed the /balsa/, which I noted
with joy was large and well made, down into the sea. Then one by one
they climbed in, Quilla taking the steering-oar, while Kari and the
two maidens hoisted the little sail and paddled till we were clear of
the island, where the gentle wind caught the /balsa/. Then they
shipped the paddles, and although full laden, we sailed quietly
towards the mainland.

Now I was at the bow of the /balsa/ and Quilla was at its stern, and
between us were the others, so that during all that long night's
journey I had no speech with her and must content myself with gazing
over my shoulder at her beauty as best I could, which was not well,
because of Kari, who ever seemed to come between my eyes and hers.

Thus the long hours went by till at length when we were near the land
the moon sank, and we sailed on through the twilight. Then came the
dawn, and there in front of us we saw the lovely strand green with
palms within a ring of snow-clad mountains, two of them the great
peaks that we had seen from our isle.

On the shore was a city of white, flat-roofed houses, and rising above
it, perchance the half of a mile from the sea, a hill four or five
hundred feet in height and terraced. On the top of the hill stood a
mighty building, painted red, that from the look of it I took to be
one of the churches of these people, in the centre of which gleamed
great doors that, as I found afterwards, were covered with plates of
gold.

"Behold the temple of Pachacamac, Master," whispered Kari, bowing his
head and kissing the air in token of reverence.

By this time watchmen, who had been set there to search the sea or the
boat of Quilla, had noted our approach. They shouted and pointed to me
who sat in the prow clad in my armour upon which the sun glittered,
then began to run to and fro as though in fear or excitement, so that
ere we reached the shore a great crowd had gathered. Meanwhile, Quilla
had put on her silver-broidered mantle and her head-dress of feathers,
crowned with the crescent of the moon. As we touched the beach she
came forward, and for the first time during that night spoke to me
saying:

"Remain here in the /balsa/, Lord, while I talk with these people, and
when I summon you be pleased to come. Fear not--none will harm you."

Then she sprang from the prow of the /balsa/ to the shore, followed by
her two maidens, who dragged it further up the beach, and went forward
to talk with certain white-robed men in the crowd. For a long while
she talked, turning now and again to point at me. At length these men,
accompanied by a number of others, ran forward. At first I thought
they meant mischief and grasped my sword-hilt, then, remembering what
Quilla had said, remained seated and silent.

Indeed, there was no cause for fear, for when the white-robed chiefs
or priests and their following were close to me, suddenly they
prostrated themselves and beat their heads upon the sand, from which I
learned that they, too, believed me to be a god. Thereon I bowed to
them and, drawing my sword--at the sight of which I saw them stare and
shiver, for to these people steel was unknown--held it straight up in
front of me in my right hand, the shield with the cognizance of the
three arrows being on my left arm.

Now all the men rose, and some of them of the humbler sort, creeping
to the /balsa/, suddenly seized it and lifted it on to their
shoulders, which, being but a light thing of reeds and blown-out
skins, they could do easily enough. Then, preceded by the chiefs, they
advanced up the beach into the town, I still remaining seated in the
boat with Kari crouching behind me. So strange was the business that
almost I laughed aloud, wondering what those grave merchants of the
Cheap whom I had known in London would think if they could see me
thus.

"Kari," I said, without turning my head, "what are they going to do
with us? Set us in yonder temple to be worshipped with nothing to
eat?"

"I think not, Master," answered Kari, "since there the lady Quilla
could not come to speak with you if she would. I think that they will
take you to the house of the king of this country where, I understand,
she is dwelling."

This, indeed, proved to be the case, for we were borne solemnly up the
main street of the town, that now was packed with thousands of people,
some of whom threw flowers before the feet of the bearers, bowing and
staring till I thought that their eyes would fall out, to a large,
flat-roofed house set in a walled courtyard. Passing through the gates
the bearers placed the /balsa/ on the ground and fell back. Then from
out of the door of the house appeared Quilla, accompanied by a tall,
stately looking man who wore a fine robe, and a woman of middle age
also gorgeously apparelled.

"O Lord," said Quilla, bowing, "behold my kinsman the /Caraca/" (which
is the name for a lesser sort of king) "of the Yuncas, named
Quismancu, and his wife, Mira."

"Hail, Lord Risen from the Sea!" cried Quismancu. "Hail, White God
clothed in silver! Hail, /Hurachi/!"

Why he called me "Hurachi" at the time I could not guess, but
afterwards I learned that it was because of the arrows painted on my
shield, /hurachi/ being their name for arrows. At any rate,
thenceforth by this name of Hurachi I was known throughout the land,
though when addressed for the most part I was called "Lord-from-the-
Sea" or "God-of-the-Sea."

Then Quilla and the lady Mira came forward and, placing their hands
beneath my elbows, assisted me to climb out of that /balsa/, which I
think was the strangest way that ever a shipwrecked wanderer came to
land.

They led me into a large room with a flat roof that was being hastily
prepared for me by the hanging of beautiful broideries on the walls,
and sat me on a carven stool, where presently Quilla and other ladies
brought me food and a kind of intoxicating drink which they called
/chicha/, that after so many months of water drinking I found cheering
and pleasant to the taste. This food, I noted, was served to me on
platters of gold and silver, and the cups also were of gold strangely
fashioned, by which I knew that I had come to a very rich land.
Afterwards I learned, however, that in it there was no money, all the
gold and silver that it produced being used for ornament or to
decorate the temples and the palaces of the /Incas/, as they called
their kings, and other great lords.



                              CHAPTER IV

                         THE ORACLE OF RIMAC

In this town of Quismancu I remained for seven days, going abroad but
little, for when I did so the people pressed about me and stared me
out of countenance. There was a garden at the back of the hose
surrounded by a wall built of mud bricks. Here for the most part I sat
and here the great ones of the place came to visit me, bringing me
offerings of robes and golden vessels and I know not what besides. To
all of them I told the same story--or, rather, Kari told it for me--
namely, that I had risen out of the sea and found him a hermit, named
Zapana, on the desert island. What is more, they believed it and,
indeed, it was true, for had I not risen out of the sea?

From time to time Quilla came to see me also in this garden, bearing
gifts of flowers, and with her I talked alone. She would sit upon a
low stool, considering me with her beautiful eyes, as though she would
search out my soul. One day she said to me:

"Tell me, Lord, are you a god or a man?"

"What is a god?" I asked.

"A god is that which is adored and loved."

"And is a man never adored and loved, Quilla? For instance, I
understand that you are to be married, and doubtless you adore and
love him who will be your husband."

She shivered a little and answered:

"It is not so. I hate him."

"Then why are you going to marry him? Are you forced to do so,
Quilla?"

"No, Lord. I marry him for my people's sake. He desires me for my
inheritance and my beauty, and by my beauty I may lead him down that
road on which my people wish that he should go."

"An old story, Quilla, but will you be happy thus?"

"No, Lord, I shall be very unhappy. But what does it matter? I am only
a woman, and such is the lot of women."

"Women, like gods and men, are also sometimes loved and adored,
Quilla."

She flushed at the words and answered:

"Ah! if that were so life might be different. But even if it were so
and I found the man who could love and adore even for a year, for me
it is now too late. I am sworn away by an oath that may not be broken,
for to break it might bring death upon my people."

"To whom are you sworn?"

"To the Child of the Sun, no less a man; to the god who will be Inca
of all this land."

"And what is this god like?"

"They say that he is huge and swarthy, with a large mouth, and I know
that he has the heart of a brute. He is cruel and false also, and he
counts his women by the score. Yet his father, the Inca, loves him
more than any of his children, and ere long he will be king after
him."

"And would you, who are sweet and lovely as the moon after which you
are named, give yourself body and soul to such a one?"

Again she flushed.

"Do my own ears hear the White-God-from-the-Sea call me sweet and
lovely as the moon? If so, I thank him, and pray him to remember that
the perfect and lovely are always chosen to be the sacrifice of gods."

"But, Quilla, the sacrifice may be all in vain. How long will you hold
the fancy of this loose-living prince?"

"Long enough to serve my purpose, Lord--or, at least," she added with
flashing eyes, "long enough to kill him if he will not go my country's
road. Oh! ask me no more, for your words stir something in my breast,
a new spirit of which I never dreamed. Had I heard them but three
moons gone, it might have been otherwise. Why did you not appear
sooner from the sea, my lord Hurachi, be you god or man?"

Then, with something like a sob, she rose, made obeisance, and fled
away.



That evening, when we were alone in my chamber where none could hear
us, I told Kari that Quilla was promised in marriage to a prince who
would be Inca of all the land.

"Is it so?" said Kari. "Well, learn, Master, that this prince is my
brother, he whom I hate, he who has done me bitter wrong, he who stole
away my wife and poisoned me. Urco is his name. Does this lady Quilla
love him?"

"I think not. I think that like you she hates him, yet will marry him
for reasons of policy."

"Doubtless she hates him now, whatever she did a week ago," said Kari
in a dry voice. "But what fruit will this tree bear? Master, are you
minded to come with me to-morrow to visit the temple of Pachacamac in
the inner sanctuary of which sits the god Rimac who speaks oracles?"

"For what purpose, Kari?" I answered moodily.

"That we may hear oracles, Master. I think that if you choose to go
the lady Quilla would come with us, since perhaps she would like also
to hear oracles."

"I will go if it can be done in secret, say at night, for I weary of
being stared at by these people."

This I said because I desired to learn of the religion of this nation
and to see new things.

"Perhaps it can be so ordered, Master. I will ask of the matter."

It seemed that Kari did ask, perhaps of the high priest of Pachacamac,
for between all the worshippers of this god there was a brotherhood;
perhaps of the lord Quismancu, or perhaps of Quilla herself--I do not
know. At least, on this same day Quismancu inquired whether it would
please me to visit the temple that night, and so the matter was
settled.

Accordingly, after the darkness had fallen, two litters were brought
into which we entered, Quilla and a waiting woman seating themselves
in one of them and Kari and I in the other, for Quismancu and his wife
did not come--why I cannot say. Then, preceded by another litter in
which was a priest of the god, and surrounded by a guard of soldiers,
through a rain-storm we were borne up the hill--it was but a little
way--to the temple.

Here, before the golden doors on which the lightning glimmered
fitfully, we descended and were led by white-robed men bearing
lanterns, through various courts to the inner sanctuary of the god, on
the threshold of which I crossed myself, not loving the company of
heathen idols. So far as I could see by the lamplight it was a great
and glorious place, and everywhere that the eye fell was gold--places
of gold on the walls, offerings of gold upon the floor, stars of gold
upon the roof. The strange thing about this holy place, however, was
that it seemed to be quite empty except for the aforesaid gold. There
was neither altar nor image--nothing but a lamp-lit void.

Here all prostrated themselves, save I alone, and prayed in silence.
When they rose again, in a whisper I asked of Kari where was the god.
To which he answered: "Nowhere, yet everywhere." This I thought a true
saying, and indeed so solemn was that place that I felt as though I
were surrounded by that which is divine.

After a while the priests, who were gorgeously apparelled, led us
across the sanctuary to a door that opened upon some stairs. Down
these stairs we went into a long passage that seemed to run beneath
the earth, for the air in it was heavy. When we had walked a hundred
paces or more in this narrow place, we came to other steps and another
door, passing through which we found ourselves in a second temple,
smaller than that which we had visited, but like to it rich with gold.
In the centre of this temple sat the image of a man rudely fashioned
of gold.

"Behold Rimac the Speaker!" whispered Kari.

"How can gold speak?" I asked.

Kari made no answer.

Presently the priests began to mutter prayers and incantations that I
thought unholy, after which they laid offerings of what looked like
raw flesh set in cups of gold before the idol, that I thought unholier
still. Lastly they drew back and asked of what we would learn.

I made no answer who did not like the business. Nor did Kari say
anything, but Quilla spoke out boldly, saying that we would learn of
the future and what would befall us.

Now there was a long silence, and I confess that fear got hold of me,
for it seemed to me as though spirits were moving in the air and
through the darkness behind us--yes, as though I could hear their
whisperings and the rustle of their wings. Suddenly, at the end of
this silence, the golden image in front of us began to glow as though
it were molten, and the emerald eyes that were set in its head to
sparkle terribly, which frightened me so much that had it not been for
shame's sake I would have run away, but because of this stood still
and prayed to St. Hubert to protect me from the devil and his works.
Presently I prayed still harder, for the image began to speak--yes, in
a horrid, whistling voice it spoke, although no one was near to it.
These were the words it said:

"Who is this clad in silver whose skin is white and whose hair is
yellow? Such an one I have not seen for a thousand years, and such as
he it is that shall possess themselves of the Land of Tavantinsuyu,
shall steal its wealth, shall slay its people, and shall cast down its
gods. But not yet, not yet! Therefore this is the command of
Pachacamac, uttered by the voice of Rimac the Speaker, that none do
harm to or cross the will of this mighty seaborn lord, since he shall
be as a strong wall to many and his sword shall be red with the blood
of the wicked."

The whistling voice ceased while the priests and all there stared at
me, for they seemed to think its words fateful. Then suddenly it began
again:

"And who is this that came out of the sea with the Shining One, having
wandered further than any of his ancient blood? I know. I know, yet I
may not say, since the Spirit of spirits whose image he wears upon his
heart bids me be silent. Be bold! Be bold! Prosper and grow great,
Child of Pachacamac, for thy wanderings are not yet done. Still there
is a mountain to be climbed, and on the crest of it hangs a fringe of
Heaven's gold."

Again the voice ceased, while this time all stared at Kari, who shook
his head humbly as though bewildered by what he could not understand.
Once more the image spoke:

"Who is this daughter of the Sun, in whose veins play moonbeams and
who is fairer than the evening star? One, I think, whom men shall
desire and because of whom shall flow the blood of the great. One
whose thought is swift as the lightning and subtle as the snake, one
in whom passion burns like fire in the womb of the mountain, but who
is filled with spirit that dances above the fire and who longs for
things that are afar. Daughter of the Sun in whose blood run the
moonbeams, thou shalt slip from the hated arms and the Sun shall be
thy shelter, and in the beloved arms thou shalt sleep at last. Yet
from the vengeance of the god betrayed fly fast and far!"

Again the voice ceased, and I thought that all was over. But it was
not so, for after a little space the golden figure of the oracle
glowed more fiercely than before and the emerald eyes shone more
terribly, and in a kind of scream it spoke, saying:

"The snows of Tavantinsuyu shall be red with blood, the waters of her
rivers shall be full of blood. Yes, ye three shall wade through blood,
and in a rain of blood shall pluck the fruit of your desires. Still
for a while the gods of Tavantinsuyu shall endure and its kings shall
reign and its children shall be free. But in the end death for the
gods and death for the kings and death for the people. Still, not yet
--not yet! None who live shall see it, nor their children, nor their
children's children. Rimac the Voice has spoken; treasure ye his words
and interpret them as ye will."



The whistling voice died away like the thin cry of some starving child
in a desert, and there was a great silence. Then in a moment the
figure of gold ceased to glow and the eyes of emerald to burn, leaving
the thing but a dead lump of metal. The priests prostrated themselves,
and rising, led us from the place without a word, but in the light of
the lamps I saw that their faces were full of terror--so full that I
doubted whether it could be feigned.

As we had come, so we went, and at last found ourselves outside the
glittering temple doors where the litters awaited us.

"What did it mean?" I whispered to Quilla, who was by my side.

"For you and the other I know not," she answered hurriedly; "but for
me I think that it means death. Yet, not until--not until----" And she
ceased.

At that moment the moon appeared from behind the rain-clouds and shone
upon her upturned face, and in her eyes there was a glory.



Now, as I learned afterwards, these words of its most famous oracle
went all through the land and caused great talk and wonder mixed with
fear, for none of such import had been spoken by it for generations.
More, they shaped my own fortunes, for, as I came to know, Quismancu
and his people had determined that I should not be allowed to go from
among them. Not every day did a white god rise from the sea, and they
desired that having come to them, there he should bide to be their
defence and boast, and with him that hermit named Zapana, to whom, as
they believed, he had appeared upon the desert isle. But after Rimac
had spoken all this was changed, and when I said it was my will to
depart and accompany Quilla upon her journey home to her father,
Huaracha, King of the Chancas, as by swift messenger this King
invited me to do, Quismancu answered that if I so desired I must be
obeyed as the god Rimac had commanded, but that nevertheless he was
sure that we should meet again.

Now, thinking these things over, I wondered much whether that oracle
came out of the golden Rimac or perchance from the heart of Quilla, or
of Kari, or of both of them, who desired that I should leave the
Yuncas and travel to the Chancas and further. I did not know, nor was
I ever to learn, since about matters to do with their gods these
people are as secret as the grave. I asked Kari and I asked Quilla,
but both of them stared at me with innocent eyes, and replied who were
they to inspire the golden tongue of Rimac? Nor, indeed, did I ever
learn whether Rimac the Speaker was a spirit or but a lump of metal
through which some priest talked. All I know is that from one end of
Tavantinsuyu to the other he was believed to be a spirit who spoke the
very will of God to those who could understand his words, though this
as a Christian man I could not credit.

So it came about that some days later, with Quilla and Kari and
certain old men who, I took it, were priests or ambassadors, or both,
I departed on our journey. As we went the people wept around my litter
for sorrow, real or feigned, for we travelled in litters guarded by
some two hundred soldiers armed with axes of copper and bows, and cast
flowers before the feet of the bearers. But I did not weep, for though
I had been very kindly treated there and, indeed, worshipped, glad was
I to see the last of that city and its people who wearied me.

Moreover, I felt that there I was in the midst of plots, though of
what these were I knew nothing, save that Quilla, who to the outward
eye was but a lovely, innocent maiden, had a hand in them. Plots there
were indeed, for, as I came to understand in time, they were nothing
less than the preparing of a great war which the Chancas and the
Yuncas were to wage against their over-lord, the Inca, the king of the
mighty nation of the Quichuas, who had his home at a city called Cuzco
far inland. Indeed, there and then this alliance was arranged, and by
Quilla--Quilla, who proposed to sacrifice herself and by the gift of
her person to his heir, to throw dust in the eyes of the Inca, whose
dominion her father planned to take and with it the imperial crown of
Tavantinsuyu.



Leaving the coastland, we were borne forward through the passes of
great mountains, upon a wonderful road so finely made that never had I
seen its like in England. At times we crossed rivers, but over these
were thrown bridges of stone. Or mayhap we came to swamps, yet there
the road still ran, built upon deep foundations in the mud. Never did
it turn aside; always it went on, conquering every hindrance, for this
was one of the Inca's roads that pierced Tavantinsuyu from end to end.
We came to many towns, for this land was thickly populated, and for
the most part slept in one of them each night. But always my fame had
gone before me, and the /Curacas/, or chiefs of the towns, waited upon
me with offerings as though I were indeed divine.

For the first five days of that journey I saw little of Quilla, but at
length one night we were forced to camp at a kind of rest-house upon
the top of a high mountain pass, where it was very cold, for the deep
snow lay all about. At this place, as here were no /Curacas/ to
trouble me, I went out alone when Kari was elsewhere, and climbed a
certain peak which was not far from the rest-house, that thence I
might see the sunset and think in quiet.

Very glorious was the scene from that high point. All round me stood
the cold crests of snow-clad mountains towering to the very skies,
while between them lay deep valleys where rivers ran like veins of
silver. So immense was the landscape that it seemed to have no end,
and so grand that it crushed the spirit, while above arched the
perfect sky in whose rich blue the gorgeous lights of evening began to
gather as the great sun sank behind the snowy peaks.

Far up in the heavens floated one wide-winged bird, the eagle of the
mountains, which is larger than any other fowl that I have ever seen,
and the red light playing on it turned it to a thing of fire. I
watched that bird and wished that I too had pinions which could bear
me far away to the sea and over it.

And yet did I wish to go who had no home left on all the earth and no
kind heart that would welcome me? Awhile ago I should have answered,
"Yes, anywhere out of this loneliness," but now I was not so sure.
Here at least Kari was my friend if a jealous one, though of late, as
I could see, he was thinking of other things than friendship--dark
plottings and high ambitions of which as yet he said little to me.

Then there was that strange and beautiful woman, Quilla, to whom my
heart went out and not only because she was beautiful, and who, as I
thought, at times looked kindly on me. But if so, what did it avail;
seeing that she was promised in marriage to some high-placed native
man who would be a king? Surely I had known enough of women who were
promised in marriage to other men, and should do well to let her be.

Thinking thus, desolation took hold of me and I sat myself down on a
rock and covered my face with my hands that I might not see the tears,
which I knew were gathering in my eyes, as they fell from them. Yes,
there in the midst of that awful solitude, I, Hubert of Hastings,
whose soul it filled, sat down like a lost child and wept.

Presently I felt a touch upon my shoulder and let fall my hands,
thinking that Kari had found me out, to hear a soft voice, the voice
of Quilla, say:

"So it seems that the gods can weep. Why do you weep, O God-from-the-
Waves who here are named Hurachi?"

"I weep," I answered, "because I am a stranger in a strange land; I
weep because I have not wings whereon I can fly away like that great
bird above us."

She looked at me awhile, then said, most gently:

"And whither would you fly, O God-from-the-Sea? Back into the sea?"

"Cease to call me a god," I answered, "who, as you know well, am but a
man though of another race than yours."

"I thought it but I did not know. But whither would you fly, O Lord
Hurachi?"

"To the land where I was born, Lady Quilla; the land that I shall
never see again."

"Ah! doubtless there you have wives and children for whom your heart
is hungry."

"Nay, now I have neither wife nor child."

"Then once you had a wife. Tell me of that wife. Was she fair?"

"Why should I tell you a sad story? She is dead."

"Dead or living, you still love her, and where there is love there is
no death."

"Nay, I only love what I thought she was."

"Was she false, then?"

"Yes, false and yet true. So true that she died because she was
false."

"How can a woman be both false and true?"

"Woman can be all things. Ask the question of your own heart. Can you
not perchance be both false and true?"

She thought awhile and, leaving this matter, said:

"So, having once loved, you can never love again."

"Why not? Perchance I can love too much. But what would be the use
when more love would but mean more loss and pain?"

"Whom should you love, my lord Hurachi, seeing that the women of your
own folk are far away?"

"I think one who is very near, if she would pay back love for love."

Quilla made no answer, and I thought that she was angry and would go
away. But she did not; indeed, she sat herself down upon the stone at
my side and covered her face with her hands as I had done and began to
weep as I had done. Now in my turn I asked her:

"Why do you weep?"

"Because I, too, must know loneliness, and with it shame, Lord
Hurachi."

At these words my heart beat and passion flamed up in me. Stretching
out my hand I drew hers away and in the dying light gazed at the face
beneath. Lo! on its loveliness there was a look which could not be
misread.

"Do you, then, also love?" I whispered.

"Aye, more, I think, than ever woman loved before. From the moment
when first I saw you sleeping in the moonbeams on the desert isle, I
knew my fate had found me, and that I loved. I fought against it
because I must, but that love has grown and grown, till now I am all
love, and, having given everything, have no more left to give."

When I heard this, making no answer, I swept her into my arms and
kissed her, and there she lay upon my breast and kissed me back.

"Let me go, and hear me," she murmured presently, "for you are strong
and I am weak."

I obeyed, and she sank back upon the stone.

"My lord," she said, "our case is very sad, or at least my case is
sad, since though you being a man may love often, I can love but once,
and, my lord, it may not be."

"Why not?" I asked hoarsely. "Your people think me a god; cannot a god
take whom he wills to wife?"

"Not when she is vowed to another god, he who will be Inca; not when
on her, mayhap, hangs the fate of nations."

"We might fly, Quilla."

"Whither could the God-from-the-Sea fly and whither could fly the
daughter of the Moon, who is vowed to the son of the Sun in marriage,
save to death?"

"There are worse things than death, Quilla."

"Aye, but my life is in pawn. I must live that my people may not die.
Myself I offered it to this cause and now, being royal, I cannot take
it back again for my own joy. It is better to be shamed with honour
than to be loved in the lap of shame."

"What then?" I asked hopelessly.

"Only this, that above us are the gods, and--heard you not the oracle
of Rimac that declared to me that I should slip from the hated arms,
that the Sun should be my shelter, and in the beloved arms I should
sleep at last, though from the vengeance of the god betrayed I must
fly fast and far? I think that this means death, but also it means
life in death and--O arms beloved, you shall fold me yet. I know not
how, but have faith--for you shall fold me yet. Meanwhile, tempt me
not from the path of honour, since this I know, that it alone can lead
me to my home. Yet who is the god betrayed from whom I must fly? Who,
who?"

Thus she spoke and was silent, and I, too, was silent. Yes, there we
sat, both silent in the darkness, searching the heavens for a guiding
star. And as we sat, presently I heard the voice of Kari saying:

"Have I found you, Lord, and you also, Lady Quilla? Return, I pray
you, for all search and are frightened."

"Why?" I answered. "The lady Quilla and I study this wondrous scene."

"Yes, Lord, though to those who are not god-born it would be difficult
in this darkness. Suffer, now that I show you the path."



                              CHAPTER V

                              KARI GOES

As it chanced during the remaining days of that journey, Quilla and I
were not again alone together (that is to say, except once for a few
minutes), for we were never out of eyeshot of someone in our company.
Thus Kari clung to me very closely, indeed, and when I asked him why,
told me bluntly that it was for my safety's sake. A god to remain a
god, he said, should live alone in a temple. When he began to mix with
others of the earth and to do those things they did, to eat and to
drink, to laugh and to frown; even to slip in the mud or to stumble
over the stones in the common path, those others would come to think
that there was small difference between god and man. Especially would
they think so if he were observed to love the company of women or to
melt beneath their soft glances.

Now I grew sore at the sting of these arrows which of late he had
loved to shoot at me, and without pretending to misunderstand him,
said outright:

"The truth is, Kari, that you are jealous of the lady Quilla as once
you were jealous of another."

