Book Two. The Woman
Chapter I. Of Storm, and TEmpest, and of the Coming of Charmian
I was at sea in an open boat. Out of the pitch-black heaven
there rushed a mighty wind, and the pitch-black seas above me
rose high, and ever higher, flecked with hissing white; wherefore
I cast me face downwards in my little boat, that I might not
behold the horror of the waters; and above their ceaseless,
surging thunder there rose a long-drawn cry:
I stood upon a desolate moor, and the pitiless rain lashed me,
and the fierce wind buffeted me; and, out of the gloom where
frowning earth and heaven met--there rose a long-drawn cry:
I started up in bed, broad awake, and listening; yet the tumult
was all about me still--the hiss and beat of rain, and the sound
of a rushing, mighty wind--a wind that seemed to fill the earth--a
wind that screamed about me, that howled above me, and filled the
woods, near and far, with a deep booming, pierced, now and then,
by the splintering crash of snapping bough or falling tree. And
yet, somewhere in this frightful pandemonium of sound, blended in
with it, yet not of it, it seemed to me that the cry still faintly
echoed:
So appalling was all this to my newly-awakened senses, that I
remained, for a time, staring into the darkness as one dazed.
Presently, however, I rose, and, donning some clothes, mended the
fire which still smouldered upon the hearth, and, having filled
and lighted my pipe, sat down to listen to the awful voices of
the storm.
What brain could conceive--what pen describe that elemental
chorus, like the mighty voice of persecuted Humanity, past and
present, crying the woes and ills, the sorrows and torments,
endured of all the ages? To-night, surely, the souls of the
unnumbered dead rode within the storm, and this was the voice of
their lamentation.
From the red mire of battlefields are they come, from the flame
and ravishment of fair cities, from dim and reeking dungeons,
from the rack, the stake, and the gibbet, to pierce the heavens
once more with the voice of their agony.
Since the world was made, how many have lived and suffered, and
died, unlettered and unsung--snatched by a tyrant's whim from
life to death, in the glory of the sun, in the gloom of night, in
blood and flame, and torment? Indeed, their name is "Legion."
But there is a great and awful Book, whose leaves are countless,
yet every leaf of which is smirched with blood and fouled with
nameless sins, a record, howsoever brief and inadequate, of human
suffering, wherein as "through a glass, darkly," we may behold
horrors unimagined; where Murder stalks, and rampant Lust; where
Treachery creeps with curving back, smiling mouth, and sudden,
deadly hand; where Tyranny, fierce-eyed, and iron-lipped, grinds
the nations beneath a bloody heel. Truly, man hath no enemy like
man. And Christ is there, and Socrates, and Savonarola--and
there, too, is a cross of agony, a bowl of hemlock, and a
consuming fire.
Oh, noble martyrs! by whose blood and agony the world is become a
purer and better place for us, and those who shall come after us
--Oh glorious, innumerable host! thy poor, maimed bodies were dust
ages since, but thy souls live on in paradise, and thy memory
abides, and shall abide in the earth, forever.
Ye purblind, ye pessimists, existing with no hope of a
resurrection, bethink you of these matters; go, open the great
and awful Book, and read and behold these things for yourselves
--for what student of history is there but must be persuaded of
man's immortality--that, though this poor flesh be mangled, torn
asunder, burned to ashes, yet the soul, rising beyond the
tyrant's reach, soars triumphant above death and this sorry
world, to the refuge of "the everlasting arms;" for God is a just
God!
Now, in a while, becoming conscious that my pipe was smoked out
and cold, I reached up my hand to my tobacco-box upon the
mantelshelf. Yet I did not reach it down, for, even as my
fingers closed upon it, above the wailing of the storm, above the
hiss and patter of driven rain, there rose a long-drawn cry:
So, remembering the voice I had seemed to hear calling in my
dream, I sat there with my hand stretched up to my tobacco-box,
and my face screwed round to the casement behind me, that, as I
watched, shook and rattled beneath each wind-gust, as if some
hand strove to pluck it open.
How long I remained thus, with my hand stretched up to my
tobacco-box, and my eyes upon this window, I am unable to say,
but, all at once, the door of the cottage burst open with a
crash, and immediately the quiet room was full of rioting wind
and tempest; such a wind as stopped my breath, and sent up a
swirl of smoke and sparks from the fire. And, borne upon this
wind, like some spirit of the storm, was a woman with flying
draperies and long, streaming hair, who turned, and, with knee
and shoulder, forced to the door, and so leaned there, panting.