He considered the matter in his grave fashion, and answered:

"Yes, Master, that is the truth, or part of it. You saved my life, and
sheltered me when I was alone in a strange land, and for this and for
yourself I came to love you very greatly, and love, if it be true, is
always jealous and always hates a rival."

"There are different sorts of loves," I said; "that of a man for man
is one, that of man for woman is another."

"Yes, Master, and that of woman for man is a third; moreover, there is
this about it--it is the acid which turns all other loves sour. Where
are a man's friends when a woman has him by the heart?--although
perchance they love him better than ever will the woman who at bottom
loves herself best of all. Still, let that be, for so Nature works,
and who can fight against Nature? What Quilla takes, Kari loses, and
Kari must be content to lose."

"Have you done?" I asked angrily, who wearied of his homilies.

"No, Master. The matter of jealousy is small and private; so is the
matter of love. But, Master, you have not told me outright whether you
love the lady Quilla, and, what is more important, whether she loves
you."

"Then I will tell you now. I do and she does."

"You love the lady Quilla and she says that she loves you, which may
or may not be true, or if true to-day may be false to-morrow. For your
sake I hope that it is not true."

"Why?" I said in a rage.

"Because, Master, in this land there are many sorts of poison, as I
have learned to my cost. Also there are knives, if not of steel, and
many who might wish to discover whether a god who courts women like a
man can be harmed by poisons or pierced by knives. Oh!" he added, in
another tone, ceasing from his bitter jests, "believe me that I would
shield, not mock you. This Lady Quilla is a queen in a great game of
pieces such as you taught me to play far away in England, and without
her perchance that game cannot be won, or so those who play it think.
Now you would steal that queen and thereby, as they also think, bring
death and destruction on a country. It is not safe, Master. There are
plenty of fair women in this land; take your pick of them, but leave
that one queen alone."

"Kari," I answered, "if there be such a game, are you not perchance
one of the players on this side or on that?"

"It may be so, Master, and if you have not guessed it, perhaps one day
I will tell you upon which side I play. It may even be that for my own
sake I should be glad to see you lift this queen from off the board,
and that what I tell you is for love of you and not of myself, also of
the lady Quilla, who, if you fall, falls with you down through the
black night into the arms of the Moon, her mother. But I have said
enough, and indeed it is foolish to waste breath in such talk, since
Fate will have its way with both of you, and the end of the game in
which we play is already written in Pachacamac's book for every one of
us. Did not Rimac speak of it the other night? So play on, play on,
and let Destiny fulfil itself. If I dared to give counsel it was only
because he who watches the battle with a general's eye sees more of it
than he who fights."

Then he bowed in his stately fashion and left me, and it was long ere
he spoke to me again of this matter of Quilla and our love for one
another.

When he was gone my anger against him passed, since I saw that he was
warning me of more than he dared to say, not for himself, but because
he loved me. Moreover, I was afraid, for I felt that I was moving in
the web of a great plot that I did not understand, of which Quilla and
those cold-eyed lordlings of her company and the chief whose guest I
had been, and Kari himself, and many others as yet unknown to me, spun
the invisible threads. One day these might choke me. Well, if they
did, what then? Only I feared for Quilla--greatly I feared for Quilla.

On the day following my talk with Kari at length we reached the great
city of the Chancas, which, after them, was called Chanca--at least I
always knew it by that name. From the dawn we had been passing through
rich valleys where dwelt thousands of these Chancas who, I could see,
were a mighty people that bore themselves proudly and like soldiers.
In multitudes they gathered themselves together upon either side of
the road, chiefly to catch a sight of me, the white god who had risen
from the ocean, but also to greet their princess, the lady Quilla.

Indeed, now I learned for the first time how high a princess she was,
since when her litter passed, these folk prostrated themselves,
kissing the air and the dust. Moreover, as soon as she came among them
Quilla's bearing changed, for her carriage grew more haughty and her
words fewer. Now she seldom spoke save to issue a command, not even to
myself, although I noted that she studied me with her eyes when she
thought that I was not observing her.

During our midday halt I looked up and saw that an army was
approaching us, five thousand men or more, and asked Kari its meaning.

"These," he answered, "are some of the troops of Huaracha, King of the
Chancas, whom he sends out to greet his daughter and only child, also
his guest, the White God."

"Some of the troops! Has he more, then?"

"Aye, Master, ten times as many, as I think. This is a great people;
almost as great as that of the Incas who live at Cuzco. Come now into
the tent and put on your armour, that you may be ready to meet them."

I did so, and, stepping forth clad in the shining steel, took my stand
where Kari showed me, upon a rise of ground. On my right at a little
distance stood Quilla, more splendidly arrayed than I had ever seen
her, and behind her her maidens and the captains and counsellors of
her following.

The army drew nearer, marshalled in regiments and halted on the plain
some two hundred yards away. Presently from it advanced generals and
old men, clad in white, whom I took to be priests and elders. They
approached to the number of twenty or more and bowed deeply, first to
Quilla, who bent her head in acknowledgment and then to myself. After
this they went to speak with Quilla and her following, but what they
said I did not know. All the while, however, their eyes were fixed on
me. Then Quilla brought them to me and one by one they bowed before
me, saying something in a language which I did not understand well,
for it was somewhat different from that which Kari had taught me.

After this we entered the litters, and, escorted by that great army,
were borne forward down valleys and over ridges till about sunset we
came to a large cup-like plain in the centre of which stood the city
called Chanca. Of this city I did not see much except that it was very
great as the darkness was falling when we entered, and afterwards I
could not go out because of the crowds that pressed about me. I was
borne down a wide street to a house that stood in a large garden which
was walled about. Here in this fine house I found food prepared for
me, and drink, all of it served in dishes and cups of gold and silver;
also there were women who waited upon me, as did Kari who now was
called Zapana and seemed to be my slave.

When I had eaten I went out alone into the garden, for on this plain
the air was very warm and pleasant. It was a beautiful garden, and I
wandered about among its avenues and flowering bushes, glad to be
solitary and to have time to think. Amongst other things I wondered
where Quilla might be, for of her I had seen nothing from the time
that we entered the town. I hated to be parted from her, because in
this vast strange land into which I had wandered she was the only one
for whom I had come to care and without whom I felt I should die of
loneliness.

There was Kari, it is true, who I knew loved me in his fashion, but
between him and me there was a great gulf fixed, not only of race and
faith, but of something now which I did not wholly understand. In
London he had been my servant and his ends were my ends; on our
wandering he had been my companion in great adventures. But now I knew
that other interests and desires had taken a hold of him, and that he
trod a road of which I could not see the goal; and no longer thought
much of me save when what I did or desired to do came between him and
that goal.

Therefore Quilla alone was left to me, and Quilla was about to be
taken away. Oh! I wearied of this strange land with its snowclad
mountains and rich valleys, its hordes of dark-skinned people with
large eyes, smiling faces, and secret hearts; its great cities,
temples, and palaces filled with useless gold and silver; its
brilliant sunshine and rushing rivers, its gods, kings, and policies.
They were alien to me, every one of them, and if Quilla were taken
away and I were left quite alone, then I thought that it would be well
to die.

Something moved behind a palm trunk of the avenue in which I walked,
and not knowing whether it were beast or man, I laid my hand upon my
sword which I still wore, although I had taken off the armour. Before
I could draw it my wrist was grasped and a soft voice whispered in my
ear:

"Fear nothing; it is I--Quilla."

Quilla it was, wrapped in a long hooded cloak such as the peasant
women wear in the cold country, for she threw back the hood and a beam
of starlight fell upon her face.

"Hearken!" she said. "It is dangerous to both of us, but I have come
to bid you farewell."

"Farewell! I feared it would be thus, but why so soon, Quilla?"

"For this reason, Love and Lord. I have seen my father the King, and
made my report to him of the matter with which I was sent to deal
among the Yuncas. It pleased him, and since his mood was gracious, I
opened my heart to him and told him that no longer did I wish to be
given in marriage to Urco, who will soon put on the Inca fringe, for,
as you know, it is to him that I am promised!"

"What did he answer, Quilla?"

"He answered: 'This means, Daughter, that you have met some other man
to whom you do wish to be given in marriage. I will not ask his name,
since if I knew it it would be my duty to kill him, however high and
noble he might be.'"

"Then he guesses, Quilla?"

"I think he guesses; I think that already some have whispered in his
ear, but he does not wish to listen who desires to remain deaf and
blind."

"Did he say no more, Quilla?"

"He said much more; he said this--now I tell you secrets, Lord, and
place my honour in your keeping, for having given you all the rest,
why should I not give you that also? He said: 'Daughter, you who have
been my ambassador, you, my only child, who know all my counsel, know
also that there is about to be the greatest war that the land of
Tavantinsuyu has ever known, war between the two mighty nations of the
Quichuas of Cuzco whereof the old Upanqui is king and god, and the
Chancas whereof I am king and you, if you live, in a day to come will
be the queen. No longer can these two lions dwell in the same forest;
one of them must devour the other; nor shall I fight alone, since on
our side are all the Yuncas of the coast who, as you report to me, are
ripe for rebellion. But, as you also report, and as I have learned
from others, they are not yet ready. Moons must go by before their
armies are joined to mine and I throw off the mask. Is it not so?'

"I answered that it was so, and my father went on:

"'Then during that time, Daughter, a dust must be raised that will
hide the shining of my spears, and, Daughter, you are that dust.
To-morrow the old Inca Upanqui visits me here with a small army. I
read your thought. It is--Why do you not kill him and his army?
Daughter, for this reason. He is very aged and about to lay down his
sceptre, who grows feeble of mind and body. If I killed him what would
it serve me, seeing that he has left his son, Urco, who will be Inca,
ruling at Cuzco, and that of his soldiers not one in fifty will be
with him here? Moreover, he is my guest, and the gods frown on those
who slay their guests, nor will men ever trust them more.'

"Now I answered: 'You spoke of me as a cloud of dust, Father; how,
then, can this poor dust serve your ends and those of the Chanca
people?'

"'Thus Daughter,' he answered. 'With your own consent you are promised
in marriage to Urco. Upanqui the Inca has heard rumours that the
Chancas prepare for war. Therefore, he who travels on his last journey
through certain of his dominions comes to lead you away, to be Urco's
bride, saying to himself, "If those rumours are true, King Huaracha
will withhold his only child and heiress, since never will he make war
upon Cuzco if she rules there as its queen." Therefore, if I refuse
you to him, he will withdraw and begin the war, rolling down his
thousands upon us before we are ready, and bringing the Chancas to
destruction and enslavement. Therefore also not only my fate, but the
fate of all your country lies in your hand.'

"'Father,' I said, 'tell me, who was ever dear to you that lack sons,
is there no escape? Must I eat this bitter bread? Before you answer,
learn that you have guessed aright, and that I who, when I made that
promise, cared for no man, have come to feel the burning of love's
fire!'

"Now he looked at me awhile, then said: 'Child of the Moon, there is
but one escape, and it must be sought--in the moon. The dead cannot be
given in marriage. If your strait is so sore, though it would cut me
to the heart, perchance it is better that you should die and go
whither doubtless he whom you love will soon follow you. Depart now
and counsel with Heaven in your sleep. To-morrow, before Upanqui
comes, we will talk again.'

"So I knelt and kissed the hand of the King, my father, and left him,
wondering at his nobleness who could show such a road to his only
child, though its treading would mean woe to him and mayhap the ruin
of his hopes. Still that road is an old one among the women of my
people, and why should I not walk it, as thousands have done before
me?"

"How came you here?" I asked hoarsely.

"Lord, I guessed that you would be walking in this garden which joins
on to that of the palace, and--none were about, and--the door in the
wall was open. Indeed, it was almost as though I were left alone and
unwatched of set purpose. So I came and sought--and found, having a
question to put to you."

"What question, Quilla?"

"This: Shall I live or shall I die? Speak the word and I obey. Yet ere
you speak, remember that if I live we meet for the last time, since
very soon I go hence to become the wife of Urco and play the part that
is prepared for me?"

Now when I, Hubert, heard these words, I felt as though my heart would
burst within my breast and knew not what to say. So to gain time I
asked her:

"Which do you desire--to live or to die?"

She laughed a little as she answered:

"That is a strange question, Lord. Have I not told you that if I live
I must do so befouled as one of Urco's women, whereas, if I die, I die
clean and take my love with me to where Urco cannot come, but where,
mayhap, another may follow at the appointed time."

"Which time would be very soon, I think, Quilla, seeing that he who
had spoiled all this pretty plot would scarcely be left long upon the
earth, even if he wished to stay there. Yet I say: Do not die--live
on."

"To become Urco's woman! That is strange counsel from a lover's lips,
Lord; such as would scarcely have been given by any of our nobles."

"Aye, Quilla, and it is given because I am not of your people and do
not think as they think, who reject their customs. You are not yet
Urco's wife, and may be rid of him by other paths than that of death,
but from the grave there is no escape."

"And in the grave there is no more fear, Lord. Thither Urco cannot
come; there are neither wars nor plottings; there honour does not
beckon and love hold back. I say that I will die and make an end, as
for like causes many of my blood have done, though not here and now.
When I am about to be delivered to Urco then I will die, and perchance
not alone. Perchance he will accompany me," she added slowly.

"And if this happens, what shall I do?"

"Live on, Lord, and find other women to love you, as a god should.
There are many in this land fairer and wiser than I, and, save myself,
you may take whom you will."

"Listen, Quilla. I have a story to tell you."

Then, as briefly as I could, I set out the tale of Blanche and of her
end, while she hung upon my every word.

"Oh! I grieve for you," she said, when I had finished.

"You grieve for me, and yet, what she did for my sake you would do
also, so that, as it were, both my hands must be dyed with blood. This
first terror I have borne, but if a second falls upon me then I know
that I shall go mad and perish in this way or in that, and you,
Quilla, will be my murderess."

"No, no, not that!" she murmured.

"Then swear to me by your god and by your spirit, that you will do
yourself no harm, whatever chances, and that if die you must, it shall
be with me for company."

"Is your love so great that you would dare this for my sake, Lord?"

"I think so, though not till all else had failed. I think that if you
were taken from me, Quilla, I could not live on here in loneliness and
exile--however great the sin. But do you swear?"

"Aye, Love and Lord, I swear, for your sake. Moreover, I add to the
oath. If perhaps we should escape these perils and come together, I
will be such a wife to you as never man has had. I will wrap you round
with love and lift you up to be a king, that you may live in glory
forgetting your home across the sea, and all the sorrows that befell
you there. Children you shall have also of whom you need not be
ashamed, though my dark blood runs in them, and armies at command and
palaces filled with gold, and all royal joys. And if perchance the
gods declare against us, and we pass from the world together, then I
think, oh! then I think that I shall give you finer gifts than these,
though what they are I know not yet, since to the power of love there
is no end--here on earth or yonder in the skies."

I stared at her face in the starlight, and oh! it had grown splendid.
No longer was it that of a woman, since through it, like light through
pearl, shone a soul divine. It might have been a goddess who stood
beside me, for those eyes were holy and her embrace that wrapped me
close was not that of the flesh alone.

"I must be gone," she whispered, "but now I go without fear. Perchance
we may not speak again for long, but trust me always. Play your part
and I will play mine. Follow me wherever I am taken and keep near to
me, if you may, as ever my spirit shall be near to you. Then what
matters anything, even if we are slain? Farewell, beloved, kiss me and
farewell."

Another moment and she had glided away and was lost in the shadows.



She was gone, and I stood amazed and overcome. Oh! what a love it was
that this alien woman had given to me and how could I be worthy of it?
Now I forgot my griefs; now I no longer mourned because I was an
outcast who nevermore might look upon the land where I was born, nor
see the face of one my own race or blood. All my loss was paid back to
me again and yet again, in the coin of the glory of this woman whom I
had won. Dangers rose about us, but I feared them no more, because I
knew that her love's conquering feet would stamp them flat and lead me
safe to a joyful treasure-house of splendour of spirit and of body
where we should dwell side by side, triumphant and unafraid.

Whilst I thought thus, lost in a rapture such as I had not felt since
Blanche kissed me at the mouth of the Hastings cave after I had killed
the three Frenchmen with as many arrows from my black bow, I heard a
sound and looked up to see a man standing before me.

"Who is it?" I asked, grasping my sword, for his face was hidden in
the shadows.

"I," answered a voice which I knew to be that of Kari.

"Then how did you come here? I saw no one pass the open ground."

"Master, you are not the only one who loves to walk in gardens in the
quiet of the night. I was here before yourself, behind yonder tree,"
and he pointed to a palm not three paces distant.

"Then, Kari, you must have seen----"

"Yes, Master, I saw and heard, not everything, because there came a
point at which I shut my eyes and stopped my ears, but still much."

"I am minded to kill you, Kari," I said between my teeth, "who play
the spy upon me."

"I guessed it would be so, Master," he replied in his gentlest voice,
"and for that reason, as you will notice, I am standing out of reach
of your sword. You wonder why I am here. I will tell you. It is not
from any desire to watch your love-makings which weary me, who have
seen such before, but rather that I might find secrets, of which love
is always the loser, and those secrets I have learned. How could I
have come by them otherwise, Master?"

"Surely you deserve to die," I exclaimed furiously.

"I think not, Master. But listen and judge for yourself. I have told
you something of my story, now you shall hear more, after which we
will talk of what I do or do not deserve. I am the eldest son of the
Inca Upanqui, and Urco, of whom you have been talking is my younger
brother. But Upanqui, our father, loved Urco's mother while mine he
did not love, and swore to her before she died that against right and
law, Urco, her son, should be Inca after him. Therefore he hated me
because I stood in Urco's path; therefore too many troubles befell me,
and I was given over into Urco's hand, so that he took my wife and
tried to poison me, and the rest you know. Now it was needful to me to
learn how things went, and for this reason I listened to the talk
between you and a certain lady. It told me that Upanqui, my father,
comes here to-morrow, which indeed I knew already, and much else that
I had not heard. This being so I must vanish away, since doubtless
Upanqui or his councillors would know me again, and as they are all of
them friends of Urco, perhaps I should taste more poison and of a
stronger sort."

"Whither will you vanish, Kari?"

"I know not, Master, or if I know, I will not say, who have but just
been taught afresh how secrets can pass from ear to ear. I must lie
hid, that is enough. Yet do not think that therefore I shall desert
you--I, while I live, will watch over you, a stranger in my country,
as you watched over me when I was a stranger in your England."

"I thank you," I answered, "and certainly you watch well--too well,
sometimes, as I have found to-night."

"You think it pleases me to spy upon you and a certain lady," went on
Kari with an unruffled voice, "but it is not so. What I do is for good
reasons, amongst others that I may protect you both, and if I can,
bring about what you desire. That lady has a great heart, as I learned
but now, and after all you did well to love her, as she does well to
love you. Therefore, although the dangers are so many, if I am able, I
will help you in your love and bring you together, yes, and save her
from the arms of Urco. Nay, ask me not how, for I do not know, and the
case seems desperate."

"But if you go, what shall I do alone?" I asked, alarmed.

"Bide here, I think, Lord, giving it out that your servant Zapana has
deserted you. Indeed it seems that this you must do, since the king of
this country will scarcely suffer you to be the companion of his
daughter upon her marriage journey to Cuzco, even if Upanqui so
desires. Nor would it be wise, for if he did, misfortune might befall
you on the road. There are some women, Lord, who cannot keep their
love out of their eyes, and henceforward there will be plenty to watch
the eyes and hearken to the most secret sighings of one of the
greatest of them. Now farewell until I come to you again or send
others on my behalf. Trust me, I pray you, since to whomever else I
may seem false, to you I am true; yes, to you and to another because
she has become a part of you."

Then before I could answer, Kari took my hand and touched it with his
lips. Another moment and I had lost sight of him in the shadows.



                              CHAPTER VI

                              THE CHOICE

That night I slept but ill who was overwhelmed with all that had
befallen me of good and evil. I had gained a wondrous love, but she
who gave it was, it seemed, about to be lost to me, aye, and to be
thrown to another whom she hated, to forward the dark policies of a
great and warlike people. I had spoken to her with high words of hope,
but of it in my heart there was little. She would follow what she held
to be her duty to the end, and that end, if she kept her promise and
did not die as she desired to do--was--the arms of Urco. From these I
could see no escape for her, and the thought maddened me. Moreover,
Kari was gone leaving me utterly alone among these strangers, and
whether he would return again I did not know. Oh! almost I wished that
I were dead.

The morning broke at last and I arose and called for Zapana. Then came
others who said that my servant, Zapana, could not be found, whereat I
affected surprise and anger. Still these others waited on me well
enough, and I rose and ate in pomp and luxury. Scarcely had I finished
my meal than there appeared heralds who summoned me to the presence of
the king Huaracha.

I went, borne in a litter, although an arrow from my black bow would
have flown from door to door. At the portal of the palace, which was
like others I had seen, only finer, I was met by soldiers and gaily
dressed servants and led across a courtyard within, which I could see
was prepared for some ceremony, to a small chamber on the further
side. Here, when my eyes grew accustomed to the half-darkness, I
perceived a man of some sixty years of age, and behind him two
soldiers. At once I noted that everything about this man was plain and
simple; the chamber, which was little more than four whitewashed walls
with a floor of stone, the stool he sat on, even his apparel. Here
were no gold or silver or broidered cloths, or gems, or other rich and
costly things such as these people love, but rather those that are
suited to a soldier. A soldier he looked indeed, being burly and broad
and scarred upon his homely face, in which gleamed eyes that were
steady and piercing.

As I entered, the king Huaracha, for it was he, rose from his stool
and bowed to me, and I bowed back to him. Then he motioned to one of
the soldiers to give me another stool, upon which I sat myself, and
speaking in a strong, low voice, using that tongue which Kari had
taught me, said:

"Greeting, White-God-from-the-Sea, or golden-bearded man named the
lord Hurachi, I know not which, of whom I have heard so much and whom
I am glad to behold in my poor city. Say, can you understand my talk?"

Thus he spoke, searching me with his eyes, though all the while I
perceived that they rested rather on my armour and the great sword,
Wave-Flame, than on my face.

I gave him back his greeting and answered that I understood the tongue
he used though not so very well, whereon he began to speak about the
armour and the sword, which puzzled him who had never seen steel.

"Make me some like them," he said, "and I will give you ten times
their weight in gold, which, after all, is of no use since with it one
cannot kill enemies."

"In my country with it one can corrupt them," I answered, "or buy them
to be friends."

"So you have a country," he interrupted shrewdly. "I thought that the
gods had none."

"Even the gods live somewhere," I replied.

He laughed, and turning to the two soldiers, who also were staring at
my mail and sword, bade them go. When the heavy door had shut behind
them and we were quite alone, he said:

"My lord Hurachi, I have heard from my daughter how she found you in
the sea, a story indeed. I have also heard, or guessed, it matters not
which, that her heart has turned towards you, as is not strange,
seeing the manner of man you are, if indeed you be not more than man,
and that women are ever prone to love those whom they think they have
saved. Is this true, my lord Hurachi?"

"Ask of the Lady Quilla, O King."

"Mayhap I have asked and at last it seems that you make no denial. Now
hearken, my lord Hurachi. You are my honoured guest and save one
thing, all I have is yours, but you must talk no more alone with the
lady Quilla in gardens at night."

Now, making no attempt to deny or explain which I saw would be
useless, since he knew it all, I asked boldly:

"Why not?"

"I thought that perchance my daughter had told you, Lord Hurachi, but
if you desire to hear it from my own lips also, for this reason. The
lady Quilla is promised in marriage and if she lives that promise must
be fulfilled, since on it hangs the fate of nations. Therefore, it is,
although to grieve to part such a pair, that you and she must meet no
more in gardens or elsewhere. Know that if you do, you will bring
about her death and your own, if gods can die."

Now I thought awhile and answered:

"These are heavy words, King Huaracha, seeing that I will not hide
from you that I love your daughter well and that she, who is great-
hearted, loves me well and desires me for her husband."

"I know it and I grieve for both of you," he said courteously.

"King Huaracha," I went on, "I see that you are a soldier and the lord
of armies, and it has come into my mind that perchance you dream of
war."

"The gods see far, White Lord."

"Now god or man, I also am a soldier, King, and I know arts of battle
which perhaps are hidden from you and your people; also I cannot be
harmed by weapons because of magic armour that I wear, and none can
stand before me in fight because of this magic sword I carry, and I
can direct battles with a general's mind. In a great war, King, I
might be useful to you were I the husband of your daughter and
therefore your son and friend, and perchance by my skill make the
difference to you and your nation between victory and defeat."

"Doubtless this is so, O Son-of-the-Sea."

"In the same fashion, King, were I upon the side of your enemies, to
them I might bring victory and to you defeat. Whom do you desire that
I should serve, you or them?"

"I desire that you should serve me," he replied with eagerness. "Do so
and all the wealth of this land shall be yours, with the rule of my
armies under me. You shall have palaces and fields and gold and
silver, and the fairest of its daughters for wives, and be worshipped
as a god, and for aught I know, be king after me, not only of my
country but mayhap of another that is even greater."

"It is a good offer, King, but not enough. Give me your daughter,
Quilla, and you may keep all the rest."

"White Lord, I cannot, since to do so I must break my word."

"Then, King, I cannot serve you, and unless you kill me first--if you
are able--I will be, not your friend, but your enemy."

"Can a god be killed, and if so can a guest be killed? Lord, you know
that he cannot. Yet he can remain a guest. To my country you have
come, Lord, and in my country you shall stay, unless you have wings
beneath that silver coat. Quilla goes hence but here you bide, my lord
Hurachi."

"Perchance I shall find the wings," I answered.

"Aye, Lord, for it is said that the dead fly, and if I may not kill
you, others may. Therefore my counsel to you is to stay here, taking
such things as my poor country can give you, and not to try to follow
the moon (by this he meant Quilla) to the golden city of Cuzco, which
henceforth must be her home."

Now having no more to say, since war had been declared between us, as
it were, I rose to bid this king farewell. He also rose, then, as
though struck by a sudden thought, said that he desired to speak with
my servant, Zapana, he whom the lady Quilla had found with me in the
island of the sea. I replied that he could not since Zapana had
vanished, I knew not where.

At this intelligence he appeared to be disturbed and was beginning to
question me somewhat sternly as to who Zapana might be and how I had
first come into his company, when the door of the room opened and
through it Quilla entered even more gorgeously robed and looking
lovelier than ever I had seen her. She bowed, first to the King and
then to me, saying:

"Lord and Father, I come to tell you that the Inca Upanqui draws near
with his princes and captains."

"Is it so, Daughter?" he answered. "Then make your farewell here and
now to this White-Son-of-the-Sea, since it is my will that you depart
with Upanqui who comes to escort you to Cuzco, the City of the Sun,
there to be given as wife to the prince Urco, son of the Sun, who will
sit on the Inca's throne."

"I make my farewell to the lord Hurachi as you command," she answered,
curtseying , and in a very quiet voice, "but know, my father, that I
love this White Lord as he loves me, and that therefore, although I
may be given to the Prince Urco, as a gold cup is given, never shall
he drink from the cup and never will I be his wife."

"You have courage, Daughter, and I like courage," said Huaracha. "For
the rest, settle the matter as you will and if you can slip from the
coils of this snake of an Urco unpoisoned, do so, since my bargain is
fulfilled and my honour satisfied. Only hither you shall not return to
the lord Hurachi, nor shall the lord Hurachi go to you at Cuzco."

"That shall be as the gods decree, my father, and meanwhile I play my
part as /you/ decree. Lord Hurachi, fare you well till in life or
death we meet again."

Then she bowed to me, and went, and presently without more words we
followed after her.



In front of the palace there was a great square of open ground
surrounded by houses, except towards the east, and on this square was
marshalled an army of men all splendidly arrayed and carrying copper-
headed spears. In front of these was pitched a great pavilion made of
cloths of various colours. Here King Huaracha, simply dressed in a
robe of white cotton but wearing a little crown of gold and carrying a
large spear, took his seat upon a throne, while to his right, on a
smaller throne, sat Quilla, and on his left stood yet another throne
ornamented with gold, that was empty. Between the throne of Huaracha
and that which was empty stood a chair covered with silver on which I
was bidden to take my seat, so placed that all could see me, while
behind and around were lords and generals.

Scarcely were we arranged when from the dip beyond the open space
appeared heralds who carried spears and were fantastically dressed.
These shouted that the Inca Upanqui, the Child of the Sun, the god who
ruled the earth, drew near.

"Let him approach!" said Huaracha briefly, and they departed.

Awhile later there arose a sound of barbarous music and of chanting
and from the dip below emerged a glittering litter borne upon the
shoulders of richly clothed men all of whom, I was told afterwards,
were princes by blood, and surrounded by beautiful women who carried
jewelled fans, and by councillors. It was the litter of the Inca
Upanqui, and after it marched a guard of picked warriors, perhaps
there were a hundred of them, not more.

The litter was set down in front of the throne; gilded curtains were
drawn and out of it came a man whose attire dazzled the eyes. It
seemed to consist of gold and precious stones sewn on to a mantle of
crimson wool. He wore a head-dress also of as many colours as Joseph's
coat, surmounted by two feathers, which he alone might bear, from
which head-dress a scarlet fringe that was made of tasselled wool hung
down upon his forehead. This was the Inca's crown, even to touch which
was death, and its name was /Lautu/. He was a very old man for his
white locks and beard hung down upon his splendid garments and he
supported himself upon his royal staff that was headed by a great
emerald. His fine-cut face also, though still kingly, was weak with
age and his eyes were blear. At the sight of him all rose and Huaracha
descended from his throne, saying in a loud voice:

"Welcome to the land of the Chancas, O Upanqui, Inca of the Quichuas."

The old monarch eyed him for a moment, then answered in a thin voice:

"Greeting to Huaracha, /Curaca/ of the Chancas."

Huaracha bowed and said:

"I thank you, but here among my own people my title is not /Curaca/,
but King, O Inca."

Upanqui drew himself up to his full height and replied:

"The Incas know no kings throughout the land of Tavantinsuyu save
themselves, O Huaracha."

"Be it so, O Inca; yet the Chancas, who are unconquered, know a king,
and I am he. I pray you be seated, O Inca."

Upanqui stood still for a moment frowning, and, as I thought, was
about to make some short answer, when suddenly his glance fell upon me
and changed the current of his mind.

"Is that the White-god-from-the-Sea?" he asked, with an almost
childish curiosity. "I heard that he was here, and to tell the truth
that is why I came, just to look at him, not to bandy words with you,
O Huaracha, who they say can only be talked to with a spear point.
What a red beard he has and how his coat shines. Let him come and
worship me."

"He will come, but I do not think that he will worship. They say he is
a god himself, O Inca."

"Do they? Well, now I remember there are strange prophecies about a
white god who should rise out of the sea, as did the forefather of the
Incas. They say, too, that this god shall do much mischief to the land
when he comes. So perhaps he had better not draw too near to me, for I
like not the look of that great big sword of his. By the Sun, my
father, he is tall and big and strong" (I had risen from my chair)
"and his beard is like a fire; it will set the hearts of all the women
burning, though perhaps if he is a god he does not care for women. I
must consult my magicians about it, and the head priest of the Temple
of the Sun. Tell the White God to make ready to return with me to
Cuzco."

"The lord Hurachi is my guest, O Inca, and here he bides with me,"
said Huaracha.

"Nonsense, nonsense! When the Inca invites any one to his court, he
must come. But enough of him for the present. I came here to talk of
other matters. What were they? Let me sit down and think."

So he was conducted to his throne upon which he sat trying to collect
his mind, which I saw was weak with age. The end of it was that he
called to his aid a stern-faced, shifty-eyed, middle-aged minister,
whom after I came to know as the High-priest Larico, the private
Councillor of himself and of his son, Urco, and one of the most
powerful men in the kingdom. This noble, I noted, was one who had the
rank of an Earman, that is, he wore in his ear, which like that of
Kari was stretched out to receive it, a golden disc of the size of an
apple, whereon was embossed the image of the sun.

At a sign and a word from his dotard master this Larico began to speak
for him as though he were the Inca himself, saying:

"Hearken, O Huaracha. I have undertaken this toilsome journey, the
last I shall make as Inca, for be it known to you that I purpose to
divest myself of the royal Fringe in favour of the prince, Urco,
begotten to me in the body and of the Sun in spirit, and to retire to
end my days in peace at my palace of Yucay, waiting there patiently
until it pleases my father, the Sun, to take me to his bosom."

Here Larico paused to allow this great news to sink into the minds of
his hearers, and I thought to myself that when I died I would choose
to be gathered to any bosom rather than to that of the Sun, which put
me in mind of hell. Then he went on:

"Rumours have reached me, the Inca, that you, Huaracha, Chief of the
Chancas, are making ready to wage war upon my empire. It was to test
these rumours, although I did not believe them, that awhile ago I sent
an embassy to ask your only child, the lady Quilla, in marriage to the
prince Urco, promising, since he has no sister whom he may wed and
since on the mother's side she, your daughter, has the holy Inca blood
in her veins, that she should become his /Coya/, or Queen, and the
mother of him who shall succeed to the throne."

"The embassy came, and received my answer, O Inca," said Huaracha.

"Yes, and the answer was that the lady Quilla should be given in
marriage to the Prince Urco, but as she was absent on a visit, this
could not happen until she returned. But since then, O Huaracha, more
rumours have reached me that you still prepare for war and seek to
make alliances among my subjects, tempting them to rebel against me.
Therefore I am here myself to lead away the lady Quilla and to deliver
her to the Prince Urco."

"Why did not the Prince Urco come in person, O Inca?"

"For this reason, Huaracha, from whom I desire to hide nothing. If the
Prince had come, you might have set a trap for him and killed him, who
is the hope of the Empire."

"So I might for you, his father, O Inca."

"Aye, I know it, but what would that avail you while the Prince sits
safe at Cuzco ready to assume the Fringe? Also I am old and care not
when or how I die, whose work is done. Moreover, few would desire to
anger the gods by the murder of an aged guest, and therefore I visit
you sitting here in the midst of your armies with but a handful of
followers, trusting to your honour and to my father the Sun to protect
me. Now answer me--will you give the hand of your daughter to my son
and thereby make alliance with me, or will you wage war upon my empire
and be destroyed, you and your people together?"

Here Upanqui, who hitherto had been listening in silence to the words
of Larico, spoken on his behalf, broke in, saying:

"Yes, yes, that is right, only make him understand that the Inca will
be his over-lord, since the Inca can have no rivals in all the land."

"My answer is," said Huaracha, "that I will give my daughter in
marriage as I have promised, but that the Chancas are a free people
and accept no over-lord."

"Foolishness, foolishness!" said Upanqui. "As well might the tree say
that it would not bend before the wind. However, you can settle that
matter afterwards with Urco, and indeed with your daughter, who will
be his queen and is your heiress, for I understand you have no other
lawful child. Why talk of war and other troubles when thus your
kingdom falls to us by marriage? Now let me see this lady Quilla who
is to become my daughter."

Huaracha, who had listened to all this babble with a stern set face,
turned to Quilla and made a sign. She descended from her chair and
advancing, stood before the Inca, a vision of splendour and of beauty,
and bowed to him. He stared at her awhile, as did all his company,
then said:

"So you are the lady Quilla. A fair woman, a very fair woman, and a
proud, one who ought to be able to lead Urco aright if any one can.
Well named, too, after the moon, for the moonlight seems to shine in
your eyes, Lady Quilla. Indeed and indeed were I but a score of years
younger I should tell Urco to seek another queen and keep you for
myself."

Then Quilla spoke for the first time, saying:

"Be it as you will, O Inca. I am promised in marriage to the Child of
the Sun and which child is nothing to me."

"Well said, Lady Quilla, and why should I wonder? Though I grow old
they tell me that I am still handsome, a great deal better looking
than Urco, in fact, who is a rough man and of a coarser type. You ask
my wives when you come to Cuzco; one of them told me the other day
that there was no one so handsome in the whole city, and earned a
beautiful present for her pretty speech. What is it you say, Larico?
Why are you always interfering with me? Well, perhaps you are right,
and, Lady Quilla, if you are ready, it is time to start. No, no, I
thank you, Curaca, but I will not stop for any feasting who desire to
be back at my camp before dark, since who knows what may happen to one
in the dark in a strange country?"

Then at last Huaracha grew angry.

"Be it as you will, O Inca," he said, "but know that you offer me a
threefold insult. First you refuse the feast that has been made ready
for you whereat you were to meet all the notables of my kingdom.
Secondly, you give me, who am a king, the title of a petty chief who
owns your rule. Thirdly, you throw doubts upon my honour, hinting that
I may cause you to be murdered in the dark. Now I am minded to say to
you, 'Begone from my poor country, Lord Inca, in safety, but leave my
daughter behind you.'"

Now at these words, I, Hubert, saw the fires of hope burn up in the
large eyes of Quilla, as they did in my own heart, for might they not
mean that she would escape from Urco after all? But, alas, they were
extinguished like a brand that is dipped in water.

"Tush, tush!" said the old dotard, "what a fire-eater are you, friend
Huaracha. Know that I never care to eat, except at night; also that
the chill of the air after my father the Sun has set makes my bones
ache, and as for titles--take any one you like, except that of Inca."

"Mayhap that is the one I shall take before all is done," broke in the
furious Huaracha, who would not be quieted by the councillors
whispering in his ears.

It was at this moment that the minister and high-priest, Larico, who
had been noting all that passed with an impassive face, said coldly:

"Be not wroth, O King Huaracha, and lay not too much weight upon the
idle words of the glorious Inca, since even the gods will doze at
times when they are weighed down by the cares of empire. No affront
was meant to you and least of all does the Inca or any one of us,
dream that you would tarnish your honour by offering violence to your
guests by day or by night. Yet know this, that if, after all that has
been sworn, you withhold your daughter, the lady Quilla, from the
house of Urco who is her lord to be, it will breed instant war, since
as soon as word of it comes to Cuzco, which will be within twenty
hours, for messengers wait all along the road, the great armies of the
Inca that are gathered there will begin to move. Judge, then, if you
have the strength to withstand them, and choose whether you will live
on in glory and honour, or bring yourself to death and your people to
slavery. Now, King Huaracha, speaking on behalf of Urco, who within
some few moons will be Inca, I ask you--will you suffer the lady
Quilla to journey with us to Cuzco and thereby proclaim peace between
our peoples or will you keep her here against your oath and hers, and
thereby declare war?"

Huaracha sat silent, lost in thought, and the old Inca Upanqui began
to babble again, saying:

"Very well put, I could not have said it better myself; indeed, I did
say it, for this coxcomb of a Larico, who thinks himself so clever
just because I made him high-priest of the Sun under me and he is of
my blood, is after all nothing but the tongue in my mouth. You don't
really want to die, Huaracha, do you, after seeing most of your people
killed and your country wasted? For you know that is what must happen.
If you do not send your daughter as you promised, within a few hours a
hundred thousand men will be marching on you and another hundred
thousand gathering behind them. Anyhow, please make up your mind one
way or another, as I wish to leave this place."

Huaracha thought on awhile. Then he descended from his throne and
beckoned to Quilla. She came and he led her towards the back part of
the pavilion behind and a little to the left of the chair on which I
sat where none could hear their talk save me, of whom he seemed to
take no note, perhaps because he had forgotten me, or perhaps because
he desired that I should know all.

"Daughter," he said in a low voice, "what word? Before you answer
remember that if I refuse to send you, now for the first time I break
my oath."

"Of such oaths I think little," answered Quilla. "Yet of another thing
I think much. Tell me, my father, if the Inca declares war and attacks
us, can we withstand his armies?"

"No, Daughter, not until the Yuncas join us for we lack sufficient
men. Moreover, we are not ready, nor shall be for another two moons,
or more."

"Then it stands thus, Father. If I do not go the war will begin, and
if I do go it seems that it will be staved off until you are ready, or
perhaps for always, because I shall be the peace-offering and it will
be thought that I, your heiress, take your kingdom as my marriage
portion to be joined to that of the Incas at your death. Is it thus?"

"It is, Quilla. Only then you will work to bring it about that the
Land of the Incas shall be joined to the Land of the Chancas, and not
that of the Chancas to that of the Incas, so that in a day to come as
Queen of the Chancas you shall reign over both of them and your
children after you."

Now I, Hubert, watching Quilla out of the corners of my eyes, saw her
turn pale and tremble.

"Speak not to me of children," she said, "for I think that there will
be none, and talk not of future glories, since for these I care
nothing. It is for our people that I care. You swear to me that if I
do not go your armies will be defeated and that those who escape the
spear will be enslaved?"

"Aye, I swear it by the Moon your mother, also that I will die with my
soldiers."

"Yet if I go I leave behind me that which I love," here she glanced
towards me, "and give myself to shame, which is worse than death. Is
that your desire, my father?"

"That is not my desire. Remember, Daughter, that you were party to
this plan, aye, that it sprang from your far-seeing mind. Still, now
that your heart has changed, I would not hold you to your bargain, who
desire most of all things to see you happy at my side. Choose,
therefore, and I obey. On your head be it."

"What shall I say, O Lord, whom I saved from the sea?" asked Quilla in
a piercing whisper, but without turning her head towards me.

Now an agony took hold of me for I knew that what I bade her, that she
would say, and that perchance upon my answer hung the fate of all this
great Chanca people. If she went they would be saved, if she remained
perchance she would be my wife if only for a while. For the Chancas I
cared nothing and for the Quichuas I cared nothing, but Quilla was all
that remained to me in the world and if she went, it was to another
man. I would bid her bide. And yet--and yet if her case were mine and
the fate of England hung upon my breath, what then?

"Be swift," she whispered again.

Then I spoke, or something spoke through me, saying:

"Do what honour bids you, O Daughter of the Moon, for what is love
without honour? Perchance both shall still be yours at last."

"I thank you, Lord, whose heart speaks as my heart," she whispered for
the third time, then lifting her head and looking Huaracha in the
eyes, said:

"Father, I go, but that I will wed this Urco I do not promise."



                             CHAPTER VII

                          THE RETURN OF KARI

So Quilla, seated in a golden litter and accompanied by maidens as
became her rank, soon was borne away in the train of the Inca Upanqui,
leaving me desolate. Before she went, under pretence of bidding me
farewell, none denying her, she gained private speech with me for a
little while.

"Lord and Lover," she said, "I go to what fate I know not, leaving you
to what fate I know not, and as your lips have said, it is right that
I should go. Now I have something to ask of you--that you will not
follow me as it is in your heart to do. But last night I prayed of you
to dog my steps and wherever I might go to keep close to me, that the
knowledge of your presence might be my comfort. Now my mind is
different. If I must be married to this Urco, I would not have you see
me in my shame. And if I escape marriage you cannot help me, since I
may only do so by death or by taking refuge where you cannot come.
Also I have another reason."

"What reason, Quilla?" I asked.

"This: I ask that you will stop with my father and give him your help
in the war that must come. I would see this Urco crushed, but without
that help I am sure that the Chancas and the Yuncas are too weak to
overthrow the Inca might. Remember that if I escape marriage thus only
can you hope to win me, namely, by the defeat and death of Urco. Say,
then, that you will stay here and help to lead the Chanca armies, and
say it swiftly, since that dotard, Upanqui, frets to be gone. Hark!
his messengers call and search; my women can hold them back no more."

"I will stay," I answered hoarsely.

"I thank you, and now farewell, till in life or death we meet again.
Thoughts come to my mind which I have no time to utter."

"To mine also, Quilla, and here is one of them. You know the man who
was with me on the island. Well, he is more than he seems."

"So I guessed, but where is he now?"

"In hiding, Quilla. If you should chance to find him, bear in mind
that he is an enemy of Urco and one not friendless; also that he loves
me after his fashion. Trust him, I pray you. Urco is not the only one
of the Inca blood, Quilla."

She glanced at me quickly and nodded her head. Then without more
words, for officers were pressing towards us, she drew a ring off her
finger, a thick and ancient golden ring on which were cut what looked
like flowers, or images of the sun, and gave it to me.

"Wear this for my sake. It is very old and has a story of true love
that I have no time to tell," she said.

I took it and in exchange passed to her that ancient ring which my
mother had given to me, the ring that had come down to her with the
sword Wave-Flame, saying:

"This, too, is old and has a story; wear it in memory of me."

Then we parted and presently she was gone.

I stood watching her litter till it vanished in the evening haze. Then
I turned to go to find myself face to face with Huaracha.

"Lord-from-the-Sea," he said, "you have played a man's--or a god's--
part to-day. Had you bidden my daughter bide here, she would have done
so for love of you and the Chanca people must have been destroyed, for
as that old Inca or his spokesman told us, the breaking of my oath
would have been taken as a declaration of instant war. Now we have
breathing time, and in the end things may go otherwise."

"Yes," I answered, "but what of Quilla and what of me?"

"I know not your creed or what with you is honour, White Lord, but
among us whom perhaps you think of small account, it is thought and
held that there are times when a man or a woman, especially if they be
highly placed, must do sacrifice for the good of the many who cling to
them for guidance and for safety. This you and my daughter have done
and therefore I honour both of you."

"To what end is the sacrifice made?" I asked bitterly. "That one
people may struggle for dominion over another people, no more."

"You are mistaken, Lord. Not for victory or to increase my dominions
do I desire to war upon the Incas, but because unless I strike I shall
presently be struck, though for a little while this marriage might
hold back the blow. Alone in the midst of the vast territories over
which the Incas rule, the Chancas stem their tide of conquest and
remain free amongst many nations of slaved. Therefore for ages these
Incas, like those who ruled before them at Cuzco, have sworn to
destroy us, and Urco has sworn it above all."

"Urco might die or be deposed, Huaracha."

"If so another would put on the Fringe and be vowed to the ancient
policy that does not change from generation to generation. Therefore I
must fight or perish with my people. Hearken, Lord-from-the-Sea! Stay
here with me and become as my brother and a general of my armies, for
where will they not follow when you lead, who are held to be a god?
Then if we conquer, in reward, from a brother you shall become a son,
and to you after me I swear shall pass the Chanca crown. Moreover, to
you, if she can be saved, I will give in marriage her whom you love.
Think before you refuse. I know not whence you come, but this I know:
that you can return thither no more, unless, indeed, you are a spirit.
Here your lot is cast till death. Therefore make it glorious.
Perchance you might fly to the Inca and there become a marvel and a
show, furnished with gold and palaces and lands, but always you would
be a servant, while I offer to you a crown and the rule of a people
great and free."

"I care nothing for crowns," I answered, sighing. "Still, such was
Quilla's prayer, perchance the last that ever she will make to me.
Therefore I accept and will serve you and your cause, that seems
noble, faithfully to the end, O Huaracha."

Then I stretched out my hand to him and so our compact was sealed.



On the very next day my work began. Huaracha made me known to his
captains, commanding them to obey me in all things, which, looking on
me as half divine, they did readily enough.

Now, of soldiering I knew little who was a seaman bred, yet as I had
learned, a man of the English race in however strange a country he
finds himself can make a path there to his ends.

Moreover, in London I had heard much talk of armies and their ordering
and often watched troops at their exercise; also I know how to handle
bow and sword, and was accustomed to the management of men. So putting
all these memories together, I set myself to the task of turning a mob
of half-savage fellows with arms into an ordered host. I created
regiments and officered them with the best captains that I could find,
collecting in each regiment so far as possible the people of a certain
town or district. These companies I drilled and exercised, teaching
them to use such weapons as they had to the best purpose.

Also I caused them to shape stronger bows on the model of my own with
which I had shot the three Frenchmen far away at Hastings that, as it
was said, once had been the battle-bow of Thorgrimmer the Norseman my
ancestor, as the sword Wave-Flame was his battle-sword. When these
Chancas saw how far and with what a good aim I could shoot with this
bow, they strove day and night to learn to equal me, though it is true
they never did. Also I bettered their body-armour of quilting by
settings sheets of leather (since in that country there is no iron)
taken from the hides of wild animals and of their long-haired native
sheep, between the layers of cotton. Other things I did also, too many
and long to record.

The end of it was that within three months Huaracha had an army of
some fifty thousand men who, if not well trained, still kept
discipline, and could move in regiments; who knew also how to shoot
with their bows and to use their copper-headed spears and axes of that
metal, or of hard stone, to the best purpose.

Then at length came the Yuncas to join us, thirty or forty thousand of
them, wild fellows and brave enough, but undisciplined. With these I
could do little since time was lacking, save send some of the officers
whom I had trained to teach their chiefs and captains what they were
able.

Thus I was employed from dawn till dark and often after it, in talk
with Huaracha and his generals, or in drawing plans with ink that I
found a means to make, upon parchment of sheepskin and noting down
numbers and other things, a sight at which these people who knew
nothing of writing marvelled very much. Great were my labours, yet in
them I found more happiness than I had known since that fatal day when
I, the rich London merchant, Hubert of Hastings, had stood before the
altar of St. Margaret's church with Blanche Aleys. Indeed, every
cranny of my time and mind being thus filled with things finished or
attempted, I forgot my great loneliness as an alien in a strange land,
and once more became as I had been when I trafficked in the Cheap.

But toil as I would, I could not forget Quilla. During the day I might
mask her memory in its urgent business, but when I lay down to rest
she seemed to come to me as a ghost might do and to stand by my bed,
looking at me with sad and longing eyes. So real was her presence that
sometimes I began to believe that she must have died to the world and
was in truth a ghost, or else that she had found the power to throw
her soul afar, as it is said certain of these Indian folk, if so they
should be called, can do. At least there she seemed to be while I
remained awake and afterwards when I slept, and I know not whether her
strange company joyed or pained me more. For alas! she could not talk
to me, or tell me how it fared with her, and, to speak truth, now that
she was the wife of another man, as I supposed, I desired to forget
her if I could.

For of Quilla no word reached us. We heard that she had come safely to
Cuzco and after that nothing more. Of her marriage there was no
tidings; indeed she seemed to have vanished away. Certain of
Huaracha's spies reported to him, however, that the great army which
Urco had gathered to attack him had been partly disbanded, which
seemed to show that the Inca no longer prepared for immediate war.
Only then what had happened to Quilla, whose person was the price of
peace? Perhaps she was hidden away during the preparations for her
nuptials; at least I could think of nothing else, unless indeed she
had chosen to kill herself or died naturally.

Soon, however, all news ceased, for Huaracha shut his frontiers,
hoping that thus Urco might not learn that he was gathering armies.

At length, when our forces were almost ready to march, Kari came, Kari
whom I thought lost.

One night when I was seated at my work by lamplight, writing down
numbers upon a parchment, a shadow fell across it, and looking up I
saw Kari standing before me, travel-worn and weary, but Kari without
doubt, unless I dreamed.

"Have you food, Lord?" he asked while I stared at him. "I need it and
would eat before I speak."

I found meat and native beer and brought them to him, for it was late
and my servants were asleep, waiting till he had filled himself, for
by this time I had learned something of the patience of these people.
At length he spoke, saying:

"Huaracha's watch is good, and to pass it I must journey far into the
mountains and sleep three nights without food amid their snows."

"Whence come you?" I asked.

"From Cuzco, Lord."

"Then what of the lady Quilla? Does she still live? Is she wed to
Urco?"

"She lives, or lived fourteen days ago, and she is not wed. But where
she is no man may ever come. You have looked your last upon the lady
Quilla, Lord."

"If she lives and is unwed, why?" I asked, trembling.