Tall she was, and nobly shaped, for her wet gown clung,
disclosing the sinuous lines of her waist and the bold, full
curves of hip and thigh. Her dress, too, had been wrenched and
torn at the neck, and, through the shadow of her fallen hair, I
caught the ivory gleam of her shoulder, and the heave and tumult
of her bosom.
Here I reached down my tobacco-box and mechanically began to fill
my pipe, watching her the while.
Suddenly she started, and seemed to listen. Then, with a swift,
stealthy movement, she slipped from before the door, and I
noticed that she hid one hand behind her.
The woman crouched back against the wall, with her eyes towards
the door, and always her right hand was hidden in the folds of
her petticoat. So we remained, she watching the door, and I,
her.
The voice was very near now, and, almost immediately after, there
came a loud "view hallo," and a heavy fist pounded upon the door.
"Oh, Charmian, you're there--yes, yes--inside--I know you are. I
swore you should never escape me, and you sha'n't--by God!" A
hand fumbled upon the latch, the door swung open, and a man
entered. As he did so I leapt forward, and caught the woman's
wrist. There was a blinding flash, a loud report, and a bullet
buried itself somewhere in the rafters overhead. With a strange,
repressed cry, she turned upon me so fiercely that I fell back
before her.
The newcomer, meantime, had closed the door, latching it very
carefully, and now, standing before it, folded his arms, staring
at her with bent head. He was a very tall man, with a rain-sodden,
bell-crowned hat crushed low upon his brows, and wrapped in a long,
many-caged overcoat, the skirts of which were woefully mired and
torn. All at once he laughed, very softly and musically.
"So, you would have killed me, would you, Charmian--shot me--like
a dog?" His tone was soft as his laugh and equally musical, and
yet neither was good to hear. "So you thought you had lost me,
did you, when you gave me the slip, a while ago? Lose me?
Escape me? Why, I tell you, I would search for you day and
night--hunt the world over until I found you, Charmian--until I
found you," said he, nodding his head and speaking almost in a
whisper. "I would, by God!"
The woman neither moved nor uttered a word, only her breath came
thick and fast, and her eyes gleamed in the shadow of her hair.
They stood facing each other, like two adversaries, each
measuring the other's strength, without appearing to be conscious
of my presence; indeed, the man had not so much as looked toward
me even when I had struck up the pistol.
Now, with every minute I was becoming more curious to see this
man's face, hidden as it was in the shadow of his dripping hat
brim. Yet the fire had burned low.
"You always were a spitfire, weren't you, Charmian?" he went on
in the same gentle voice; "hot, and fierce, and proud--the flame
beneath the ice--I knew that, and loved you the better for it;
and so I determined to win you, Charmian--to win you whether you
would or no. And--you are so strong--so tall, and glorious, and
strong, Charmian!"
His voice had sunk to a murmur again, and he drew a slow step
nearer to her.
"How wonderful you are, Charmian! I always loved your shoulders
and that round, white throat. Loved? Worshipped them,
worshipped them! And to-night--" He paused, and I felt, rather
than saw, that he was smiling. "And to-night you would have
killed me, Charmian--shot me--like a dog! But I would not have
it different. You have flouted, coquetted, scorned, and mocked
me--for three years, Charmian, and to-night you would have
killed me--and I--would not have it otherwise, for surely you can
see that this of itself must make your final surrender--even
sweeter."
With a gesture utterly at variance with his voice, so sudden,
fierce, and passionate was it, he sprang toward her with
outstretched arms. But, quick as he, she eluded him, and, before
he could reach her, I stepped between them.
"Out of my way, bumpkin!" he retorted, and, brushing one aside,
made after her. I caught him by the skirts of his long, loose
coat, but, with a dexterous twist, he had left it in my grasp.
Yet the check, momentary though it was, enabled her to slip
through the door of that room which had once been Donald's, and,
before he could reach it, I stood upon the threshold. He
regarded me for a moment beneath his hat brim, and seemed
undecided how to act.
"My good fellow," said he at last, "I will buy your cottage of
you--for to-night--name your price."
I shook my head. Hereupon he drew a thick purse from his pocket,
and tossed it, chinking, to my feet.
"There are two hundred guineas, bumpkin, maybe more--pick them
up, and--go," and turning, he flung open the door.
Obediently I stooped, and, taking up the purse, rolled it in the
coat which I still held, and tossed both out of the cottage.
"Sir," said I, "be so very obliging as to follow your property."
"Ah!" he murmured, "very pretty, on my soul!" And, in that same
moment, his knuckles caught me fairly between the eyes, and he
was upon me swift, and fierce, and lithe as a panther.