"Because she is numbered among the Virgins of the Sun our Father, and
therefore inviolate to man. Were I the Inca, though I love you and
know all, should you attempt to take her, yes, even you, I would kill
you if I could, and with my own sword. In our land, Lord, there is one
crime which has no forgiveness, and that is to lay hands upon a Virgin
of the Sun. We believe, Lord, that if this is done, great curses will
fall upon our country, while as for the man who works the crime,
before he passes to eternal vengeance he and all his house and the
town whence he came must perish utterly, and that false virgin who has
betrayed our father, the Sun, must die slowly and by fire."

"Has this ever chanced?" I asked.

"History does not tell it, Lord, since none have been so wicked, but
such is the law."

I thought to myself that it was a very evil law, and cruel; also that
I would break it if I found opportunity, but made no answer, knowing
when to be silent and that I might as well strive to move a mountain
from its base as to turn Kari from the blindness of his folly bred of
false faith. After all, could I blame him, seeing that we held the
same of the sacredness of nuns and, it was said, killed them if they
broke their vows?

"What news, Kari?" I asked.

"Much, Lord. Hearken. Disguised as a peasant who had come into this
country to barter wool from a village near to Cuzco, I joined myself
to the train of the Inca Upanqui, among whose lords I found a friend
who had loved me in past years and kept my secret as he was bound to
do, having passed into the brotherhood of knights with me while we
were lads. Through him, in place of a man who was sick, I became one
of the bearers of the lady Quilla's litter and thus was always about
her and at times had speech with her in secret, for she knew me again
notwithstanding my disguise and uniform. So I became one of those who
waited on her when she ate and noted all that passed.

"After the first day the Inca Upanqui, he who is my father and whose
lawful heir I am, although he discarded me for Urco and believes me
dead, made it a habit to take his food in the same tent or rest-house
chamber as the lady Quilla. Lord, being very clever, she set herself
to charm him, so that soon he began to dote upon her, as old, worn-out
men sometimes do upon young and beautiful women. She, too, pretended
to grow fond of him and at last told him in so many words that she
grieved it was not he that she was to marry whose wisdom she hung
upon, in place of a prince who, she heard, was not wise. This, she
said, because she knew well that the Inca would never marry any more
and indeed had lived alone for years. Still, being flattered, he told
her it was hard that she should be forced to wed one to whom she had
no mind, whereon she prayed him, even with tears, to save her from
such a fate. At last he vowed that he would do so by setting her among
the Virgins of the Sun on whom no man may look. She thanked him and
said that she would consider the matter, since, for reasons that you
may guess, Lord, she did not desire to become a Virgin of the Sun and
to pass the rest of her days in prayer and the weaving of the Inca's
garments.

"So it went on until when we were a day's march from Cuzco, Urco, my
brother, came to meet his promised bride. Now, Urco is a huge man and
hideous, one whom none would believe to have been born of the Inca
blood. Coarse he is, and dissolute, given to drink also, though a
great fighter and brave in battle, and quick-brained when he is sober.
I was present when they met and I saw the lady Quilla shiver and turn
pale at the sight of him, while he on his part devoured her beauty
with his eyes. They spoke but few words together, yet before these
were done, he told her it was his will that they should be wed at once
on the day after she came to Cuzco, nor would he listen to the Inca
Upanqui who said, being cunning and wishing to gain time, that due
preparation must be made for so great a business.

"Thereupon Urco grew angry with his father, who both fears and loves
him, and answered that, being almost Inca, this matter was one which
he would settle for himself. So fierce was he that Upanqui became
afraid and went away. When they were alone Urco strove to embrace
Quilla, but she fled from him and hid with her maidens in a private
place. After this, at the feast Urco took too much drink according to
his custom and was led away to sleep by his lords. Then Quilla waited
upon the Inca and said:

"'O Inca, I have seen the Prince and I claim your promise to save me
from him. O Inca, abandoning all thought of marriage, I will become
the bride of our Father the Sun.'

"Upanqui, who was wroth with Urco because he had crossed his will,
swore by the Sun itself that he would not fail her, come what might,
since Urco should learn that he was not yet Inca."

"What happened then?" I asked, staring him in the eyes.

"After this, Lord, when we were halted before making the state entry
into Cuzco, for a moment the lady Quilla found opportunity for private
speech with me. This is what she said:

"'Tell my father, King Huaracha, that I have fulfilled his oath, but
that I cannot marry Urco. Therefore I seek refuge in the arms of the
Sun, as the oracle Rimac foretold that I should do, having to choose
between this fate and that of death. Tell my Lord-from-the-Sea what
has befallen me and bid him farewell to me. Still say that he must
keep a good heart, since I do not believe that all is ended between
us.'

"Then we were parted and I saw her no more."

"And did you hear no more, Kari?"

"I heard much, Lord. I heard that when Urco learned that the lady
Quilla had vanished away into the House of Virgins, whither he might
not come, and that he was robbed of the bride whom he desired, he grew
mad with rage. Indeed, of this I saw something myself. Two days later,
with thousands of others I was in the great square in front of the
Temple of the Sun, where the Inca Upanqui sat in state upon a golden
throne to receive the praise of his people upon his safe return after
his long and hard journey, and as some reported, to lay down his
lordship in favour of Urco; also to tell the people that the danger of
war with the Chancas had passed away. Scarcely had the ceremony begun
when Urco appeared at the head of a number of lords and princes of the
Inca blood, who are of his clan, and I noticed that he was drunk and
furious. He advanced to the foot of the throne, almost without
obeisance, and shouted:

"'Where is the lady Quilla, daughter of Huaracha, who is promised to
me in marriage, Inca? Why have you hidden her away, Inca?'

"'Because the Sun, our Father, has claimed her as his bride and has
taken her to dwell in his holy house, where never again may the eyes
of man behold her, Prince!' answered Upanqui.

"'You mean that robbing me, you have taken her for yourself, Inca,'
shouted Urco again.

"Then Upanqui stood up and swore by the Sun that this was not so and
that what he had done was done by the decree of the god and at the
prayer of the lady Quilla, who having seen Urco, had declared that
either she would be wed to the god or die by her own hand, which would
bring the vengeance of the Sun upon the people.

"Then Urco went mad. He raved at the Inca and while all present
shivered with fear, he cursed the Sun our Father, yes, even when a
cloud came up in the clear sky and veiled the face of the god,
heedless of the omen, he continued his curses and blasphemy. Moreover,
he said that soon he would be Inca and that then, if he must tear the
House of Virgins stone from stone, as Inca he would drag forth the
lady Quilla and make her his wife.

"Now at these words Upanqui stood up and rent his robes.

"'Must my ears be outraged with such blasphemies?' he cried. 'Know,
Son Urco, that this day I was minded to take off the Royal Fringe and
to set it on your head, crowning you Inca in my place while I withdrew
to pass the remainder of my days at Yucay in peace and prayer. My will
is changed. This I shall not do. My life is not done and strength
returns to my mind and body. Here I stay as Inca. Now I see that I am
punished for my sin.'

"'What sin?' shouted Urco.

"'The sin of setting you before my eldest lawful son, Kari, whose wife
you stole; Kari, whom also it is said you poisoned and who at least
has vanished and is doubtless dead.'

"Now, Lord, when I, Kari, heard this my heart melted in me and I was
minded to declare myself to Upanqui my father. But while I weighed the
matter for a moment, knowing that if I did so, such words as these
might well be my last since Urco had many of is following present, who
perhaps would fall upon and kill me, suddenly my father Upanqui fell
forward in a swoon. His lords and physicians bore him away. Urco
followed and presently the multitude departed this way and that.
Afterwards we were told that the Inca had recovered but must not be
disturbed for many days."

"Did you hear more of Quilla, Kari?"

"Yes, Lord," he answered gravely. "It was commonly reported that,
through some priestess in his pay, Urco had poisoned her, saying that
as she had chosen the Sun as husband, to the Sun she would go."

"Poisoned her!" I muttered, well-nigh falling to the ground. "Poisoned
her!"

"Aye, Lord, but be comforted for this was added--that she who gave the
poison was taken in the act by her who is named the Mother of the
Virgins, and handed over to the women who cast her into the den of
serpents, where she perished, screaming that it was Urco who had
forced her to the deed."

"That does not comfort me, man. What of Quilla? Did she die?"

"Lord, it is said not. It is said that the Mother of the Virgins
dashed away the cup as it touched her lips. But this is said also,
that some of the poison flew into her eyes and blinded her."

I groaned, for the thought of Quilla blinded was horrible.

"Again take comfort, Lord, since perchance she may recover from this
blindness. Also I was told, that although she can see nothing, her
beauty is not marred; that the venom indeed has made her eyes seem
larger and more lovely even than they were before."

I made no answer, who feared that Kari was deceiving me or perhaps was
himself deceived and that Quilla was dead. Presently he continued his
story in the same quiet, even voice, saying:

"Lord, after this I sought out certain of my friends who had loved me
in my youth and my mother also while she lived, revealing myself to
them. We made plans together, but before aught could be done in
earnest, it was needful that I should see my father Upanqui. While I
was waiting till he had recovered from the stroke that fell upon him,
some spy betrayed me to Urco, who searched for me to kill me and well-
nigh found me. The end of it was that I was forced to fly, though
before I did so many swore themselves to my cause who would escape
from the tyranny of Urco. Moreover, it was agreed that if I returned
with soldiers at my back, they and their followers would come out to
join me to the number of thousands, and help me to take my own again
so that I may be Inca after Upanqui my father. Therefore I have come
back here to talk with you and Huaracha.

"Such is my tale."



                             CHAPTER VIII

                          THE FIELD OF BLOOD

When on the morrow Huaracha, King of the Chancas, heard all this story
and that Urco had given poison to his daughter Quilla, who, if she
still lived at all, did so, it was said, as a blind woman, a kind of
madness took hold of him.

"Now let war come; I will not rest or stay," he cried, "till I see
this hound, Urco, dead, and hang up his skin stuffed with straw as an
offering to his own god, the Sun."

"Yet it was you, King Huaracha, who sent the lady Quilla to this Urco
for your own purposes," said Kari in his quiet fashion.

"Who and what are you that reprove me?" asked Huaracha turning on him.
"I only know you as the servant or slave of the White-Lord-from-the-
Sea, though it is true I have heard stories concerning you," he added.

"I am Kari, the first-born lawful son of Upanqui and by right heir to
the Inca throne, no less, O Huaracha. Urco my brother robbed me of my
wife, as through the folly of my father, upon whose heart Urco's
mother worked, he had already robbed me of my inheritance. Then, to
make sure, he strove to poison me as he has poisoned your daughter,
with a poison that would make me mad and incapable of rule, yet leave
me living--because he feared lest the curse of the Sun should fall
upon him if he murdered me. I recovered from that bane and wandered to
a far land. Now I have returned to take my own, if I am able. All that
I say I can prove to you."

For a while Huaracha stared at him astonished, then said:

"And if you prove it, what do you ask of me, O Kari?"

"The help of your armies to enable me to overthrow Urco, who is very
strong, being the Commander of the Quichua hosts."

"And if your tale be true and Urco is overthrown, what do you promise
me in return?"

"The independence of the Chanca people, who otherwise must soon be
destroyed, and certain other added territories which you covet, while
I am Inca."

"And with this my daughter, if she still lives?" asked Huaracha
looking at him.

"Nay," replied Kari firmly. "As to the lady Quilla I promise nothing.
She has vowed herself to my Father the Sun, and what I have already
told the Lord Hurachi here, who loves her I tell you. Henceforward no
man may look upon her, who is the Bride of the Sun, for if I suffered
this, certainly the curse of the Sun would fall upon me and upon my
people. He who lays a hand upon her I will strive to slay"--here he
looked at me with meaning--"because I must or be accurst. Take all
else, but let the lady Quilla be. What the Sun has, he holds forever."

"Perhaps the Moon, her mother, may have something to say in that
matter," said Huaracha gloomily. "Still, let it lie for the while."

Then they fell to discussing the terms of their alliance and, when it
came to battle, what help Kari could bring from among those who clung
to him in Cuzco.

After this Huaracha took me to another chamber, where we debated the
business.

"This Kari, if he be Kari himself, is a bigot," he said, "and if he
has his way, neither you nor I will ever set eyes on Quilla again,
because to him it is sacrilege. So, what say you?"

I answered that it would be best to make an alliance with Kari, whom I
knew to be honest and no Pretender, since without his help I did not
think that it would be possible to defeat the armies of the People of
the Incas. For the rest, we must trust to chance, making no promises
as to Quilla.

"If we did they would avail little," said Huaracha, "seeing that
without doubt she is dead and only vengeance remains to us. There is
more poison in Cuzco, White Lord!"



Eight days later we were marching on Cuzco, a great host of us,
numbering at least forty thousand Chancas and twenty-five thousand of
the rebellious Yuncas, who had joined our standard.

On we marched by the great road over mountains and across plains,
driving with us numberless herds of the native sheep for food, but
meeting no man, since so soon as we were out of the territory of the
Chancas all fled at our approach. At length one night we camped upon a
hill named Carmenca and saw beneath us at a distance the mighty city
of Cuzco standing in a valley through which a river ran. There it was
with its huge fortresses built of great blocks of stone, its temples,
its palaces, its open squares, and its countless streets bordered by
low houses. Moreover, beyond and around it we saw other things,
namely, the camps of a vast army dotted with thousands of white tents.

"Urco is ready for us," said Kari to me grimly as he pointed to these
tents.

We camped upon the hill Carmenca and that night there came to us an
embassy which spoke in the names of Upanqui and Urco, as though they
reigned jointly. This embassy of great lords who all wore discs of
gold in their ears asked us what was our purpose. Huaracha answered--
to avenge the murder of the lady Quilla, his daughter, that he heard
had been poisoned by Urco.

"How know you that she is dead?" asked the spokesman.

"If she is not dead," replied Huaracha, "show her to us."

"That may not be," replied the spokesman, "since if she lives, it is
in the House of the Virgins of the Sun, whence none come out and where
none go in. Hearken, O Huaracha. Go back whence you came, or the
countless army of the Incas will fall upon you and destroy you, you
and your handful together."

"That is yet to be seen," answered Huaracha, and without more words
the embassy withdrew.

That night also men crept into our camp secretly, who were of the
party of Kari. Of Quilla they seemed to know nothing, for none spoke
of those over whom the veil of the Sun had fallen. They told us,
however, that the old Inca, Upanqui, was still in Cuzco and had
recovered somewhat from his sickness. Also they said that now the feud
between him and Urco was bitter, but that Urco had the upper hand and
was still in command of the armies. These armies, they declared, were
immense and would fight us on the morrow, adding, however, that
certain regiments of them who were of the party of Kari would desert
to us in the battle. Lastly, they said that there was great fear in
Cuzco, since none knew how that battle would end, which was understood
by all to be one for the dominion of Tavantinsuyu.

They had nothing more to say except that they prayed the Sun for our
success to save them from the tyranny of Urco. This prince, it
appeared, suspected their conspiracy, for now the rumour that Kari
lived was everywhere, and having obtained the names of some who were
connected with it through his spies, he pursued them with murder and
sudden death. They were poisoned at their food; they were stabbed as
they walked through the streets at night; their wives, if young and
fair, vanished away, as they believed into the houses of those who
desired them; even their children were kidnapped, doubtless to become
the servants of whom they knew not. They had complained of these
things to the old Inca Upanqui, but without avail, since in such
matters he was powerless before Urco who had command of the armies.
Therefore they would even welcome the triumph of Huaracha, which meant
that Kari would become Inca if with lessened territory.

Before they parted to play their parts, Kari brought them before me,
whom in their foolishness they worshipped, believing me to be in truth
a god. Then he told them to have no fear, since I would command the
armies of Huaracha in the battle.

Having surveyed the ground while the light lasted, for the most of
that night, together with Huaracha and Kari, I toiled, making plans
for the great fight that was to come. All being ready, I lay down to
sleep awhile, wondering whether it were the last time I should do so
upon the earth and, to tell the truth, not caring overmuch who,
believing that Quilla was dead, had it not been for my sins which
weighed upon me with none to whom I might confess them, should have
been glad to leave the world and its troubles for whatever might lie
beyond, even if it were but sleep.

There comes a time to most men when above everything they desire rest,
and now that hour was with me, the exiled and the desolate. Here in
this strange country and among these alien people I had found one soul
which was akin to mine, that of a beautiful woman who loved me and
whom I had come to love and desire. But what was the end of it? Owing
to the necessities of statecraft and her own nobleness, she had been
separated from me and although, as it would seem, she had as yet
escaped defilement, was spirited away into the temple of some
barbarous worship where I was almost sure death had found her.

At the best she was blinded, and where she lay in her darkness no man
might come because of the superstitions of these folk. Even if Kari
became Inca, it would not help me or her, should she still live, since
he was the fiercest bigot of them all and swore that he would kill me,
his friend, rather than that I should touch her, the vowed to his
false gods.

Or perhaps, through the priests, to save himself such sorrow, he would
kill her. At the least, dead or not, she was lost to me, while I--
utterly alone--must fight for a cause in which I had but one concern,
to bring some savage prince to his end because of his crime against
Quilla. And, if things went well and this chanced, what of the Future?
Of what use to me were rewards that I did not want, and the worship of
the vulgar which I hated? Rather would I have lived out my life as the
humblest fisherman on Hastings beach, than be made a king over these
glittering barbarians with their gold and gems which could buy nothing
that I needed, not even a Book of Hours to feed my soul, or the sound
of the English tongue to comfort my empty heart.

At length I fell asleep, and as it seemed but a few minutes later,
though really six hours had gone by, was awakened by Kari, who told me
that the dawn was not far off and came to help me to buckle on my
armour. Then I went forth and together with Huaracha arranged our army
for battle. Our plan was to advance from our rising ground across a
great plain beneath us which was called Xaqui, but afterwards became
known by the name of Yahuar-pampa, or Field of Blood.

This plain lay between us and the city of Cuzco, and my thought was
that we would march or fight our way across it and rush into the city
which was unwalled, and there amidst its streets and houses await the
attack of the Inca hosts that were encamped upon its farther side, for
thus protected by their walls we hoped that we should be more equal to
them. Yet things happened otherwise, since with the first light,
without which we did not dare to move over unknown ground, we
perceived that during the darkness the Inca armies had moved round and
through the town and were gathered by the ten thousand in dense
battalions upon the farther side of the plain.

Now we took council together and in the end decided not to attack as
we had proposed, but to await their onslaught on the rocky ridge up
which they must climb. So we commanded that our army, which was
marshalled in three divisions abreast and two wings with the Yuncas as
a reserve behind, should eat and make ready. In the centre of our main
division, which numbered some fifteen thousand of the Chanca troops,
and a little in front of it, was a low long hill upon the highest
point of which I took my place, standing upon a rock with a group of
captains and messengers behind me and a guard of about a thousand
picked men massed upon the slopes and around the hill. From this high
point I could see everything, and in my glittering armour was visible
to all, friends and foes together.

After a pause, during which the priests of the Chancas and of the
Yuncas behind us sacrificed sheep to the moon and the many other gods
they worshipped, and those of the Quichuas, as I could see from my
rock, made prayers and offerings to the rising sun, with a mighty
shouting the Inca hosts began to advance across the plain towards us.
Reckoning them with my eye I saw that they outnumbered us by two or
three to one; indeed their hordes seemed to be countless, and always
more of them came on behind from the dim recesses of the city. Divided
into three great armies they crept across the plain, a wild and
gorgeous spectacle, the sunlight shining upon the forest of their
spears and on their rich barbaric uniforms.

A furlong or more away they halted and took counsel, pointing to me
with their spears as though they feared me. We stood quite still,
though some of our generals urged that we should charge, but this I
counselled Huaracha not to do, who desired that the Quichuas should
break their strength upon us. At length some word was given; the
splendid "rainbow Banner" of the Incas was unfurled and, still divided
into three armies with a wide stretch of plain between each of them
they attacked, yelling like all the fiends of hell.

Now they had reached us and there began the most terrible battle that
was told of in the history of that land. Wave after wave of them
rolled up against us, but our battalions which I had not trained in
vain stood like rocks and slew and slew and slew till the dead could
be counted by the thousand. Again and again they strove to storm the
hill on which I stood, hoping to kill me, and each time we beat them
back. Picking out their generals I loosed shaft after shaft from my
long bow, and seldom did I miss, nor could their cotton-quilted armour
turn those bitter arrows.

"/The shafts of the god! The shafts of the god!/" they cried, and
shrank back from before me.

There appeared a man with a yellow fillet on his head and a robe that
was studded with precious stones; a huge man with great limbs and
flaming eyes; a loose-mouthed, hideous man who wielded a big axe of
copper and carried a bow longer than any I had seen in that land.
Hooking the axe to his belt, he set an arrow on the bow and let drive
at me. It sped true and struck me full upon the breast, only to
shatter on the good French mail, which copper could not pierce.

Again he shot, and this time the arrow glanced from my helm. Then I
drew on him and my shaft, that I had aimed at his head, cut away the
fringe about his brow and carried it far away. At this sight a groan
went up from the lords about him, and one cried:

"An omen, O Urco, an evil omen!"

"Aye," he shouted, "for the White Wizard who shot the arrow."

Dropping the bow, he rushed up the hill at me roaring, axe aloft, and
followed by his company. He smote, and I caught the blow upon my
shield, and striking back with Wave-Flame, shore through the shaft of
the axe that he had lifted to guard his head as though it had been
made of reed, aye, and through the quilted cotton on his shoulder
strengthened with strips of gold, and to the bone beneath.

Then a man slipped past me. It was Kari, striking at Urco with
Deleroy's sword. They closed and rolled down the slope locked in each
other's arms. What chanced after this I do not know, for others rushed
in and all grew confused, but presently Kari limped back somewhat
shaken and bleeding, and I caught sight of Urco, little hurt, as it
seemed, amidst his lords at the bottom of the slope.

At this moment I heard a great shouting and looking round, saw that
the Quichuas had broken through our left and were slaughtering many,
while the rest fled, also that our right was wavering. I sent
messengers to Huaracha, bidding him call up the Yunca rear guard. They
were slow in coming and I began to fear that all was lost for little
by little the hordes of the men of Cuzco were surrounding us.

Then it was that Kari, or some with him, lifted a banner that had been
wrapped upon a pole, a blue banner upon which was embroidered a golden
sun. At the sight of it there was tumult in the Inca ranks, and
presently a great body of men, five or six thousand of them that had
seemed to be in reserve, ran forward shouting, "/Kari! Kari!/" and
fell upon those who were pursuing our shattered left, breaking them up
and dispersing them. Also at last the Yuncas came up and drove back
the regiments that assailed our right, while from Urco's armies there
rose a cry of "Treachery!"

Trumpets blew and the Inca host, gathering itself together and
abandoning its dead and wounded, drew back sullenly on to the plain,
and there halted in three bodies as before, though much lessened in
number.

Huaracha appeared, saying:

"Strike, White Lord! It is our hour! The heart is out of them."

The signal was given, and roaring like a hurricane, presently the
Chancas charged. Down the slope they went, I at the head of them with
Huaracha on one side and Kari on the other. The swift-footed Chancas
outran me who was hindered by my mail. We charged in three masses as
we had stood on the ridge, following those open lanes of ground up
which the foe had not come, because these were less cumbered with dead
and wounded. Presently I saw why those of Cuzco had left these lanes
untrod, for of a sudden some warriors, who had outstripped me,
vanished. They had fallen into a pit covered over with earth laid upon
canes, of which the bottom was set with sharp stakes. Others, who were
running along the lanes of open ground to right and left, also fell
into pits of which there were scores all carefully prepared against
the day of battle. With trouble the Chancas were halted, but not
before we had lost some hundreds of men. Then we advanced again across
that ground over which the Inca host had retreated.

At length we reached their lines, passing through a storm of arrows,
and there began such a battle as I had never heard of or even dreamed.
With axes, stone-headed clubs and spears, both armies fought
furiously, and though the Incas still outnumbered us by two to one,
because of my training our regiments drove them back. Lord after lord
rushed at me with glaring eyes, but my mail turned their copper spears
and knives of flint. Oh! Wave-Flame fed full that day, and if
Thorgrimmer my forefather could have seen us from his home in
Valhalla, surely he must have sworn by Odin that never had he given it
such a feast.

The Inca warriors grew afraid and shrank back.

"This Red-Beard from the sea is indeed a god. He cannot be slain!" I
heard them cry.

Then Urco appeared, bloody and furious, shouting:

"Cowards! I will show you whether he cannot be slain."

He rushed onward to meet--not me, but Huaracha, who seeing that I was
weary, had leapt in front of me. They fought, and Huaracha went down
and was dragged away by some of his servants.

Now Urco and I were face to face, he wielding a huge copper-headed
club with which, as my mail could not be pierced, he thought to batter
out my life. I caught the blow upon my shield, but so great was the
giant's strength that it brought me to my knees. Next second I was up
and at him. Shouting, I smote with both hands, for my shield had
fallen. The thick, turban-like headdress that Urco wore was severed,
cut through as the axe had been, and Wave-Flame bit deep into the
skull beneath.

Urco fell like a stunned ox and I sprang upon him to make an end. Then
it was that a rope was flung about my shoulders, a noosed rope that
was hauled tight. In vain I struggled. I was thrown down; I was seized
by a score of hands and dragged away into the heart of Urco's host.

Waiting till a litter could be brought, they set me on my feet again,
my arms still bound by the noose that these Indians call /laso/, which
they know so well how to throw, the red sword Wave-Flame still hanging
by its thong from my right wrist. Whilst I stood thus, like a bull in
a net, they gathered round, staring at me, not with hate as it seemed
to me, but in fear and with reverence. When at length the litter came
they aided me to enter it quite gently.

As I did so I looked back. The battle still raged but it seemed to me
with less fury than before. It was as though both sides were weary of
slaughter, their leaders being fallen. The litter was borne forward,
till at length the noise of shouting and tumult grew low. Twisting
myself round I peered through the back curtains and saw that the Inca
host and that of the Chancas were separating sullenly, neither of them
broken since they carried their wounded away with them. It was plain
that the battle remained drawn for there was no rout and no triumph.

I saw, too, that I was entering the great city of Cuzco, where women
and children stood at the doors of the houses gazing, and some of them
wringing their hands with tears upon their faces.

Passing down long streets and across a bridge, I came to a vast square
round which stood mighty buildings, low, massive, and constructed of
huge stones. At the door of one of these the litter halted and I was
helped to descend. Men beautifully clad in broidered linen led me
through a gateway and across a garden where I noted a marvellous
thing, namely: that all the plants therein were fashioned of solid
gold with silver flowers, or sometimes of silver with golden flowers.
Also there were trees on which were perched birds of gold and silver.
When I saw this I thought that I must be mad, but it was not so, for
having no other use for the precious metals, of which they had so much
abundance, thus did these Incas adorn their palaces.

Leaving the golden garden, I reached a courtyard surrounded by rooms,
to one of which I was conducted. Passing its door, I found myself in a
splendid chamber hung with tapestries fantastically wrought and having
cushioned seats, and tables of rich woods incrusted with precious
stones. Here servants or slaves appeared with a chamberlain who bowed
deeply and welcomed me in the name of the Inca.

Then, as though I were something half divine, gently enough, they
loosed the sword from my wrist, took the long bow from my back, with
the few arrows that remained, also my dagger, and hid them away. They
unbound me, and freeing me from my armour, as I told them how, and the
garments beneath, laved me with warm, scented water, rubbed my bruised
limbs, and clothed me in wonderful soft garments, also scented and
fastened about my middle with a golden belt. This done, food and
spiced drinks of their native wine were brought to me in golden
vessels. I ate and drank and, being very weary, laid myself down upon
one of the couches to sleep. For now I no longer took any thought as
to what might befall me, but received all as it came, good and ill
together, entrusting my body and soul to the care of God and St.
Hubert. Indeed, what else could I do who was disarmed and a prisoner?

When I awoke again, very stiff and bruised, but much refreshed, night
had fallen, for hanging lamps were lit about the room. By their light
I saw the chamberlain of whom I have spoken standing before me. I
asked him his errand. With many bows he said that if I were rested the
Inca Upanqui desired my presence that he might speak with me.

I bade him lead on, and, with others who waited without, he conducted
me through a maze of passages into a glorious chamber where everything
seemed to be gold, for even the walls were panelled with it. Never had
I dreamt of so much gold; indeed the sight of it wearied me till I
could have welcomed that of humble brick or wood. At the end of this
chamber that was also lit with lamps, were curtains. Presently these
were drawn by two beautiful women in jewelled skirts and head-dresses,
and behind them on a dais I saw a couch and on the couch the old Inca
Upanqui looking feebler than when I had last beheld him in the Chanca
city, and very simply clad in a white tunic. Only on his head he wore
the red fringe from which I suppose he never parted day or night. He
looked up and said:

"Greeting, White-Lord-from-the-Sea. So you have come to visit me after
all, though you said that you would not."

"I have been brought to visit you, Inca," I answered.

"Yes, yes, they tell me they captured you in the battle, though I
expect that was by your own will as you had wearied of those Chancas.
For what /laso/ can hold a god?"

"None," I answered boldly.

"Of course not, and that you are a kind of god there is no doubt
because of the things you did in that battle. They say that the arrows
and spears melted when they touched you and that you shot and cut down
men by scores. Also that when the prince Urco tried to kill you,
although he is the strongest man in my kingdom, you knocked him over
as though he had been a little child and hacked his head open so that
they do not know whether he will live or die. I think I hope he will
die, for you see I have quarrelled with him."

I thought to myself that so did I, but I only asked:

"How did the battle end, Inca?"

"As it began, Lord Hurachi. A great many men have been killed on both
sides, thousands and thousands of them, and neither army has the
victory. They have drawn back and sit growling at each other like two
angry lions which are afraid to fight again. Indeed, I do not want
them to fight, and now that Urco cannot interfere, I shall put a stop
to all this bloodshed if I am able. Tell me, for you were with him,
why does this Huaracha, who I hear is also wounded, want to make war
on me with those troublesome Chancas of his?"

"Because your son, the prince Urco, has poisoned, or tried to poison,
his only child, Quilla."

"Yes, yes, I know, and it was a wicked thing to do. You see, Lord,
what happened was this: That lovely Quilla, who is fairer than her
mother the Moon, was to have married Urco. But, Lord, as it chanced on
our journey together, although I am old--well, she became enamoured of
me, and prayed me to protect her from Urco. Such things happen to
women, Lord, whose hearts, when they behold the divine, are apt to
carry them away from the vulgar," and he laughed in a silly fashion
like the vain old fool that he was.

"Naturally. How could she help it, Inca? Who, after seeing you, would
wish to turn to Urco?"

"No one, especially as Urco is a coarse and brutal fellow. Well, what
was I to do? There are reasons why I do not wish to marry again at my
age; indeed I am tired of the sight of women, who want time to pray
and think of holy things; also if I had done what she wished, some
might have thought that I had behaved badly to Urco. At the same time,
a woman's heart is sacred and I could not do violence to that of one
so sweet and understanding and lovely. So I put her into the House of
the Virgins of the Sun where she will be quite safe."

"It seems that she was not safe, Inca."

"No, because that violent man, Urco, being disappointed and very
jealous, through some low creature of his, who waited on the Virgins,
tried to poison her with a drug which would have made her all swollen
and hideous and covered her face with blotches, also perhaps have sent
her mad. Luckily one of the matrons, whom we call /Mama-conas/,
knocked the cup away before she drank, but some of the horrible poison
went into her eyes and blinded her."

"So she lives, Inca."

"Certainly she lives. I have learnt that for myself, because in this
country it is not wise to trust what they tell you. You know as Inca I
have privileges, and although even I do not talk to them, I caused
those Virgins of the Sun to be led in front of me, which in strictness
even I ought not to have done. It was a dreary business, Lord Hurachi,
for though those Virgins may be so holy, some of them are very old and
hideous and of course Quilla as a novice came last in the line
conducted by two /Mama-conas/ who are cousins of my own. The odd thing
is that the poison seems to have made her much more beautiful than
before, for her eyes have grown bigger and are glorious, shining like
stars seen when there is frost. Well, there she is safe from Urco and
every other man, however wicked and impious. But what does this
Huaracha want?"

"He wants his blinded daughter back, Inca."

"Impossible, impossible! Who ever heard of such a thing! Why, Heaven
and Earth would come together and the Sun, my father, and her husband,
would burn us all up. Still, perhaps, we could come to an agreement
for Huaracha must have had enough fighting and very likely he will
die. Now I am tired of talking about the lady Quilla and I want to ask
you something."

"Speak on, Inca."

Suddenly the old dotard's manner changed: he became quick and shrewd,
as doubtless he was in his prime, for this Upanqui had been a great
king. At the beginning of our talk the two women of whom I have spoken
and the chamberlain had withdrawn to the end of the chamber where they
waited with their hands folded, like those who adore before an altar.
Still he peered about him to make sure that none were within hearing,
and in the end beckoned to me to ascend the dais and sit upon the
couch beside him, saying:

"You see I trust you although you are a god from the sea who has been
fighting against me. Now hearken. You had a servant with you, a very
strange man, who is said also to have come out of the sea, though that
I cannot believe since he is like one of our princes. Where is that
man?"

"With the army of Huaracha, Inca."

"So I have heard. I heard also that in the battle he hoisted a banner
with the sun blazoned on it, and that thereon certain regiments of
mine deserted to Huaracha. Now, why did they do that?"

"I understand, O Inca, that the kings of this land have many children.
Perhaps he might be one of them."

"Ah! You are clever as a god should be. Well, I am a god also and the
same thought has come to me, although as a fact I have only had two
legitimate sons and the others are of no account. The eldest of these
was an able and beautiful prince named Kari, but we quarrelled, and to
tell the truth there was a woman in the matter, or rather two women,
for Kari's mother fought with Urco's mother whom I loved, because she
never scolded me, which the other did. So Urco was named to be Inca
after me. Yet that was not enough for him who remained jealous of his
brother Kari who outpassed him in all things save strength of body.
They wooed the same beautiful woman and Kari won her, whereon Urco
seduced her from him, and afterwards he or someone killed her. At
least she died, I forget how. Then the lords of the Inca blood began
to turn towards Kari because he was royal and wise, which would have
meant civil war when I had been gathered to the Sun. Therefore Urco
poisoned him, or so it was rumoured; at any rate, he vanished away,
and often since then I have mourned him."

"The dead come to life again sometimes, Inca."

"Yes, yes, Lord-from-the-Sea, that happens; the gods who took them
away bring them back--and this servant of yours--they say he is so
like to Kari that he might be the same man grown older. And--why did
those regiments, all of them officered by men who used to love Kari,
go over to Huaracha to-day, and why do rumours run through the land
like the wind that springs up suddenly in fine weather? Tell me of
this servant of yours and how you found him in the sea."

"Why should I tell you, Inca? Is it because you want to kill him who
is so like to this lost Kari of yours?"

"No, no--gods can keep each other's counsel, can they not? It is
because I would give--oh! half my godship to know that he is alive.
Hark you, Urco wearies me so much that sometimes I wonder whether he
really is my son. Who can tell? There was a certain lord of the
coastlands, a hairy giant who, they said, could eat half a sheep at a
sitting and break the backs of men in his hands, of whom Urco's mother
used to think much. But who can tell? No one except my father, the
Sun, and he guards his secrets--for the present. At least Urco wearies
me with his coarse crimes and his drunkenness, though the army loves
him because he is a butcher and liberal. We quarrelled the other day
over the small matter of this lady Quilla, and he threatened me till I
grew wrath and said that I would not hand him my crown as I had
purposed to do. Yes, I grew wrath and hated him for whose sake I had
sinned because his mother bewitched me. Lord-from-the-Sea," here his
voice dropped to a whisper, "I am afraid of Urco. Even a god such as I
am can be murdered, Lord-from-the-Sea. That is why I will not go to
Yucay, for there I might die and none know it, whereas here I still am
Inca and a god whom it is sacrilege to touch."

"I understand, but how can I help you, Inca, who am but a prisoner in
your palace?"

"No, no, you are only a prisoner in name. At the worst Urco will be
sick for a long while, since the physicians say that sword of yours
has bitten deep, and during that time all power is mine. Messengers
are at your service; you are free to come and go as you will. Bring
this servant of yours to my presence, for doubtless he trusts you. I
would speak with him, O Lord-from-the-Sea."

"If I should do this, Inca, will the lady Quilla be given back to her
father?"

"Nay, it would be sacrilege. Ask what else you will, lands and rule
and palaces and wives--not that. Myself I should not dare to lay a
finger on her who rests in the arms of the Sun. What does it matter
about this Quilla who is but one fair woman among thousands?"

I thought awhile, then answered, "I think it matters much, Inca.
Still, that this bloodshed may be stayed, I will do my best to bring
him who was my servant to your presence if you can find me the means
to come at him, and afterwards we will talk again."

"Yes, I am weary now. Afterwards we will talk again. Farewell, Lord-
from-the-Sea."



                              CHAPTER IX

                        KARI COMES TO HIS OWN

When I awoke on the following morning in the splendid chamber of which
I have spoken, it was to find that my armour and arms had been
restored to me, and very glad was I to see Wave-Flame again. After I
had eaten and, escorted by servants, walked in the gardens, for never
could I be left alone, marvelling at the wondrous golden fruits and
flowers, a messenger came to me, saying that the /Villaorna/ desired
speech with me. I wondered who this /Villaorna/ might be, but when he
entered I saw that he was Larico, that same stern-faced, cunning-eyed
lord who had been the spokesman of the Inca when he visited the city
of the Chancas. Also I learned that /Villaorna/ was his title and
meant "Chief priest."

We bowed to each other and all were sent from the chamber, leaving us
quite alone.

"Lord-from-the-Sea," he said, "the Inca sends me, his Councillor and
blood relative, who am head priest of the Sun, to desire that you will
go on an embassy for him to the camp of the Chancas. First, however,
it is needful that you should swear by the Sun that you will return
thence to Cuzco. Will you do this?"

Now as there was nothing I desired more than to return to Cuzco where
Quilla was, I answered that I would swear by my own god, by the Sun,
and by my sword, unless the Chancas detained me by force. Further, I
prayed him to set out his business.

He did so in these words:

"Lord, we have come to know, it matters not how, that the man who
appeared with you in this land is no other than Kari, the elder son of
the Inca, whom we thought dead. Now it is in the Inca's mind, and in
the minds of us, his councillors, to proclaim the Prince Kari as heir
to the throne which soon he would be called upon to fill. But the
matter is very dangerous, seeing that Urco still commands the army and
many of the great lords who are of his mother's House cling to him,
hoping to receive advancement from him when he becomes Inca."

"But, Priest Larico, Urco, they say, is like to die, and if so all
this trouble will melt like a cloud."

"Your sword bit deep, Lord, but I have it from his physicians that as
the brain is uncut he will not die, although he will be sick for a
long while. Therefore we must act while he is sick, since it is not
lawful to bring about his end, even if he could be come at. Time
presses, Lord, for as you have seen, the Inca is old and feeble and
his mind is weak. Indeed at times he has no mind, though at others his
strength returns to him."

"Which means that I deal with you who are the chief priest, and those
behind you," I said, looking him in the eyes.

"That is what it means, Lord. Now hearken while I tell you the truth.
After the Inca I am the most powerful man in Tavantinsuyu, indeed for
the most part the Inca speaks with my voice although I seem to speak
with his. Yet I am in a snare. Heretofore I have supported Urco
because there was no other who could become Inca, although he is a
brutal and an evil man. Of late, however, since my return from the
City of the Chancas, I have quarrelled with Urco because he has lost
that witch, the lady Quilla, whom he desires madly and lays the blame
on me, and it has come to my knowledge that when he succeeds to the
throne it is his purpose to kill me, which doubtless he will do if he
can, or at the least to cast me from my place and power, which is as
bad as death. Therefore, I desire to make my peace with Kari, if he
will swear to continue me in my office, and this I can only do through
you. Bring this peace about, Lord, and I will promise you anything you
may wish, even perchance to the Incaship itself, should aught happen
to Kari or should he refuse my offers. I think that the Quichuas might
welcome a white god from the Sea who has shown himself so great a
general and so brave in battle, and who has knowledge and wisdom more
than theirs, to rule over them," he added reflectively. "Only then,
Lord, it would be needful to be rid of Kari as well as of Urco."

"To which I would never consent," I replied, "seeing that he is my
friend with whom I have shared many dangers. Moreover, I do not wish
to be Inca."

"Is there then anything else that you wish very much, Lord? A thought
came to me, yonder at the City of the Chancas. By the way, how lovely
is that lady Quilla and how royal a woman. It is most strange that she
should have turned her mind towards an aged man like Upanqui."

We looked at each other.

"Very strange," I said. "It seems to me sad also that this beauteous
Quilla should be immured in a nunnery for life. To tell you the truth,
High-priest, since it is not good for man to live alone, rather than
that such a thing should have happened I would have married her
myself, to which perchance she might have consented."

Again we looked at each other and I went on:

"I hinted as much to Kari after we heard she was numbered amongst the
Virgins, and asked him whether, should he become Inca, he would take
her thence and give her to me."

"What did he answer, Lord?"

"He said that though he loved me like a brother, first he would kill
me with his own hand, since such a deed would be sacrilege against the
Sun. Last night also the Inca himself said much the same."

"Is it so, Lord? Well, we priests bring up our Incas to think thus. If
we did not, where would our power be, seeing that we are the Voice of
the Sun upon earth and issue his decrees?"

"But do you always think thus yourselves, O High-priest?"

"Not quite always. There are loopholes in every law of gods and men.
For example, I believe I see one in the instance of this lady Quilla.
But before we waste more time in talking--tell me, White Lord, do you
desire her, and if so, are you ready to pay me my price? It is that
you shall assure to me the friendship of the prince Kari, should he
become Inca, and the continuance of my power and office."

"My answer is that I do desire this lady, O High-priest, and that if I
can I will obtain from Kari the promise of what you seek. And now
where is the loophole?"

"I seem to remember, Lord, that there is an ancient law which says--
that none who are maimed may be the wives of the Sun. It is true that
this law applies to them /before/ they contract the holy marriage.
Still, if the point came up before me as high-priest, I might perhaps
find that it applied also to those who were maimed /after/ marriage.
The case is rare, for which precedents cannot be found if the search
be thorough. Now through the wickedness of Urco, as it happens, this
lady Quilla has been blinded, and therefore is no longer perfect in
her body. Do you understand?"

"Quite. But what would Upanqui or Kari say? The Incas you declare are
always bigots and might interpret this law otherwise."

"I cannot tell, Lord, but let us cease from beating bushes. I will
help you if I can, if you will help me if /you/ can, though I daresay
that in the end you, who are not a bigot, must take the law into your
own hands, as perhaps the lady Quilla, who is a moon-worshipper, would
be willing to do also."

The finish of it was that this cunning priest and statesman and I made
a bargain. If I could win Kari over to his interests, then he swore by
the Sun that he would gain me access to the lady Quilla and help me to
fly with her, if so we both wished, while I on my part swore to plead
his cause with Kari. Moreover, as he showed me, there was little fear
that either of us would break these oaths since henceforth each lay in
the power of the other.

After this we passed on to public matters. I was charged to offer an
honourable truce to Huaracha and the Chancas with permission to them
to camp their armies in certain valleys near to Cuzco where they would
be fed until peace was declared, which peace would give them all they
needed, namely, their freedom and safeguards from attack. For the rest
I was to bring Kari and those who had deserted to him on the yesterday
into Cuzco where none would molest them.

Then he went, leaving me happier than I had been since I bade farewell
to Quilla. For now at last I saw light, a faint uncertain light, it
was true, only to be reached, if reached at all, through many
difficulties and dangers, but still light. At last I had found someone
in this land of black superstition who was not a bigot, and who, being
the High-priest of the Sun, knew too much of his god to fear him or to
believe that he should come down to earth and burn it up should one of
the hundreds of his brides seek another husband. Of course this Larico
might betray me and Quilla, but I did not think he would, since he had
nothing to gain thereby, and might have much to lose, for the reason
that I was able, or he thought that I was able, to set Kari against
him. At least I could only go forward and trust to fortune, though in
fact hitherto she had never shown me favour where woman was concerned.



Awhile later I was being borne in one of the Inca's own litters back
to the camp of the Chancas, accompanied by an embassy of great lords.

We passed over that dreadful, bloodstained plain where, under a flag
of truce, both sides were engaged in burying the thousands of their
dead, and came to the ridge whence we had charged on the yester morn.
Here sentries stopped us and I descended from my litter. When the
Chancas saw me in my armour come back to them alive, they set up a
great shouting and presently I and the lords with me were led to the
pavilion of King Huaracha.

We found him lying sick upon a couch, for though he showed no wound he
had been badly bruised upon the body by a blow from Urco's club and,
as I feared, was hurt in the bowels. He greeted me with delight, since
he thought that I might have been killed after I was captured, and
asked how I came to appear in his camp in the company of our enemies.
I told him at once what had chanced and that I was sworn to return to
Cuzco when I had done my business. Then the Inca's ambassadors set out
their proposals for a truce, and retired, while Huaracha discussed
them with his generals and Kari, who also was overjoyed to see me
safe.

The end of it was that they were accepted on the terms offered,
namely, that Huaracha and his army should withdraw to the valleys of
which I have spoken, and there camp, receiving all the food they
needed until a peace could be offered such as he would be willing to
accept. Indeed, the Chancas were glad to agree to this plan for their
losses in the battle had been very great and they were in no state to
renew the attack upon Cuzco, which was still defended by such mighty
hordes of brave warriors fighting for their homes, families, and
freedom.

So all was agreed on the promise that peace should be made within
thirty days or sooner, and that if it were not the war should
re-commence.

Then privately, I told Huaracha all that I had learned about Quilla
and that I had still hopes of saving her though what these were I did
not tell him. When he had thought, he said that now the fate of Quilla
must be left in the hands of the gods and mine, since not even for her
could he neglect the opportunity of an honourable peace, seeing that
another battle might mean destruction. Also he pointed out that he was
hurt and I who had been general under him was a prisoner and bound by
my oath to return to prison, so that the Chancas had lost their
leaders.

After this we parted, I promising to work for his cause and to come to
see him again, if I might.

These matters finished I went aside with Kari to a place where none
could hear us, and there laid before him the offers of Larico, the
high-priest, showing him how the case stood. Of Quilla, however, I
said nothing to him, though it pained me to keep back part of the
truth even from Kari. Yet, what was I to do, who knew that if I told
him all and he became Inca, or the Inca's acknowledged heir, he would
work against me because of his superstitious madness, and perhaps
cause Quilla to be killed by the priests, as one whose feet were set
in the path of sacrilege? So on this matter I held my peace, nor did
he ask me anything concerning Quilla who, I think, wished to hear
nothing of that lady and what had befallen her.

When he had learned all, he said:

"This may be a trap, Lord. I do not trust yonder Larico, who has
always been my enemy and Urco's friend."

"I think he is his own friend first," I answered, "who knows that if
Urco recovers he will kill him, because he has taken the part of your
father, Upanqui, in their quarrels, and suspects him."

"I am not sure," said Kari. "Yet something must be risked. Did I not
tell you when we were sailing down the English river that we must put
faith in our gods, yes, afterwards also, and more than once? And did
not the gods save us? Well, now again I trust to my god," and drawing
out the image of Pachacamac, which he wore round his neck, he kissed
it, then turning, bowed and prayed to the Sun.

"I will come with you," he said, when he had finished his devotions,
"to live to be Inca, or to die, as the Sun decrees."

So he came and with him some of his friends, captains of those who had
deserted to him in the battle. But the five thousand soldiers, or
those who were left of them, did not come as yet because they feared
lest they should be set upon and butchered by the regiments of Urco.



That night, when we were back safe in Cuzco, Kari and the high-priest,
Larico talked together in secret. Of what passed between them he only
told me that they had come to an agreement which satisfied them both.
Larico said the same to me when next I saw him, adding:

"You have kept your word and served my turn, Lord-from-the-Sea,
therefore I will keep mine and serve yours when the time comes. Yet be
warned by me and say nothing of a certain lady to the prince Kari,
since when I spoke a word to him on the matter, hinting that her
surrender to her father Huaracha would make peace with him more easy
and lasting, he answered that first would he fight Huaracha, and the
Yuncas as well, to the last man in Cuzco.

"To the Sun she has gone," he said, "and with the Sun she must stay,
lest the curse of the Sun and of Pachacamac, the Spirit above the sun,
should fall on me and all of us."

Larico told me also that, fearing something, the great lords, who were
of Urco's party, had borne him away in a litter to a strong city in
the mountains about five leagues from Cuzco, escorted by thousands of
picked men who would stay in and about that city.

On the next morning I was summoned to wait upon the Inca Upanqui, and
went, wearing my armour. I found him in the same great chamber as
before, only now he was more royally arrayed, and with him were sundry
of his high lords of the Inca blood, also certain priests, among them
the /Villaorna/ Larico.

The old king, who on that day seemed clear in his mind and well,
greeted me in his kindly fashion and bade me set out all that had
passed between me and Huaracha in the Chanca camp. This I did, only I
hid from him how great had been the Chanca losses in the battle and
how glad they were to declare a truce and rest.

Upanqui said that the matter should be attended to, speaking in a
royal fashion as though it were one of little moment, which showed me
how great an emperor he must be. Great he was, indeed, seeing that all
the broad land of England would have made but one province of his vast
dominions, which in every part were filled with people who, unless
they chanced to be in rebellion like the Yuncas, lived but to do his
will.

After this, when I thought the audience was ended, a chamberlain
advanced to the foot of the throne, and kneeling, said that a
suppliant prayed speech with the Inca. Upanqui waved his sceptre, that
long staff which I have described, in token that he should be
admitted. Then presently up the chamber came Kari arrayed in the tunic
and cloak of an Inca prince, wearing in his ear a disc carved with the
image of the Sun, and a chain of emeralds and gold about his neck. Nor
did he come alone, for he was attended by a brilliant band of those
lords and captains who had deserted to him on the day of the great
battle. He advanced and knelt before the throne.

"Who is this that carries the emblems of the Holy Blood and is clothed
like a Prince of the Sun?" asked Upanqui, affecting ignorance and
unconcern, though I saw the colour mount to his cheeks and the sceptre
shake in his withered hand.

"One who is indeed of the holy Inca blood; one sprung from the purest
lineage of the Sun," answered the stately Kari in his quiet voice.

"How then is he named?" asked the Inca again.

"He is named Kari, first-born son of Upanqui, O Inca."

"Such a son I had once, but he is long dead, or so they told me," said
Upanqui in a trembling voice.

"He is not dead, O Inca. He lives and he kneels before you. Urco
poisoned him, but the Sun his Father recovered him, and the Spirit
that is above all gods supported him. The sea bore him to a far land,
where he found a white god who befriended and cared for him," here he
turned his head towards me. "With this god he returned to his own
country and here he kneels before you, O Inca."

"It cannot be," said the Inca. "What sign do you bring who name
yourself Kari? Show me the image of the Spirit above the gods that
from his childhood for generations has been hung about the neck of the
Inca's eldest son, born from the Queen."

Kari opened his robe and drew out that golden effigy of Pachacamac
which he always wore.

Upanqui examined it, holding it close to his rheumy eyes.

"It seems to be the same," he said, "as I should know upon whose
breast it lay until my first son was born. And yet who can be sure
since such things may be copied?"

Then he handed back the image to Kari and after reflecting awhile,
said:

"Bring hither the Mother of the Royal Nurses."

Apparently this lady was in waiting, for in a minute she appeared
before the throne, an old and withered woman with beady eyes.