I remember the glint of his eyes and the flash of his bared
teeth, now to one side of me, now to the other, as we swayed to
and fro, overturning the chairs, and crashing into unseen
obstacles. In that dim and narrow place small chance was there
for feint or parry; it was blind, brutal work, fierce, and grim,
and silent. Once he staggered and fell heavily, carrying the
table crashing with him, and I saw him wipe blood from his face
as he rose; and once I was beaten to my knees, but was up before
he could reach me again, though the fire upon the hearth spun
giddily round and round, and the floor heaved oddly beneath my
feet.
Then, suddenly, hands were upon my throat, and I could feel the
hot pant of his breath in my face, breath that hissed and
whistled between clenched teeth. Desperately I strove to break
his hold, to tear his hands asunder, and could not; only the
fingers tightened and tightened.
Up and down the room we staggered, grim and voiceless--out
through the open door--out into the whirling blackness of the
storm. And there, amid the tempest, lashed by driving rain and
deafened by the roaring rush of wind, we fought--as our savage
forefathers may have done, breast to breast, and knee to knee
--stubborn and wild, and merciless--the old, old struggle for
supremacy and life.
I beat him with my fists, but his head was down between his arms;
I tore at his wrists, but he gripped my throat the tighter; and
now we were down, rolling upon the sodden grass, and now we were
up, stumbling and slipping, but ever the gripping fingers sank
the deeper, choking the strength and life out of me. My eyes
stared up into a heaven streaked with blood and fire, there was
the taste of sulphur in my mouth, my arms grew weak and
nerveless, and the roar of wind seemed a thousand times more
loud. Then--something clutched and dragged us by the feet, we
tottered, swayed helplessly, and plunged down together. But, as
we fell, the deadly, gripping fingers slackened for a moment, and
in that moment I had broken free, and, rolling clear, stumbled up
to my feet. Yet even then I was sill encumbered, and, stooping
down, found the skirts of the overcoat twisted tightly about my
foot and ankle. Now, as I loosed it, I inwardly blessed that
tattered garment, for it seemed that to it I owed my life.
So I stood, panting, and waited for the end. I remember a blind
groping in the dark, a wild hurly-burly of random blows, a sudden
sharp pain in my right hand--a groan, and I was standing with the
swish of the rain about me, and the moaning of the wind in the
woods beyond.
How long I remained thus I cannot tell, for I was as one in a
dream, but the cool rain upon my face refreshed me, and the
strong, clean wind in my nostrils was wonderfully grateful.
Presently, raising my arm stiffly, I brushed the wet hair from my
eyes, and stared round me into the pitchy darkness, in quest of
my opponent.
"Where are you?" said I at last, and this was the first word
uttered during the struggle; "where are you?"
Receiving no answer, I advanced cautiously (for it was, as I have
said, black dark), and so, presently, touched something yielding
with my foot.
"Come--get up!" said I, stooping to lay a hand upon him, "get up,
I say." But he never moved; he was lying upon his face, and, as
I raised his head, my fingers encountered a smooth, round stone,
buried in the grass, and the touch of that stone thrilled me from
head to foot with sudden dread. Hastily I tore open waistcoat
and shirt, and pressed nay hand above his heart. In that one
moment I lived an age of harrowing suspense, then breathed a sigh
of relief, and, rising, took him beneath the arms and began to
half drag, half carry him towards the cottage.
I had proceeded thus but some dozen yards or so when, during a
momentary lull in the storm, I thought I heard a faint "Hallo,"
and looking about, saw a twinkling light that hovered to and fro,
coming and going, yet growing brighter each moment. Setting down
my burden, therefore, I hollowed my hands about my mouth, and
shouted.
"Be that you, sir?" cried a man's voice at no great distance.
"This way!" I called again, "this way!" The words seemed to
reassure the fellow, for the light advanced once more, and as he
came up, I made him out to be a postilion by his dress, and the
light he carried was the lanthorn of a chaise.
"Why--sir!" he began, looking me up and down, by the light of his
lanthorn, "strike me lucky if I'd ha' knowed ye! you looks as if
--oh, Lord!"
"What is it?" said I, wiping the rain from my eyes again. The
Postilion's answer was to lower his lanthorn towards the face of
him who lay on the ground between us, and point. Now, looking
where he pointed, I started suddenly backwards, and shivered,
with a strange stirring of the flesh.
For I saw a pale face with a streak of blood upon the cheek
--there was blood upon my own; a face framed in lank hair, thick
and black--as was my own; a pale, aquiline face, with a prominent
nose, and long, cleft chin--even as my own. So, as I stood
looking down upon this face, my breath caught, and my flesh
crept, for indeed, I might have been looking into a mirror--the
face was the face of myself.