"Mother," said the Inca, "you were with the /Coya/ (that is the Queen)
who has been gathered to the Sun, when her boy was born, and
afterwards nursed him for years. If you saw it, would you know his
body again after he has come to middle age?"

"Aye, O Inca."

"How, Mother?"

"By three moles, O Inca, which we women used to call /Yuti/, /Quilla/,
and /Chasca/" (that is, the Sun, the Moon, and the planet Venus),
"which were the marks of good fortune stamped by the gods upon the
Prince's back between the shoulders, set one above the other."

"Man who call yourself Kari, are you willing that this old crone
should see your flesh?" asked Upanqui.

By way of answer Kari with a little smile stripped himself of his
broidered tunic and other garments and stood before us naked to the
middle. Then he turned his back to the Mother of the Nurses. She
hobbled up and searched it with her bright eyes.

"Many scars," she muttered, "scars in front and scars behind. This
warrior has known battles and blows. But what have we here? Look, O
Inca, /Yuti/, /Quilla/, and /Chasca/, set one above the other, though
/Chasca/ is almost hidden by a hurt. Oh! my fosterling, O my Prince
whom I nursed at these withered breasts, are you come back from the
dead to take your own again? O Kari of the Holy Blood; Kari the lost
who is Kari the found!"

Then sobbing and muttering she threw her arms about him and kissed
him. Nor did he shame to kiss her in return, there before them all.

"Restore his garments to the royal Prince," said Upanqui, "and bring
hither the Fringe that is worn by the Inca's heir."

It was produced without delay by the high-priest Larico, which told me
at once that all this scene had been prepared. Upanqui took it from
Larico, and beckoning Kari to him, with the priest's help bound it
about his brow, thereby acknowledging him and restoring him as heir-
apparent to the Empire. Then he kissed him on the brow and Kari knelt
down and did his father homage.

After this they went away together accompanied only by Larico and two
or three of the councillors of Inca blood and as I learned from Larico
afterwards, told each other their tales and made plans to outwit, and
if need were to destroy, Urco and his faction.

On the following day Kari was established in a house of his own that
was more of a fortress than a palace, for it was built of great stones
with narrow gates, and surrounded by an open space. Upon this space,
as a guard, were encamped all those who had deserted to him in the
battle of the Field of Blood, who had returned to Cuzco from the camp
of Huaracha now that Kari was accepted as the royal heir. Also other
troops who were loyal to the Inca were stationed near by, while those
who clung to Urco departed secretly to that town where he lay sick.
Moreover, proclamation was made that on the day of the new moon, which
the magicians declared to be auspicious, Kari would be publicly
presented to the people in the Temple of the Sun as the Inca's lawful
heir, in place of Urco disinherited for crimes that he had committed
against the Sun, the Empire, and the Inca his father.

"Brother," said Kari to me, for so he called me now that he was an
acknowledged Prince, when I went to meet him in his grandeur,
"Brother, did I not tell you always that we must trust to our gods?
See, I have not trusted in vain though it is true that dangers still
lie ahead of me, and perhaps civil war."

"Yes," I answered, "your gods are in the way of giving you all you
want, but it is not so with mine and me."

"What then do you desire, Brother, who can have even to the half of
the kingdom?"

"Kari," I replied, "I cry not for the Earth, but for the Moon."

He understood, and his face grew stern.

"Brother, the Moon alone is beyond you, for she inhabits the sky while
you still dwell upon the earth," he answered with a frown, and then
began to talk of the peace with Huaracha.



                              CHAPTER X

                           THE GREAT HORROR

The day of the new moon came and with it the great horror that caused
all the Empire of Tavantinsuyu to tremble, fearing lest Heaven should
be avenged upon it.

Since Upanqui had found his elder son again he began to dote upon him,
as in such a case the old and weak-minded often do, and would walk
about the gardens and palaces with his arm around his neck babbling to
him of whatever was uppermost in his mind. Moreover, his soul was
oppressed because he had done Kari wrong in the past, and preferred
Urco to him under the urging of that prince's mother.

"The truth is, Son," I myself heard him say to Kari, "that we men who
seem to rule the world do not rule it at all, because always women
rule us. This they do through our passions which the gods planted in
us for their own ends, also because they are more single in their
minds. The man thinks of many things, the woman only thinks of what
she desires. Therefore the man whom Nature already has bemused, only
brings a little piece of his mind to fight against her whole mind, and
so is conquered; he who was made for one thing only, to be the mate of
the woman that she may mother more men in order to serve the wills of
other women who yet seem to be those men's slaves."

"So I have learned, Father," answered the grave Kari, "and for this
reason having suffered in the past, I am determined to have as little
to do with women as is possible for one in my place. During my travels
in other lands, as in this country, I have seen men great and noble
brought to nothingness and ruin by their love for women; down into the
dirt, indeed, when their hands were full of the world's wealth and
glory. Moreover, I have noticed that they seldom learn wisdom, and
that what they have done before, they are ready to do again, who
believe anything that soft lips swear to them. Yes, even that they are
loved for themselves alone, as I own to my sorrow, once I did myself.
Urco could not have taken that fair wife of mine, Father, if she had
not been willing to go when she saw that I had lost your favour and
with it the hope of the Scarlet Fringe."

Here Kari looked at me, of whom I knew he was thinking all this time,
and seeing that I could overhear his talk, began to speak of something
else.



On the appointed day there was a great gathering of the nobles of the
land, especially of those of the Inca blood, and of all that were
"earmen," a class of the same rank as our peers in England, to hear
the proclamation of Kari as the Inca's heir. It was made before this
gorgeous company in the Great Temple of the Sun, which now I saw for
the first time.

It was a huge and most wondrous place well named the "House of Gold."
For here everything was gold. On the western wall hung an image of the
Sun twenty feet or more across, an enormous graven plate of gold set
about with gems and having eyes and teeth of great emeralds. The roof,
too, and the walls were all panelled with gold, even the cornices and
column heads were of solid gold.

Opening out of this temple also were others dedicated to the Moon and
Stars, that of the Moon being clothed in silver, with her radiant face
shaped in silver fixed to the western wall. So it was with the temple
of the Stars, of the Lightnings and of the Rainbow, which perhaps with
its many colours that sprang from jewels, was the most dazzling of
them all.

The sight of so much glory overwhelmed me, and it came into my mind
that if only it were known of in Europe, men would die by the ten
thousand on the chance that they might conquer this country and make
its wealth theirs. Yet here, save for these purposes of ornament and
to be used as offerings to the gods and Incas, it was of no account at
all.

But in this temple of the Sun was a marvel greater than its gold. For
on either side of the carved likenesses of the sun, seated upon chairs
of gold, sat the dead Incas and their queens. Yes, clothed in their
royal robes and emblems, with the Fringe upon their brows, there they
sat with their heads bent forward, so wonderfully preserved by the
arts these people have, that except for the stamp of death upon their
countenances, they might have been sleeping men and women. Thus in the
dead face of the mother of Kari I could read her likeness to her son.
Of these departed kings and queens there were many, since from the
first Inca of whom history told all were gathered here in the holy
House and under the guardianship of the effigy of their god, the Sun,
from whom they believed themselves to be descended. The sight was so
solemn that it awed me, as it did all that congregation, for I noted
that here men walked with unsandalled feet and that in speaking none
raised their voices high.

The old Inca, Upanqui, entered, gloriously apparelled and accompanied
by lords and priests, while after him came Kari with his retinue of
great men. The Inca bowed to the company whereon everyone in the great
temple, save myself alone whose British pride kept me on my feet,
standing like one left living on a battlefield among a multitude of
slain, prostrated himself before his divine majesty. At a sign they
rose again and the Inca seated himself upon his jewelled golden throne
beneath the effigy of the Sun, while Kari took his place upon a lesser
throne to the Inca's right.

Looking at him there in his splendour on this day when he came into
his own again, I bethought me of the wretched, starving Indian marked
with blows and foul with filth whom I had rescued from the cruel mob
upon the Thames-side wharf, and wondered at this enormous change of
fortune and the chain of wonderful events by which it had been brought
about.

My fortune also had changed, for then I was great in my own fashion,
who now had become but a wanderer, welcomed indeed in this glittering
new world of which yonder we knew nothing, because I was strange and
different, also full of unheard-of learning and skilled in war, but
still nothing but an outcast wanderer, and so doomed to live and die.
And as I thought, so thought Kari, for our glances met, and I read it
in his eyes.

Yonder sat my servant who had become my lord, and though he was still
my friend, soon I felt he would be lost in the state matters of that
great empire, leaving me more lonely than before. Also his mind was
not as my mind, as his blood was not my blood, and he was the slave of
a faith that to me was a hateful superstition doubtless begotten by
the Devil, who under the name of /Cupay/, some worshipped in that
land, though others declared that this /Cupay/ was the God of the
Dead.

Oh! that I could flee away with Quilla and at her side live out what
was left to me of life, since of all these multitudes she alone
understood and was akin to me, because the sacred fire of love had
burned away our differences and opened her eyes. But Quilla was
snatched from me by the law of their accursed faith, and whatever else
Kari might give, he would never give me this lady of the Moon, since,
as he had said, to him this would be sacrilege.

The ceremonies began. First Larico, the high-priest of the Sun,
clothed in his white sacerdotal robes, made sacrifice upon a little
altar which stood in front of the Inca's throne.

It was a very simple sacrifice of fruit and corn and flowers, with
what seemed to be strange-shaped pieces of gold. At least I saw
nothing else, and am sure that nothing that had life was laid upon
that altar after the fashion of the bloody offerings of the Jews, and
indeed of those of some of the other peoples of that great land.

Prayers, however, were spoken, very fine prayers and pure so far as I
could understand them, for their language was more ancient and
somewhat different to that which was used in common speech; also the
priests moved about, bowing and bending the knees much as our own do
in celebrating the mass, though whether these motions were in honour
of the god or of the Inca, I am not sure.

When the sacrifice was over, and the little fire that burned upon the
altar had sunk low, though I was told that for hundreds of years it
had never been extinguished, suddenly the Inca began to speak. With
many particulars that I had not heard before he told the tale of Kari
and of his estrangement from him in past years through the plottings
of the mother of Urco who now was dead, like the mother of Kari. This
woman, it would appear, had persuaded him, the Inca, that Kari was
conspiring against him, and therefore Urco was ordered to take him
prisoner, but returned only with Kari's wife, saying that Kari had
killed himself.

Here Upanqui became overcome with emotion as the aged are apt to do,
and beat his breast, even shedding tears because most unjustly he had
allowed these things to happen and the wicked triumph over the good,
for which sin he said he felt sure his father the Sun would bring some
punishment on him, as indeed was to chance sooner than he thought.
Then he continued his story, setting out all Urco's iniquities and
sacrileges against the gods, also his murders of people of high and
low degree and his stealing of their wives and daughters. Lastly he
told of the coming of Kari who was supposed to be dead, and all that
story which I have set out.

Having finished his tale, with much solemn ceremonial he deposed Urco
from his heirship to the Empire which he gave back to Kari to whom it
belonged by right of birth and calling upon his dead forefathers, one
by one, to be witness to the act, with great formality once more he
bound the Prince's Fringe about his brow. As he did this, he said
these words:

"Soon, O Prince Kari, you must change this yellow circlet for that
which I wear, and take with it all the burden of empire, for know that
as quickly as may be I purpose to withdraw to my palace at Yucay,
there to make my peace with God before I am called hence to dwell in
the Mansions of the Sun."

When he had finished Kari did homage to his father, and in that quiet,
even voice of his, told his tale of the wrongs that he had suffered at
the hands of Urco his brother and of how he had escaped, living but
maddened, from his hate. He told also how he had wandered across the
sea, though of England he said nothing, and been saved from misery and
death by myself, a very great person in my own country. Still, since I
had suffered wrong there, as he, Kari, had in his, he had persuaded me
to accompany him back to his own land, that there my wisdom might
shine upon its darkness, and owing to my divine and magical gifts
hither we had come in safety. Lastly, he asked the assembled priests
and lords if they were content to accept him as the Inca to be, and to
stand by him in any war that Urco might wage against him.

To this they answered that they were content and would stand by him.

Then followed many other rites such as the informing of the dead
Incas, one by one, of this solemn declaration, through the mouth of
the high-priest, and the offering of many prayers to them and to the
Sun their father. So long were these prayers with the chants from
choirs hidden in side chapels by which they were interspersed, that
the day drew towards its close before all was done.

Thus it came about that the dusk was gathering when the Inca, followed
by Kari, myself, the priests, and all the congregation, left the
temple to present Kari as the heir to the throne to the vast crowd
which waited upon the open square outside its doors.

Here the ceremony went on. The Inca and most of us, for there was not
space for all, although we were packed as closely together as Hastings
herrings in a basket, took our stand upon a platform that was
surrounded by a marvellous cable made of links of solid gold which, it
was said, needed fifty men to lift it from the ground. Then Upanqui,
whose strength seemed restored to him, perhaps because of some drug
that he had eaten, or under the spur of this great event, stepped
forward to the edge of the low platform and addressed the multitude in
eloquent words, setting out the matter as he had done in the temple.
He ended his speech by asking the formal question:

"Do you, Children of the Sun, accept the prince Kari, my first-born,
to be Inca after me?"

There was a roar of assent, and as it died away Upanqui turned to call
Kari to him that he might present him to the people.

At this very moment in the gathering twilight I saw a great fierce-
faced man with a bandaged head, whom I knew to be Urco, leap over the
golden chain. He sprang upon the platform and with a shout of "I do
not accept him, and thus I pay back treachery," plunged a gleaming
copper knife or sword into the Inca's breast.

In an instant, before any could stir in that packed crowd, Urco had
leapt back over the golden chain, and from the edge of the platform,
to vanish amongst those beneath, who doubtless were men of his
following disguised as citizens or peasants.

Indeed all who beheld seemed frozen with horror. One great sigh went
up and then there was silence, since no such deed as this was known in
the annals of that empire. For a moment the aged Upanqui stood upon
his feet, the blood pouring down his white beard and jewelled robe.
Then he turned a little and said in a clear and gentle voice:

"Kari, you will be Inca sooner than I thought. Receive me, O God my
Father, and pardon this murderer who, I think, can be no true son of
mine."

Then he fell forward on his face and when we lifted him he was dead.

Still the silence hung; it was as though the tongues of men were
smitten with dumbness. At length Kari stepped forward and cried:

"The Inca is dead, but I, the Inca, live on to avenge him. I declare
war upon Urco the murderer and all who cling to Urco!"

Now the spell was lifted, and from those dim hordes there went up a
yell of hatred against Urco the butcher and parricide, while men
rushed to and fro searching for him. In vain! for he had escaped in
the darkness.

On the following day, with more ceremonies, though many of these were
omitted because of the terror and trouble of the times, Kari was
crowned Inca, exchanging the yellow for the crimson Fringe and taking
the throne name of Upanqui after his father. In Cuzco there was none
to say him nay for the whole city was horror-struck because of the
sacrilege that had been committed. Also those who clung to Urco had
fled away with him to a town named Huarina on the borders of the great
lake called Titicaca, where was an island with marvellous temples full
of gold, which town lay at a distance from Cuzco.



Then the civil war began and raged for three whole months, though of
all that happened in that time because of the labour of it, I set down
little, who would get forward with my story.

In this war I played a great part. The fear of Kari was that the
Chancas, seeing the Inca realm thus rent in two, would once more
attack Cuzco. This it became my business to prevent. As the ambassador
of Kari I visited the camp of Huaracha, bearing offers of peace which
gave to him more than he could ever hope to win by strength of arms. I
found the old warrior-king still sick and wasted because of the hurt
from Urco's club, though now he could walk upon crutches, and set out
the case. He answered that he had no wish to fight against Kari who
had offered him such honourable terms, especially when he was waging
war against Urco whom he, Huaracha, hated, because he had striven to
poison his daughter and dealt him a blow which he was sure would end
in his death. Therefore he was ready to make a firm peace with the new
Inca, if in addition to what he offered he would surrender to him
Quilla who was his heiress and would be Queen of the Chancas after
him.

With these words I went back to Kari, only to find that on this matter
he was hard as a rock of the mountains. In vain did I plead with him,
and in vain did the high-priest, Larico, by subtle hints and
arguments, strive to gentle his mind.

"My brother," said Kari in that soft even voice of his, when he had
heard me patiently to the end, "forgive me if I tell you that in
advancing this prayer, for one word you say on behalf of King
Huaracha, you say two for yourself, who having unhappily been
bewitched by her, desire this Virgin of the Sun, the lady Quilla, to
be your wife. My brother, take everything else that I have to give,
but leave this lady alone. If I handed her over to Huaracha or to you,
as I have told you before, I should bring upon myself and upon my
people the curse of my father the Sun, and of Pachacamac, the Spirit
who is above the Sun. It was because Upanqui, my father according to
the flesh, dared to look upon her after she had entered the House of
the Sun, as I have learned he did, that a bloody and a cruel death
came upon him, for so the magicians and the wise men have assured me
that the oracles declare. Therefore, rather than do this crime of
crimes, I would choose that Huaracha should renew the war against us
and that you should join yourself to him, or even to Urco, and strive
to tear me from the Throne, for then even if I were slain, I should
die with honour."

"That I could never do," I answered sadly.

"No, my brother Hubert (for now he called me by my English name
again), that you could never do, being what you are, as I know well.
So like the rest of us you must bear your burden. Mayhap it may please
my gods, or your gods in the end, and in some way that I cannot
foresee, to give you this woman whom you seek. But of my free will I
will never give her to you. To me the deed would be as though in your
land of England the King commanded the consecrated bread and cups of
wine to be snatched from the hands of the priests of your temples and
cast to the dogs, or given to cheer the infidels within your gates, or
dragged away the nuns from your convents to become their lemans. What
would you think of such a king in your own country? And what," he
added with meaning, "would you have thought of me if there I had
stolen one of these nuns because she was beautiful and I desired her
as a wife?"

Now although Kari's words stung me because of the truth that was in
them, I answered that to me this matter wore another face. Also that
Quilla had become a Virgin of the Sun, not of her own free will, but
to escape from Urco.

"Yes, my brother," he answered, "because you believe my religion to be
idolatry, and do not understand that the Sun to me is the symbol and
garment of God, and that when we of the Inca blood, or those of us who
have the inner knowledge, talk of him as our Father, we mean that we
are the children of God, though the common people are taught
otherwise. For the rest, this lady took her vows of her own free will
and of her secret reasons I know nothing, any more than I know why she
offered herself in marriage to Urco before she found you upon the
island. For you I grieve, and for her also; yet I would have you
remember that, as your own priests teach, in every life that is not
brutal there must be loss, sorrow, and sacrifice, since by these steps
only man can climb towards the things of the spirit. Pluck then such
flowers as you will from the garden that Fate gives you, but leave
this one white bloom alone."

In such words as these he preached at me, till at length I could bear
no more, and said roughly:

"To me it is a very evil thing, O Inca, to separate those who love
each other, and one that cannot be pleasing to Heaven. Therefore,
great as you are, and friend of mine as you are, I tell you to your
face that if I can take the lady Quilla out of that golden grave of
hers I shall do so."

"I know it, my brother," he answered, "and therefore, were I as some
Incas have been, I should cause this holy Spouse to travel more
quickly to the skies than Nature will take her. But this I will not do
because I know also that Destiny is above all things and that which
Destiny decrees will happen unhelped by man. Still I tell you that I
will thwart you if I can and that should you succeed in your ends, I
will kill you if I can and the lady also, because you have committed
sacrilege. Yes, although I love you better than any other man, I will
kill you. And if King Huaracha should be able to snatch her away by
force I will make war on him until either I and my people or he and
his people are destroyed. And now let us talk no more of this matter,
but rather of our plans against Urco, since in these at least, where
no woman is concerned, I know that you will be faithful to me and I
sorely need your help."



So with a heavy heart I went back to the camp of Huaracha and told him
Kari's words. He was very wroth when he heard them, since his gods
were different to those of the Incas and he thought nothing of the
holiness of the Virgins of the Sun, and once again talked of renewing
the war. Still it came to nothing for sundry reasons of which the
greatest was that his sickness increased on him as the days went by.
Also I told him that much as I desired Quilla, I could not fight upon
his side since I was sworn to aid Kari against Urco and my word might
not be broken. Moreover, the Yuncas who had been our allies, wearying
of their long absence from home and satisfied with the gentle
forgiveness and the redress of their grievances which the new Inca had
promised them, were gone, having departed on their long march to the
coast, while many of the Chancas themselves were slipping back to
their own country. Therefore Huaracha's hour had passed by.

So at length we agreed that it would be foolish to attack Cuzco in
order to try to rescue Quilla, since even if Huaracha won in face of a
desperate defence, probably it would be only to find that his daughter
was dead or had vanished away to some unknown and distant convent. All
that we could do was to trust to fortune to deliver her into our
hands. We agreed further that, having obtained an honourable peace and
all else that he desired, it would be well for Huaracha to return to
his own land, leaving me a body of five thousand picked men who were
willing to serve under me, to assist in the war against Urco, to be my
guard and that of Quilla, if perchance I could deliver her from the
House of the Sun.

When this was known five thousand of the best and bravest of the
Chancas, young soldiers who sought adventure and battle and whom I had
trained, stepped forward at once and swore themselves to my service.
Bidding farewell to Huaracha, with these troops I returned to Cuzco,
sending messengers ahead to explain the reason of their coming to
Kari, who welcomed them well and gave them quarters round the palace
which was allotted to me.

A few days later we advanced on the town Huarina, a great host of us,
and outside of it met the yet greater host of Urco in a mighty battle
that endured for a day and a night, and yet, like that of the Field of
Blood, remained neither lost nor won. When the thousands of the dead
had been buried and the wounded sent back to Cuzco, we attacked the
city of Huarina, I leading the van with my Chancas, and stormed the
place, driving Urco and his forces out on the farther side.

They retreated to the mountains and there followed a long and tedious
war without great battles. At length, although the Inca's armies had
suffered sorely, we forced those of Urco to the shores of the Lake
Titicaca, where most of them melted away into the swamps and certain
tree-clad, low-lying valleys. Urco himself, however, with a number of
followers, escaped in boats to the holy island in the lake.

We built a fleet of /balsas/ with reeds and blown-out sheepskins, and
followed him. Landing on the isle we stormed the city of temples which
were more wondrous and even fuller of gold and precious things than
those of Cuzco. Here the men of Urco fought desperately, but driving
them from street to street, at length we penned them in one of the
largest of the temples of which by some mischance a reed roof was set
on fire, so that there they perished miserably. It was a dreadful
scene such as I never wish to behold again. Also, after all Urco and
some of his captains, breaking out of the burning temple under cover
of the smoke escaped, either in /balsas/ or, as many declare, by
swimming the lake. At least they were gone nor search as we might on
the mainland could they be found.

So all being finished, except for the escape of Urco, we returned to
Cuzco which Kari entered in triumph, I marching at his side, wearied
out with war and bloodshed.



                              CHAPTER XI

                          THE HOUSE OF DEATH

Now at one time during this long war against Urco victory smiled upon
him, though afterwards the scale went down against him. Kari was
defeated in a pitched battle and I who commanded another army was
almost surrounded in a valley. When everything seemed lost, afterwards
I escaped by leading my soldiers round up the slope of a mountain and
surprising Urco in the rear, but as it ended well for us I need not
speak of that matter.

It was while all was at its blackest for us that a certain officer was
brought to me who was captured while striving to desert, or at least
to pass our outposts. As it happened I knew this man again having,
unseen myself, noted him on the previous day talking earnestly to the
high-priest Larico, who, with other priests, accompanied my army,
perhaps to keep a watch on me. I took this captain apart and
questioned him alone, threatening him with death by torment if he did
not reveal his errand to me.

In the end, being very much afraid, he spoke. From him I learned that
he was a messenger from Larico to Urco. Believing that our defeat was
almost certain, Larico had sent him to make his peace with Urco by
betraying all Kari's and my own plans to him and revealing how he
might most easily destroy us. He said also that he, Larico, had only
joined the party of Upanqui, and of Kari after him, under threats of
death and that always in his heart he had been true to Urco, whom he
acknowledged as his Lord and as the rightful Inca whom he would help
to restore to the Throne with all the power of the Priesthood of the
Sun. Further, he sent by this spy a secret message by means of little
cords cunningly knotted, which knots served these people as writing,
since they could read them as we read a book.

Now, being always desirous of knowledge, I had caused myself to be
instructed in the plan of this knot-writing which by this time I could
read well enough. Therefore I was able to spell out this message. It
said shortly but plainly, that knowing he still desired her, he,
Larico, as high-priest would hand over to Urco the lady Quilla,
daughter to the King of the Chancas who unlawfully had been hidden
away among the Virgins of the Sun, also that he would betray me, the
White-God-from-the-Sea who sought to steal her away, into Urco's
hands, that he might kill me if he could.

When I had mastered all this I was filled with rage and bethought me
that I would cause Larico to be taken and suffer the fate of traitors.
Soon, however, I changed this mind of mine and placing the spy in
close keeping where none could come at him, I set a watch on Larico
but said nothing to him or to Kari of all that I had learned.

A few days later our fortunes changed and Urco, defeated, was in full
flight to the shores of Lake Titicaca. After this I knew we had
nothing more to fear from this fox-hearted high-priest who above
everything desired to be on the winning side and to continue in his
place and power. So knowing that I held him fast I bided my time,
because through him alone I could hope to come at Quilla. That time
came after the war was over and we had returned to Cuzco in triumph.
As soon as the rejoicings were over and Kari was firmly seated on his
throne, I sent for Larico, which, as the greatest man in the kingdom
after the Inca, I was able to do.

He appeared in answer to my summons and we bowed to each other, after
which he began to praise me for my generalship, saying that had it not
been for me, Urco would have won the war and that the Inca had done
well to name me his Brother before the people and to say that to me he
owed his throne.

"Yes, that is true," I answered, "and now, since through me, you,
Larico, are the third greatest man in the kingdom and remain High-
Priest of the Sun and Whisperer in the Inca's ear, I would put you in
mind of a certain bargain that we made when I promised you all these
things, Larico."

"What bargain, Lord-of-the-Sea."

"That you would bring me and a Virgin of the Sun, who while she was of
the earth was named Quilla, together, Larico, and enable her to return
from those of the Sun to my arms, Larico."

Now his face grew troubled and he answered:

"Lord, I have thought much of this matter, desiring above all things
to fulfil my word and I grieve to tell you that it is impossible."

"Why, Larico?"

"Because I find that the law of my faith is against it, Lord."

"Is that all, Larico?" I asked with a smile.

"No, Lord. Because I find that the Inca would not suffer it and swears
to kill all who attempt to touch the lady Quilla."

"Is that all, Larico?"

"No, Lord. Because I find that a woman who has been betrothed to one
of the royal blood may never pass to another man."

"Now perhaps we come nearer to it, Larico. You mean that if this
happened and perchance after all Urco should come to the throne, as he
might do if Kari his brother died--as any man may die--he would hold
you to account."

"Yes, Lord, if that chanced, as chance it may, since Urco still lives
and I hear is gathering new armies among the mountains, certainly he
would hold me to account for I have heard as much. Also our father the
Sun would hold me to account and so would the Inca who wields his
sceptre upon earth."

I asked him why he did not think of all these things before when he
had much to gain instead of now when he had gained them through me,
and he answered because he had not considered them enough. Then I
pretended to grow angry and exclaimed:

"You are a rogue, Larico! You promise and take your pay and you do not
perform. Henceforth I am your enemy and one to whom the Inca
hearkens."

"He hearkens still more to this god the Sun and to me who am the voice
of God, White Man," he answered, adding insolently, "You would strike
too late; your power over me and my fortunes is gone, White Man."

"I fear it is so," I replied, pretending to be frightened, "so let us
say no more of the matter. After all, there are other women in Cuzco
besides this fair bride of the Sun. Now before you go, High-Priest,
will you who are so learned help me who am ignorant? I have been
striving to master your method of conveying thoughts by means of
knots. Here I have a bundle of strings which I cannot altogether
understand. Be pleased to interpret them to me, O most holy and
upright High-Priest."

Then from my robe I drew out those knotted fibres that I had taken
from his messenger and held them before Larico's eyes.

He stared at them and turned pale. His hand groped for his dagger till
he saw that mine was on the hilt of Wave-Flame, whereon he let it
fall. Next the thought took him that in truth I could not read the
knots which he began to interpret falsely.

"Have done, Traitor," I laughed, "for I know them all. So Urco may wed
Quilla and I may not. Also cease to fret as to that messenger of yours
for whom you seek far and near, since he is safe in my keeping.
To-morrow I take him to deliver his message not to Urco, but to Kari--
and then, Traitor?"

Now Larico who, notwithstanding his stern face and proud manner, was a
coward at heart, fell upon his knees before me trembling and prayed me
to spare his life which lay in my hand. Well he knew that if once it
came to Kari's ears, even a high priest of the Sun could not hope to
escape the reward of such treachery as his.

"If I pardon you, what will you give me?" I asked.

"The only thing that you will take, Lord--the lady Quilla herself.
Hearken, Lord. Outside the city is the palace of Upanqui whom Urco
slew. There in the great hall the divine Inca sits embalmed and into
that holy presence none dare enter save the Virgins of the Sun whose
office it is to wait upon the mighty dead. To-morrow one hour before
the dawn, when all men sleep, I will lead you to this hall disguised
in the robes of a priest of the Sun, so that on the way thither none
can know you. There you will find but one Virgin of the Sun, the lady
whom you seek. Take her and begone. The rest I leave to you."

"How do I know that you will not set some trap for me, Larico?"

"Thus, Lord, that I shall be with you and share your sacrilege. Also
my life will be in your hand."

"Aye, Larico," I answered grimly, "and if aught of ill befalls me,
remember that this," and I touched the knotted cords, "will find its
way to Kari, and with it the man who was your messenger."

He nodded and answered:

"Be sure that I have but one desire, to know you, Lord, and this woman
whom, being mad, you seek so madly, far from Cuzco and never to look
upon your face again."

Then we made our plans as to when and where we should meet and other
matters, after which he departed, bowing himself away with many
smiles.

I thought to myself that there went as big a rogue as I had ever
known, in London or elsewhere, and fell to wondering what snare he
would set for me, since that he planned some snare I was sure. Why,
then, did I prepare to fall into it? I asked myself. The answer was,
for a double reason. First, although my whole heart was sick with
longing for the sight of her, now, after months of seeking, I was no
nearer to Quilla than when we had parted in the city of the Chancas,
nor ever should be without Larico's aid. Secondly, some voice within
me told me to go forward taking all hazards, since if I did not, our
parting would be for always in this world. Yes, the voice warned me
that unless I saved her soon, Quilla would be no more. As Huaracha had
said, there was more poison in Cuzco, and murderers were not far to
seek. Or despair might do its work with her. Or she might kill herself
as once she had proposed to do. So I would go forward even though the
path I walked should lead me to my doom.

That day I did many things. Now, being so great a general and man--or
god--among these people, I had those about me who were sworn to my
service and whom I could trust. For one of these, a prince of the Inca
blood, of the House of Kari's mother, I sent and gave to him those
knotted cords that were the proof of Larico's treachery, bidding him
if aught of evil overtook me, or if I could not be found, to deliver
them to the Inca on my behalf and with them the prisoned messenger who
was in his keeping, but meanwhile to show them to no man. He bowed and
swore by the Sun to do my bidding, thinking doubtless that, my work
finished in this land, I purposed to return into the sea out of which
I had risen, as doubtless a god could do.

Next I summoned the captains of the Chancas who had fought under me
throughout the civil war, of whom about half remained alive, and bade
them gather their men upon the ridge where I had stood at the
beginning of the battle of the Field of Blood, and wait until I joined
them there. If it chanced, however, that I did not appear within six
days I commanded that they should march back to their own country and
make report to King Huaracha that I had "returned into the sea" for
reasons that he would guess. Also I commanded that eight famous
warriors whom I named, men of my own bodyguard who had fought with me
in all our battles and would have followed me through fire or water or
the gates of Hell themselves, should come to the courtyard of my
palace after nightfall, bringing a litter and disguised as its
bearers, but having their arms hidden beneath their cloaks.

These matters settled, I waited upon the Inca Kari and craved of him
leave to take a journey. I told him that I was weary with so much
fighting and desired to rest amidst my friends the Chancas.

He gazed at me awhile, then stretched out his sceptre to me in token
that my request was granted, and said in a sad voice:

"So you would leave me, my brother, because I cannot give you that
which you desire. Bethink you. You will be no nearer to the Moon (by
which he meant Quilla) at Chanca than you are at Cuzco and here, next
to the Inca, you are the greatest in the Empire who by decree are
named his brother and the general of his armies."

Now, though my gorge rose at it, I lied to him, saying:

"The Moon is set for me, so let her sleep whom I shall see no more.
For the rest, learn, O Kari, that Huaracha has sworn to me that I
shall be, not his brother but his son, and Huaracha is sick--they say
to death."

"You mean that you would choose to be King over the Chancas rather
than stand next to the throne among the Quichuas?" he said, scanning
me sharply.

"Aye, Kari," I replied, still lying. "Since I must dwell in this
strange land, I would do so as a king--no less."

"To that you have a right, Brother, who are far above us all. But when
you are a king, what is your plan? Do you purpose to strive to conquer
me and rule over Tavantinsuyu, as perchance you could do?"

"Nay, I shall never make war upon you, Kari, unless you break your
treaty with the Chancas and strive to subdue them."

"Which I shall never do, Brother."

Then he paused awhile and spoke again with more passion that I had
ever known in him, saying:

"Would that this woman who comes between us were dead. Would that she
had never been born. In truth, I am minded to pray to my father, the
Sun, that he will be pleased to take her to himself, for then
perchance we two might be as we were in the old time yonder in your
England, and when we faced perils side by side upon the ocean and in
the forests. A curse on Woman the Divider, and all the curses of all
the gods upon this woman whom I may not give to you. Had she been of
my Household I would have bidden you to take her, yes, even if she
were my wife, but she is the wife of the god and therefore I may not--
alas! I may not," and he hid his face in his robe and groaned.

Now when I heard these words I grew afraid who knew well that she of
whom the Inca prays the Sun that she may die, does die, and swiftly.

"Do not add to this lady's wrongs by robbing her of life as well as of
sight and liberty, Kari," I said.

"Have no fear, Brother," he answered, "she is safe from me. No word
shall pass my lips though it is true that in my heart I wish that she
would die. Go your ways, Brother and Friend, and when you grow weary
of kingship if it comes to you, as to tell truth already I grow weary,
return to me. Perchance, forgetting that we had been kings, we might
journey hence together over the world's edge."

Then he stood up on his throne and bowed towards me, kissing the air
as though to a god, and taking the royal chain that every Inca wore
from about his neck, set it upon mine. This done, turning, he left me
without another word.

With a heavy heart I returned to my palace where I dwelt. At sundown I
ate according to my custom, and dismissed those who waited upon me to
the servants' quarters. There were but two of them for my private life
was simple. Then I slept till past midnight and rising, went into the
courtyard where I found the eight Chanca captains disguised as litter-
bearers and with them the litter. I led them to an empty guard-house
and bade them stay there in silence. After this I returned to my
chamber and waited.

About two hours before the dawn Larico came, knocking on the side-door
as we had planned. I opened to him and he entered disguised in a
hooded cloak of sheep's wool which covered his robes and his face,
such as priests wear when the weather is cold. He gave to me the
garments of a priest of the Sun which he had brought with him in a
cloth. I clothed myself in them though because of the fashion of them
to do this I must be rid of my armour which would have betrayed me.
Larico desired that I should take off the sword Wave-Flame also, but,
mistrusting him, this I would not do, but made shift to hide it and my
dagger beneath the priest's cloak. The armour I wrapped in a bundle
and took with me.

Presently we went out, having spoken few words since the time for
speech had gone by and peril or some fear of what might befall weighed
upon our tongues. In the guard-house I found the Chancas at whom
Larico looked curiously but said nothing. To them I gave the bundle of
armour to be hidden in the litter and with it my long bow, having
first revealed myself to them by lifting the hood of my cloak. Then I
bade them follow me.

Larico and I walked in front and after us came the eight men, four of
them bearing the empty litter, and the other four marching behind.
This was well planned since if any saw us or if we met guards as once
or twice we did, these thought that we were priests taking one who was
sick or dead to be tended or to be made ready for burial. Once,
however, we were challenged, but Larico spoke some word and we passed
on without question.

At length in the darkness before the dawn we came to the private
palace of dead Upanqui. At its garden gate Larico would have had me
leave the litter with the eight Chanca warriors disguised as bearers.
I refused, saying that they must come to the doors of the palace, and
when he grew urgent, tapped my sword, whispering to him fiercely that
he had best beware lest it should be he who stayed at the gate. Then
he gave way and we advanced all of us across the garden to the door of
the palace. Larico unlocked the door with a key and we entered, he and
I alone, for here I bade the Chancas await my return.

We crept down a short passage that was curtained at its end. Passing
the curtains I found myself in Upanqui's banqueting-hall. This hall
was dimly lit with one hanging golden lamp. By its light I saw
something more wondrous and of its sort more awful than ever I had
seen in that strange land.

There, on a dais, in his chair of gold, sat dead Upanqui arrayed in
all his gorgeous Inca robes and so marvellously preserved that he
might have been a man asleep. With arms crossed and his sceptre at his
side, he sat staring down the hall with fixed and empty eyes, a
dreadful figure of life in death. About him and around the dais were
set all his riches, vases and furniture of gold, and jewels piled in
heaps, there to remain till the roof fell in and buried them, since on
this hallowed wealth the boldest dared not lay a hand. In the centre
of the hall, also, was a table prepared as though for feasters, for
amid jewelled cups and platters stood the meats and wines which day by
day were brought afresh by the Virgins of the Sun. Doubtless there
were more wonders, but these I could not see because the light did not
reach them, or to the doorways of the chambers that opened from the
hall. Moreover, there was something else which caught my eye.

At the foot of the dais crouched a figure which at first I took to be
that of some dead one also embalmed, perhaps a wife or daughter of the
dead Inca who had been set with him in this place. While I stared at
it the figure stirred, having heard our footsteps, rose and turned,
standing so that the light from the hanging lamp fell full upon it. It
was Quilla clad in white and purple with a golden likeness of the Sun
blazoned upon her breast!

So beauteous did she look searching the darkness with great blind eyes
and her rich flowing hair flowing from beneath her jewelled headdress,
a diadem fashioned to resemble the Sun's rays, that my breath failed
me and my heart stood still.

"There stands she whom you seek," muttered Larico in a mocking
whisper, for here even he did not seem to dare to talk aloud. "Go take
her, you whom men call a god, but I call a drunken fool ready to risk
all for a woman's lips. Go take her and ask the blessing upon your
kisses of yonder dead king whose holy rest you break."

"Be silent," I whispered back and passed round the table till I came
face to face with Quilla. Then a strange dumbness fell upon me like a
spell or dead Upanqui's curse, so that I could not speak.

I stood there staring at those beautiful blind eyes and the blind eyes
stared back at me. Presently a look of understanding gathered on the
face and Quilla spoke, or rather murmured to herself.

"Strange--but I could have sworn! Strange, but I seemed to feel! Oh! I
slept in my vigils upon that dead old man who in life was so foolish
and in death appears to have become so wise, and sleeping I dreamed. I
dreamed I heard a step I shall never hear again. I dreamed one was
near me whom I shall never touch again. I will sleep once more, for in
my darkness what are left to me save sleep and--death?"

Then at last I found my tongue and said hoarsely,

"Love is left, Quilla, and--life."

She heard and straightened herself. Her whole body seemed to become
rigid as though with an agony of joy. Her blind eyes flashed, her lips
quivered. She stretched out her hand, feeling at the darkness. Her
fingers touched my forehead, and thence she ran them swiftly over my
face.

"It is--dead or living--it is----" and she opened her arms.

Oh! was there ever anything more beautiful on the earth than this
sight of the blind Quilla thus opening her arms to me there in the
gorgeous house of death?

We clung and kissed. Then I thrust her away, saying:

"Come swiftly from this ill-omened place. All is ready. The Chancas
wait."

She slipped her hand into mine and I turned to lead her away.

Then it was that I heard a low, mocking laugh, Larico's, I thought,
heard also a sound of creeping footsteps around me. I looked. Out of
the darkness that hid the doors of the chamber on the right appeared a
giant form which I knew for that of Urco, and behind him others. I
looked to the left and there were more of them, while in front beyond
the gold-laid board stood the traitor, Larico, laughing.

"You have the first fruits, but it seems that another will reap the
harvest, Lord-from-the-Sea," he jeered.

"Seize her," cried Urco in his guttural voice, pointing to Quilla with
his mace, "and brain that white thief."

I drew Wave-Flame and strove to get at him, but from both sides men
rushed in on me. One I cut down, but the others snatched Quilla away.
I was surrounded, with no room to wield my sword, and already weapons
flashed over me. A thought came to me. The Chancas were at the door. I
must reach them, for perhaps so Quilla might be saved. In front was
the table spread for the death feast. With a bound I leapt on to it,
shouting aloud and scattering its golden furnishings this way and
that. Beyond stood the traitor, Larico, who had trapped me--I sprang
at him and lifting Wave-Flame with both hands I smote with all my
strength. He fell, as it seemed to me, cloven to the middle. Then some
spear cast at me struck the lamp.

It shattered and went out!



                             CHAPTER XII

                        THE FIGHT TO THE DEATH

There was tumult in the hall; shoutings, groans from him whom I had
first struck down, the sound of vases and vessels overthrown, and
above all those of a woman's shrieks echoing from the walls and roof,
so that I could not tell whence they came.

Through the gross darkness I went on towards the curtains, or so I
hoped. Presently they were torn open, and by the faint light of the
breaking dawn I saw my eight Chancas rushing towards me.

"Follow!" I cried, and at the head of them groped my way back up the
hall, seeking for Quilla. I stumbled over the dead body of Larico and
felt a path round the table. Then suddenly a door at the back of the
hall was thrown open and by the grey light which came through the
doorway I perceived the last of the ravishers departing. We scrambled
across the dais where the golden chair was overthrown and the embalmed
Upanqui lay, a stiff and huddled heap upon his back, staring at me
with jewelled eyes.

We gained the door which, happily, none had remembered to close, and
passed out into the parklike grounds beyond. A hundred paces or more
ahead of us, by the glowing light, I saw a litter passing between the
trees surrounded by armed men, and knew that in it was Quilla being
borne to captivity and shame.

After it we sped. It passed the gate of the park wall, but when we
reached that gate it was shut and barred and we must waste time
breaking it down, which we did by help of a felled tree that lay at
hand. We were through it, and now the rim of the sun had appeared so
that through the morning mist, which clung to the hillside beyond the
town, we could see the litter, the full half of a mile away. On we
went up the hill, gaining as we ran, for we had no litter to bear, nor
aught else save the sack of armour which one of the Chancas had
thought to bring with him when he rushed into the hall, and with it my
long bow and shaft.

Now, at a certain place between this hill and another there was a
gorge such as are common in that country, a gorge so deep and narrow
that in places the light of day scarcely struggles to the pathways at
its bottom. Into this tunnel the litter vanished and when we drew near
I saw that its mouth was held by armed men, six of them or more.
Taking my bow from the Chanca I strung it and shot swiftly. The man at
whom I aimed went down. Again I shot and another fell, whereon the
rest of them took cover behind stones.

Throwing back the bow to the Chanca, for now it was useless, we
charged. That business was soon over, for presently all those of
Urco's men who remained there were dead, save one who, being cut off,
fled down hill towards the city, taking with him the news of what had
passed in the palace of dead Upanqui.

We entered the mouth of the gorge, plunging towards the gloom, though
as it chanced this place faced towards the east, so that the low sun,
which now was fully up, shone down it and gave us light that later
would have been lacking.

I, who was very swift of foot and to whom rage and fear gave wings,
outran my companions. Swinging myself round a rock which lay in the
pathway, I saw the litter again not a hundred yards ahead. It halted
because, as it seemed to me, one or more of the bearers stumbled and
fell among the stones. I rushed at them, roaring. Perhaps it had been
wiser to wait for my companions, but I was mad and feared nothing.
They saw me and a cry went up of:

"The White God! The terrible White God!"

Then fear took hold of them and they fled, leaving the litter on the
ground. Yes, all of them fled save one, Urco himself.

He stood there rolling his eyes and gnashing his teeth, looking huge
and awful in those shadows, looking like a devil from hell. Suddenly a
thought seemed to take him, and leaping at the litter he tore aside
its curtains and dragged out Quilla, who fell prone upon the ground.

"If I may not have her, you shall not, White Thief. See! I give back
his bride to the Sun," he shouted, and lifted his copper sword to
pierce her through.

Now I was still ten paces or so away and saw that before I could reach
him that sword would be in her heart. What could I do? Oh! St. Hubert
must have helped me then for I knew in an instant. In my hand was
Wave-Flame and with all my strength I hurled it at his head.

The great blade hurtled hissing through the air. I saw the sunlight
shine on it. He strove to leap clear, but too late, for it caught him
on the hand that he had lifted to protect his head, and shore off two
of his fingers so that he dropped his sword. Next instant, still
roaring, as doubtless old Thorgrimmer, my forefather, used to do when
he fought to the death, for blood is very strong, I leapt on the
giant, who like myself was swordless. There in the gulf we wrestled.
He was a mighty man, but now my strength was as that of ten. I threw
him to the ground by a Sussex trick I knew and there we rolled over
and over each other. Once he had me undermost and I think would have
choked me, had it not been that his right hand lacked two fingers.

With a mighty heave I lifted him so that now we lay side by side. He
was groping for a knife--I did not see, but knew it. Near his head a
sharp-edged stone rose in the path to the height of a man's hand or
more. I saw it and bethought me what to do if I could. Again I heaved
and as at length he found the knife and stabbed at me, scratching my
face, I got his bull's neck upon that stone. Then I loosed my hand and
caught him by the hair. Back I pressed his great head, back and back
with all my might till something snapped.

Urco's neck was broken. Urco quivered and was dead!

I lay by his side, panting. A voice came from the white heap upon the
ground by whom and for whom this dreadful combat had been fought, the
voice of Quilla.

"One died, but who lives?" asked the voice.

I could not answer because I had no breath. All my strength was gone.
Still I sat up, supporting myself with my hand and hoping that it
would come back. Quilla turned her face towards me, or rather towards
the sound that I had made in moving, and I thought to myself how sad
it was that she should be blind. Presently she spoke again and now her
voice quavered:

"I /see/ who it is that lives," she said. "Something has broken in my
eyes and, Lord and Love, I see that it is /you/ who live. You, you,
and oh! you bleed."

Then the Chancas came bounding down the gorge and found us.

They looked at the dead giant and saw how he had died, killed by
strength, not by the sword; they looked and bent the knee and praised
me, saying that I was indeed a god, since no man could have done this
deed, killing the huge Urco with his naked hands. Then they placed
Quilla back in her litter and six of them bore her down that black
gorge. The two who remained, for in that fight none of them had been
hurt, supported me till my strength came back, for the cut in the face
that I had received from Urco's dagger was but slight. We reached the
mouth of the gorge and took counsel.

To return to Cuzco after what I had done, would be to seek death. So
we bore away to the right and, making a round, came about ten o'clock
of the morning unmolested by any, to that ridge on which I had stood
at the beginning of the battle of the Field of Blood. There I found
the Chancas encamped, some three thousand of them, as I had commanded.
When they saw me, living and but little hurt, they shouted for joy,
and when they learned who was in that litter they went well-nigh mad.

Then the eight warriors with me told them all the tale of the saving
of Quilla and the death of the giant Urco at my hands, whereon their
captains came and kissed my feet, saying that I was in truth a god,
though heretofore some of them had held me to be but a man.

"God or man," I answered, "I must rest. Let the women tend to lady
Quilla, and give me food and drink, after which I will sleep. At
sunset we march home to Huaracha, your king and mine, to give him back
his daughter. Till then there is naught to fear, since Kari has no
troops at hand with which to attack us. Still, set outposts."

So I ate and drank, but little of the former and much of the latter, I
fear, and after that I slept as soundly as one who is dead, for I was
outworn.

When the sun was within an hour of setting, captains awakened me and
said that an embassy from Cuzco, ten men only, waited outside our
lines, seeking speech with me. So I rose, and my face and wound having
been dressed, caused water to be poured over my body, and was rubbed
with oil; after which, clothed in the robes of a Chanca noble, but
wearing no armour, I went out with nine Chanca captains to receive the
embassy on the plain at the foot of the hill, at that very spot where
first I had fought with Urco.

When we drew near, from out of the group of nobles advanced one man. I
looked and saw that he was Kari, yes, the Inca himself.

I went forward to meet him and we spoke together just out of earshot
of our followers.

"My brother," said Kari, "I have learned all that has passed and I
give you praise who are the most daring among men and the first among
warriors; you who slew the giant Urco with your naked hands."

"And thus made your throne safe for you, Kari."

"And thus made my throne safe for me. You also who clove Larico to the
breast in the death-house of Upanqui, my father----"

"And thus delivered you from a traitor, Kari."

"And thus delivered me from a traitor, as I have learned also from
your messenger who handed to me the knotted cord, and from the spy
whom you had in your keeping. I repeat that you are the most daring
among men and the first among warriors; almost a god as my people name
you."

I bowed, and after a little silence he went on:

"Would that this were all that I have to say. But alas! it is not. You
have committed the great sacrilege against the Sun, my father, of
which I warned you, having robbed him of his bride, and, my brother,
you have lied to me, who told me but yesterday that you had put all
thought of her from your mind."

"To me that was no sacrilege, Kari, but rather a righteous deed, to
free one from the bonds of a faith in which neither she nor I believe,
and to lead her from a living tomb back to life and love."

"And was the lie righteous also, Brother?"

"Aye," I answered boldly, "if ever a lie can be. Bethink you. You
prayed that this lady might die because she came between you and me,
and those that kings pray may die, do die, if not with their knowledge
or by their express command. Therefore I said that I had put her from
my mind in order that she might go on living."

"To cherish you in her arms, Brother. Now hearken. Because of this
deed of yours, we who were more than friends have become more than
foes. You have declared war upon my god and me; therefore I declare
war upon you. Yet hearken again. I do not wish that thousands of men
should perish because of our quarrel. Therefore I make an offer to
you. It is that you should fight me here and now, man to man, and let
the Sun, or Pachacamac beyond the Sun, decide the matter as may be
decreed."

"Fight /you!/ Fight /you/ Kari, the Inca," I gasped.

"Aye, fight me to the death, since between us all is over and done. In
England you nurtured me. Here in the land of Tavantinsuyu, which I
rule to-day, I have nurtured you, and in my shadow you have grown
great, though it is true that had it not been for your generalship,
perchance I should no longer be here to throw the shadow. Let us
therefore set the one thing against the other and, forgetting all
between us that is past, stand face to face as foes. Mayhap you will
conquer me, being so mighty a man of war. Mayhap, also, if that
chances, my people who look upon you as half a god will raise you up
to be Inca after me, should such be your desire."

"It is not," I broke in.

"I believe you," he answered, bowing his head, "but will it not be the
desire of that fair-faced harlot who has betrayed our Lord the Sun?"

At this word I started and bit my lip.

"Ah! that stings you," he went on, "as the truth always stings, and it
is well. Understand, White Lord who were once my brother, that either
you must fight me to the death, or I declare war upon you and upon the
Chanca people, which war I will wage from month to month and from year
to year until you are all destroyed, as destroyed you shall be. But
should you fight and should the Sun give me the victory, then justice
will be accomplished and I will keep the peace that I have sworn with
the Chanca people. Further, should you conquer me, in the name of my
people I swear that there shall still be peace between them and the
Chancas, since I shall have atoned your sacrilege with my blood. Now
summon those lords of yours and I will summon mine, and set out the
matter to them."

So I turned and beckoned to my captains, and Kari beckoned to his.
They came, and in the hearing of all, very clearly and quietly as was
his fashion, he repeated every word that he had said to me, adding to
them others of like meaning. While he spoke I thought, not listening
over-much.

This thing was hateful to me, yet I was in a snare, since according to
the customs of all these peoples I could not refuse such a challenge
and remain unshamed. Moreover, it was to the advantage of the Chancas,
aye, and of the Quichuas also, that I should not refuse it seeing that
whether I lived or died, peace would then reign between them who
otherwise must both be destroyed by war. I remembered how once Quilla
had sacrificed herself to prevent such a war, though in the end that
war had come; and what Quilla had done, should I not do also? Weary
though I was I did not fear Kari, brave and swift as he might be,
indeed I thought that I could kill him and perhaps take his throne,
since the Quichuas worshipped me, who so often had led their armies to
triumph, almost as much as did the Chancas. But--I could not kill
Kari. As soon would I kill one born of my own mother. Was there then
no escape?

The answer rose in my mind. There was an escape. I could suffer Kari
to kill me. Only if I did this, what of Quilla! After all that had
come and gone, must I lose Quilla thus, and must Quilla lose me?
Surely she would break her heart and die. My plight was desperate. I
knew not what to do. Then of a sudden, while I wavered, some voice
seemed to whisper in my ear; I thought it must be that of St. Hubert.
It seemed to say to me, "Kari trusts to his god, cannot you trust to
yours, Hubert of Hastings, you who are a Christian man? Go forward,
and trust to yours, Hubert of Hastings."

Kari's gentle voice died away; he had finished his speech and all men
looked at me.

"What word?" I said roughly to my captains.

"Only this, Lord," answered their spokesman, "Fight you must, of that
there can be no doubt, but we would fight with you, the ten of the
Chancas against the ten of the Quichuas."

"Aye, that is good," replied the first of Kari's nobles. "This
business is too great to set upon one man's skill and strength."

"Have done!" I said. "It lies between the Inca and myself," while Kari
nodded, and repeated "Have done!" after me.

Then I sent one of the captains back to the camp for my sword and Kari
commanded that his should be brought to him, since according to the
custom of these people when ambassadors meet, neither of us was armed.
Presently, the captain holding my sword returned, and with him
servants who brought my armour. Also after them streamed all the army
of the Chancas among whom the news had spread like wind-driven fire,
and lined themselves upon the ridge to watch. As he came, too, I
noticed that this captain sharpened Wave-Flame with a certain kind of
stone that was used to give a keen edge to weapons.

He brought the ancient weapon and handed it to me on his knee. The
Inca's man also brought his sword and handed it to him, as he did so,
bowing his forehead to the dust. Well I knew that weapon, since once
before I had faced it in desperate battle for my life. It was the
ivory-handled sword of the lord Deleroy which Kari had taken from his
dead hand after I slew him in the Solar of my house in the Cheap at
London. Then the servant came to me with the armour, but I sent him
away, saying that as the Inca had none, I would not wear it, at which
my people murmured.

Kari saw and heard.

"Noble as ever," he said aloud. "Oh! that such bright honour should
have been tarnished by a woman's breath."

Our lords discussed the manner of our fighting, but to them I paid
little heed.

At length all was ready and we stepped forward to face each other at a
given word, clad much alike. I had thrown off my outer garment and
stood bareheaded in a jerkin of soft sheepskin. Kari, too, was
stripped of his splendid dress and clad in a tunic of sheepskin. Also,
that we might be quite equal, he had taken off his turban-like
headgear and even the royal Fringe, whereat his lords stared at each
other for they thought this a bad omen.

It was just then I heard a sound behind me, and turning my head I saw
Quilla stumbling towards us down the stony slope as best her half-
blind eyes would let her, and crying as she came:

"Oh! my Lord, fight not. Inca, I will return to the House of the Sun!"

"Silence, accursed woman!" said Kari, frowning. "Does the Sun take
back such as you? Silence until the woe that you have wrought is
finished, and then wail on forever."

She shrank back at his bitter, unjust words, and guided by the women
who had followed her, sank upon a stone, where she sat still as a
statue or as dead Upanqui in his hall.

Now one called aloud the pledges of the fight which were as Kari had
spoken them. He listened and added:

"Be it known, also, that this battle is to the death of one or both of
us, since if we live I take back my oaths and I will burn yonder witch
as a sacrifice to the Sun whom she has betrayed, and destroy her
people and her city according to the ancient law of Vengeance on the
House of those who have deceived the Sun."

I heard but made no answer, who did not wish to waste my breath in
bandying words with a great man, whose brain had been turned by
bigotry and woman-hatred.

A moment later the signal was given and we were at it. Kari leapt at
me like the tree-lion of his own forests, but I avoided and parried.
Thrice he leapt and thrice I did this; yes, even when I saw an opening
and might have cut him down. Almost I struck, then could not. The
Chancas watched me, wondering what game I played who was not wont to
fight in this fashion, and I also wondered, who still knew not what to
do. Something I must do, or presently I should be slain, since soon my
guard would fail and Deleroy's sword get home at last.

I think that Kari grew perplexed at this patient defence of mine, and
never a blow struck back. At least he withdraw a little, then came for
me with a rush, holding his sword high above his head with the purpose
of striking me above that guard, or so I supposed. Then, of a sudden,
I knew what to do. Wheeling Wave-Flame with all my strength in both
hands, I smote, not at Kari but at the ivory handle of his sword. The
keen and ancient steel that might well have been some of that which,
as legend told, was forged by the dwarfs in Norseland, fell upon the
ivory between his hand-grip and the cross-piece and shore through it
as I had hoped that it would do, so that the blade of Kari's sword,
severed just above the hilt, fell to the ground and the hilt itself
was jarred from his hand.

His nobles saw and groaned while the Chancas shouted with joy, for now
Kari was defenceless and save for the death itself, this fight to the
death was ended.

Kari folded his arms upon his breast and bent his head.

"It is the decree of my god," he said, "and I did ill to trust to the
sword of a villain whom you slew. Strike, Conqueror, and make an end."

I rested myself upon Wave-Flame and answered:

"If I strike not, O Inca, will you take back your words and let peace
reign between your people and the Chancas?"

"Nay," he answered. "What I have said, I have said. If yonder false
woman is given up to suffer the fate of those who have betrayed the
Sun, then there shall be peace between the peoples, but not otherwise,
since while I live I will wage war upon her and you, and upon the
Chancas who shelter both of you."

Now rage took hold of me, who remembered that while this woman-hater
lived blood must flow in streams, but that if he died there would be
peace and Quilla would be safe. So I lifted my sword a little, and as
I did so Quilla rose from her stone and stumbled forward, crying:

"O Lord, shed not the Inca's holy blood for me. Let me be given up!
Let me be given up!"

Then some spirit entered into me and I spoke, saying:

"Lady, half of your prayer I grant and half I deny. I will not shed
the Inca's blood; as soon would I shed yours. Nor will I suffer you to
be given up who have done no wrong, since it was I who took you away
by force, as Urco would have done. Kari, hearken to me. Not once only
when we were in danger together in past days have you said to me that
we must put our faith in the gods we worship, and thus we did. Now
again I hearken to that counsel of yours and put my faith in the God I
worship. You threaten to gather all the strength of your mighty
empire, and because of what I hold to be your superstitions, to
destroy the Chanca people to the last babe and to level their city to
the last stone. I do not believe that the God I worship will suffer
this to come about, though how he will stay your vengeance I do not
know. Kari, great Inca of Tavantinsuyu, Lord of all this strange new
world, I, the White Wanderer-from-the-Sea, give you your life and save
you as once before I saved you in a far land, and with your life I
give you my blessing in all matters but this one alone. Kari, my
brother, look your last on me and go in peace."

The Inca heard, and raising his head, stared at me with his fine,
melancholy eyes. Then suddenly from those eyes there came a gush of
tears. More, he knelt before me and kissed the ground, as the humblest
of his slaves might do before his own majesty.

"Most noble of men," he said, lifting himself up again, "I worship
you. Yes, I, the Inca, worship you. Would that I might take back my
oath, but this I cannot do because my god hardens my heart and then
would decree destruction on my people. Mayhap he whom you serve will
bring things to pass as you foretell, as it would seem he has brought
it to pass that I should eat the dust before you. I hope that it may
be so who love not the sight of blood, but who like the shot arrow
must yet follow my course, driven by the strength that loosed me.
Brother, honoured and beloved, fare you well! May happiness be yours
in life and death, and there in death may we meet again and once more
be brothers where no women come to part us."



Then Kari turned and went with bowed head, together with his nobles,
who followed him as sadly as those who surround a corpse, but not
until they had given to me that royal salute which is only rendered to
the Inca in his glory.



                             CHAPTER XIII

                          THE KISS OF QUILLA

Her women bore Quilla swooning from that ill-fated field, and sick and
sad she remained until once more we saw the City of the Chancas. Yet
all this while strength and sight were returning to her eyes, so that
in the end she could see as well as ever she had done, for which I
thanked Heaven.

Messengers had gone before us, so that when we drew near all the
people of the Chancas came out to meet us, a mighty multitude, who
spread flowers before us and sang songs of joy. On the same evening I
was summoned by Huaracha and found him dying. There in the presence of
his chief captains Quilla and I told him all our story, to which he
listened, answering nothing. When it was finished he said:

"I thank you, Lord-from-the-Sea, who through great perils have saved
my daughter and brought her home to bid farewell to me, untarnished as
she went. I understand now that it was an evil policy which led me to
promise her in marriage to the prince Urco. Through your valour it has
come to naught and I am glad. Great dangers still lie ahead of you and
of my people. Deal with them as you will and can, for henceforward,
Lord-from-the-Sea, they are your people, yours and my daughter's
together, since it is my desire and command that you two should wed so
soon as I am laid with my fathers. Perchance it had been better if you
had slain the Inca when he was in your hand, but man goes where his
spirit leads him. My blessing and the blessing of my gods be on you
both and on your children. Leave me, for I can say no more."

That night King Huaracha died.

Three days later he was buried with great pomp beneath the floor of
the Temple of the Moon, not being preserved and kept above ground
after the fashion of the Incas.

On the last day of the mourning a council was summoned of all the
great ones in the country to the number of several hundreds, to which
I was bidden. This was done in the name of Quilla, who was now named
by a title which meant, "High Lady," or "Queen." I went to it eagerly
enough who had seen nothing of her since that night of her father's
death, for, according to the custom of this people, she had spent the
time of mourning alone with her women.

To my surprise I was led by an officer, not into the great hall where
I knew the notables were assembling, but to that same little chamber
where first I had talked with Huaracha, Quilla's father. Here the
officer left me wondering. Presently I heard a sound and looking up,
saw Quilla herself standing between the curtains, like to a picture in
its frame. She was royally arrayed and wore upon her brow and breast
the emblem of the moon, so that she seemed to glitter in that dusky
place, though nothing about her shone with such a light as did her
large and doe-like eyes.

"Greeting, my Lord," she said in her soft voice, curtseying to me as
she spoke. "Has my Lord aught to say to me? If so, it must be quick,
since the Great Council waits."

Now I grew foolish and tongue-tied, but at length stammered out:

"Nothing, except what I have said before--that I love you."

She smiled a little in her slow fashion, then asked:

"Is there naught to add?"

"What can there be to add to love, Quilla?"

"I know not," she answered, still smiling. "Yet in what does the love
of man and woman end?"

I shook my head and answered:

"In many things, all of them different. In hell sometimes, and more
rarely in heaven."

"And on earth which lies between the two, should those who love escape
death and separation?"

"Well, on earth--in marriage."

She looked at me again and this time a new light shone in her eyes
which I could not misinterpret.

"Do you mean that you will marry me, Quilla?" I muttered.

"Such was my father's wish, Lord, but what is yours? Oh! have done,"
she went on in a changed voice. "For what have we suffered all these
things and gone through such long partings and dangers so dreadful?
Was it not that if Fate should spare us we might come together at
last? And has not Fate spared us--for a while? What said the prophecy
of me in the Temple of Rimac? Was it not that the Sun should be my
refuge and--I forget the rest."

"I remember it," I said. "That in the beloved arms you should sleep at
last."

"Yes," she went on, the blood mounting to her cheeks, "that in the
beloved arms I should sleep at last. So, the first part of the
prophecy has come true."

"As the rest shall come true," I broke in, awaking, and swept her to
my breast.

"Are you sure," she murmured presently, "that you love me, a woman
whom you think savage, well enough to wed me?"

"Aye, more than sure," I answered.

"Hearken, Lord. I knew it always, but being woman I desired to hear it
from your own lips. Of this be certain: that though I am but what I
am, a maiden, wild-hearted and untaught, no man shall ever have a
truer and more loving wife. It is my hope, even that my love will be
such that in it at last you may learn to forget that other lady far
away who once was yours, if only for an hour."

Now I shrank as from a sword prick, since first loves, whatever the
tale of them, as Quilla guessed or Nature taught her, are not easily
forgot, and even when they are dead their ghosts will rise and haunt
us.

"And my hope, most dear, is that you will be mine, not for an hour but
for all our life's days," I answered.

"Aye," she said, sighing, "but who knows how many these will be?
Therefore let us pluck the flowers before they wither. I hear steps.
The lords come to summon us. Be pleased to enter the Council at my
side and holding me by the hand. There I have somewhat to say to the
people. The shadow of the Inca Kari, whom you spared, still lies cold
upon us and them."

Before I could ask her meaning the lords entered, three of them, and
glancing at us curiously, said that all were gathered. Then they
turned and went before us to the great hall where every place was
filled. Hand in hand we mounted the dais, and as we came all the
audience rose and greeted us with a roar of welcome.

Quilla seated herself upon a throne and motioned to me to take my
place upon another throne at her side, which I noted stood a little
higher than that on which she sat, and this, as I learned afterwards,
not by chance. It was planned so to tell the people, of the Chancas
that henceforth I was their king while she was but my wife.

When the shouting had died away Quilla rose from her throne and began
to speak, which like many of the higher class of this people she could
do well enough.

"Lords and Captains of the Chanca nation," she said, "my father, the
king Huaracha, being dead, leaving no lawful son, I have succeeded to
his dignities, and summoned you here to take counsel with me.

"First, learn this, that I, your Queen and Lady, have been chosen as
wife by him who sits at my side."

Here the company shouted again, thus announcing that this tidings
pleased them. For though by now only the common people still believed
me to be a god risen from the sea, all held that I was a great general
and a great man, one who knew much that they did not know, and who
could both lead and fight better than the best of them. Indeed, since
I had slain Urco with my hands and overcome Kari, who as Inca was
believed to be clothed with the strength of the Sun and therefore
unconquerable, I was held to be unmatched throughout Tavantinsuyu.
Moreover, the army that had fought under my command loved me as though
I were their father as well as their general. Therefore all greeted
this tidings well enough without astonishment, for they knew it was
their dead king's wish that I should wed his daughter and that to win
her I had gone through much.

In answer to their shoutings I, too, rose from my seat, and drawing
the sword Wave-Flame, which I wore girt about my dinted armour, with
it I saluted first Quilla and then the gathered nobles, saying:

"Lords of the Chancas, when on an island in the sea, my eyes fell upon
this lady who to-day is your queen, I loved her and swore that I would
wed her if I might. Between that day and this much has befallen. She
was snatched away to be made the wife of Urco, heir to the Inca
throne, and afterwards, to escape him whom she hated, she took refuge
in the House of the Inca god. Then, people of the Chancas, came the
great war which we shared together, and in the end I rescued her from
that house of bondage, and slew Urco while he strove to steal or stab
her. This done, I conquered Kari the Inca, who was as my brother, yet
because I saved your lady from his god the Sun, became my enemy, and
together she and I returned to this, her land. Now it is her will to
wed me, as it has always been mine to wed her, and here in front of
all of you I take her to wife, as she takes me to husband, hoping that
for many years it may be given to us to rule over you, and to our
children after us. Yet I warn you that although in the great war that
has been, if with much loss, we have held our own against all the
hosts of Cuzco and won an honourable peace, by this marriage of ours,
which robs the Inca god of one of a thousand brides, that peace is
broken. Therefore in the future, as in the past, there will be war
between the Quichua and the Chanca peoples."

"We know it," shouted the nobles. "War is decreed, let war come!"

"What would you have had me do?" I went on. "Leave your queen to
languish in the House of the Sun, wed to nothingness, or suffer her to
be dragged away to be one of Urco's women, or hand her back to Kari to
be slain as a sacrifice to a god whom you do not accept?"

"Nay!" they cried. "We would have her wed you, White Lord-from-the-
Sea, that she may become a mother of kings."

"So I thought, Chancas. Yet I warn you that there is trouble near. The
storm gathers and soon it will burst, since Kari is not one who breaks
his oaths."

"Why did you not kill him when he was in your hand, and take his
throne?" asked one.

"Because I could not. Because it would not have been pleasing to
Heaven that I should slay a man who for years had been as my brother.
Because in this way or in that the deed would have fallen back upon my
head, upon the head of the lady Quilla, and upon your heads also, O
people of the Chancas, because----"

At this moment there was disturbance at the end of the hall, and a
herald cried:

"An embassy! An embassy from Kari, the Inca."

"Let it be admitted," said Quilla.

Presently up the central passage marched the embassy with pomp, great
lords and "earmen," every man of them, and bowed before us.

"Your words?" said Quilla quietly.

"They are these, Lady," answered the spokesman of the party. "For the
last time the Inca demands that you should surrender yourself to be
sacrificed as one who has betrayed the Sun. He asks it of you since he
has learned that your father Huaracha is no more."

"And if I refuse to surrender myself, what then, O Ambassador?"

"Then in the name of the Empire and in his own name the Inca declares
war upon you, war to the end, until not one of Chanca blood is left
living beneath the sun and not one stone marks where your city stood.
It may be that a while will pass before this sword of war falls upon
your head, since the Inca must gather his armies and give a breathing
space to his peoples after all the troubles that have been. Yet if not
this year, then next year, and if not next year, then the year after,
that sword shall fall."

Quilla listened and turned pale, though more, I think, with wrath than
fear. Then she said:

"You have heard, Chancas, and know how stands this case. If I
surrender myself to be sacrificed, the Inca in his mercy will spare
you; if I do not surrender myself, soon or late he will destroy you--
if he can. Say, then, shall I surrender myself?"

Now every man in that great hall leapt up and from every throat there
arose a shout of

"Never!"

When it had died away an aged chief and councillor, an uncle of
Huaracha, the dead King, came forward and stared at the envoys with
his horny eyes.

"Go back to the Inca," he said, "and tell him that the threats of the
mouth are one thing and the deeds of the hand are another. In the late
war that has been he has learned something of our quality, both as
foes and friends, and perchance more remains for him to learn. Yonder
is one"--and he pointed to myself--"who is about to become our King
and the husband of our Queen. By the help of that one and of some of
us the Inca won his throne. From the mercy of that one, also, but a
little while ago the Inca won his life. Let him be careful lest
through the might of that one, behind whom stands every Chanca that
breathes, the Inca Kari Upanqui should yet lose both throne and life,
and with them the ancient empire of the Sun. Thus say we all."

"Thus say we all!" repeated the great company with a roar that shook
the walls.

In the silence that followed Quilla asked:

"Have you aught to add, O Ambassadors?"

"Ay, this," said the first of them.

"The Chanca tree is about to be cut down, but the Inca still offers a
refuge to the Lion that hides among its branches because he has loved
that Lion from of old. Let the White Lord-from-the-Sea over whom you
have cast the net of your witcheries return with us and he shall be
saved and given place and power, and with them a brother's love."

Now Quilla looked at me, and I rose to speak but could not, since all
that came from my lips was laughter. At length I said:

"But the other day when I gave him his life, the Inca named me noble.
What would he think of me if I said yes to this offer? Would he call
me noble then and the Lion that dwells in the Chanca tree? Or,
whatever his lips might speak, would not his heart name me the basest
of slaves and no lion of the tree, but rather a snake that creeps at
its roots? Get you gone, my lords, and say that here I bide happy with
her whom I have won, and that the ancient sword Wave-Flame, on which
Kari has looked of late, is still sharp and the arm that wields it is
still strong, and that he will do well now that it has served his
turn, to look on it no more," and again I drew the great blade and
flashed it before their eyes there in that dusky hall.

Then, bowing courteously, for every man of them knew me and some of
them loved me well, they turned and went. That was the last that ever
I, Hubert of Hastings, saw of nobles of the Inca blood, though
perchance, ere long, I shall meet them again in war.

"Let them be escorted safely from the city," commanded Quilla, and
soldiers went to do her bidding.

When they had gone she issued another order, that the door should be
closed and watchmen set about the hall, so that none could approach it
unseen. Then after a pause she rose and spoke:

"My Lord," she said, "who soon, as I trust, will be my husband and my
king, and you, the chosen of my people, hearken to me for I have a
matter to lay before you. You have heard the Inca's message and you
know that his words are not vain. He who is great in many ways, in one
is small and narrow. He sets his god before his honour, and to satisfy
his god, whom he thinks that I have outraged, is prepared to sacrifice
his honour, and even to kill one to whom he owes all," and she touched
me with her hand. "Moreover, these things he can do, not at once but
in time to come, because for every man of ours he is able to gather
ten. Therefore we stand thus; death and destruction stare us in the
face."

She paused, and that old chief of whom I have spoken, asked in the
midst of a silence, as I think was planned that he should ask:

"You have set our teeth in the bitter rind of truth. Is there no sweet
fruit within? Can you not show us a way of escape, O Quilla, Daughter
of the Moon, whose heart is fed with the wisdom of the Moon?"

"I believe that I can show you such a way," she answered. "You know
the legend of our people--that in the old days, a thousand years ago--
we came to this country out of the forests.

"You know, too, the legend tells that once far away, beyond the
forest, there was a mighty empire of which the king sat in a City of
Gold hidden within a ring of mountains. That king, it is said, had two
sons, and when he died these sons made war upon each other, and one of
them, my forefather, was defeated and driven away into the forests by
those who clung to him. By boats he descended the river that runs
through the forest, and at length with those who remained to him came
to this land and there once more grew to be a king. Is it not so?"

"It is so," answered the aged chief. "The tale has come down to me
through ten generations, and with it the prophecy that in a day to
come the Chancas would return to that City of Gold whence they came
and be welcomed of its people."

"I have heard that prophecy," said Quilla. "Moreover, of it I have
something to tell you. While I sat in despair and blindness in the
Convent of the Sun at Cuzco it came into my mind and I brooded upon it
much, who was always sure that the war between the Chancas and the
armies of the Incas was but begun. In my darkness I prayed to my
Mother, the Moon, for light and help. Long and often I prayed, and at
length an answer came. One night the Spirit of the Moon appeared to my
soul as a beautiful and shining goddess, and spoke to me.

"'Be brave, Daughter,' she said, 'for all that seems to be lost shall
yet be found again, and the light of a certain flashing sword shall
pierce the blackness and give back vision to your eyes.' This, indeed,
happened, my people, since it was when the sword of my Lord saved me
from death at the hands of Urco that the first gleam of light returned
to my darkened eyes.

"'Be not afraid, moreover, for the Children of the Chancas who bow to
me,' went on the shining Spirit of the Moon, 'since in the day of
their danger I will show them a path towards my place of resting in
the west. Yea, I will lead them far from wars and tyrannies back to
that ancient city whence they came, and there they shall sleep in
peace till all things are accomplished. Moreover, you shall be their
ruler during your appointed days, you and another whom I led to you
out of the deeps of the sea and showed to you sleeping in my beams.'

"Thus that Spirit spoke to me, Councillors, though at the time I did
not know whether the vision were more than a happy dream. But now I do
know that it was no dream, but the truth.

"For did not my sight begin to return to me in the flashing of the
sword that is named Flame-of-the-Wave? And if this were true, why
should not the rest be true also? People of the Chancas, I am your
Queen to-day and my counsel to you is that we flee from this land
before the Inca's net closes round us and the Inca's spears pierce our
heart, to seek our ancient home far in the depths of the western
forest where, as I trust, his armies cannot come. Is that your will, O
my People? If so, by the tongues of your Lords and Captains declare it
here and now before it be too late."

Back thundered the answer:

"It is our will, O Daughter of the Moon!"

When its echoes had died away Quilla turned to me, lovely to look on
as the evening star and with eyes that shone like stars, and asked:

"Is it your will also, O Lord-from-the-Sea?"

"Your will is my will, Quilla," I answered, "and your heart is my
home. Lead on; where you go I follow, even to the edge of the world
and beyond the world."

"So be it!" she cried in a triumphant voice. "Now the evil past is
finished with its fears and battles and before our feet, lit by
moonbeams, stretches the Future's shining road leading us to the
mystery in which all roads begin and for an hour are lost again. Now,
too, our separations end in a perfect unity that perchance we have
known before and shall know again in ages to be born and lands
revisited. Now, Lord-from-the-Sea, at whose coming my sleeping heart
awoke to love and whose sword saved me from shame and death, giving me
back to life and light, here, before this company of our people, I,
the Daughter of the Moon, defying the Sun who held me captive, and all
his servants, take you to husband with this kiss," and leaning forward
Quilla pressed her lips upon my own. . . .



    The remaining parchment sheets of the ancient Manuscript are
    rotted with the damp of the tomb in which it lay for centuries
    and quite undecipherable.
                                                       Editor.

