您的位置 : 首页 > 英文著作
People Of The Mist, The
CHAPTER XXXIV - NAM'S LAST ARGUMENT
H.Rider Haggard
下载:People Of The Mist, The.txt
本书全文检索:
       _ For a moment Juanna stood stupefied; for the manoeuvre had been so
       sudden that at first she could scarcely realise its results.
       "Now, Shepherdess," began Nam blandly, "we can talk in private, for I
       have words to say to you which it is not fitting that other ears
       should hear."
       "You fiend," she answered fiercely; then comprehending that violence
       or remonstrance would be useless, she added, "Speak on, I hear you."
       "Listen, Shepherdess, and for your own sake I implore you, do not give
       way to grief or rage. I swear to you that no harm shall come to yonder
       man if you will but do my bidding. Shepherdess, you are found out; I
       know, and the people know, that you are no goddess. It had been safer
       to sacrifice you to-day, but partly because of the pleading of my
       daughter who loves you, and partly for other reasons, I have caused
       you to be saved alive. Now, Shepherdess, from this country there is no
       escape; as you have chosen to come hither, here you must remain for
       life, and in this cell you cannot live and die. Therefore, for my
       daughter's sake I have cast about for a means to deliver you from
       bonds and to set you high in the land, ay, almost at its head," and he
       paused.
       "Perhaps you will come to the point," said Juanna, who was trembling
       with fear and anger.
       "It is this, Shepherdess," Nam answered bowing; "although you are
       dethroned as a goddess, you may still shine as a queen and rule over
       us as the wife of our king."
       "Indeed," replied Juanna, turning suddenly cold; "and how shall I, who
       am held to be dead, appear again as a woman wedded to your king?
       Surely the people would find that strange, Nam?"
       "No, Shepherdess, for I have prepared a tale which shall explain the
       wonder, and already its rumour runs from mouth to mouth. It will be
       said that you were a goddess and therefore immortal, but that for the
       sake of love you have put off your godhead and put on the flesh, that
       you might dwell for some years with him whom you desire."
       "Indeed," said Juanna again. "And what if I refuse to consent to this
       scheme, which, as I think, can have come only from a woman's brain?"
       and she pointed to Soa.
       "You are right, Shepherdess," answered Soa, "the plan is mine; I made
       it to save you, and also," she added coolly, "to be revenged upon that
       white thief who loves you, for he shall live to see you the wife of
       another man, a wild man."
       "And have you never thought, Soa, that I may have wishes of my own in
       this matter?"
       "Doubtless, yet the fairest women cannot always have what they may
       chance to wish. Know, Shepherdess, that this must be both for your own
       sake and for the sake of Nam, my father. Olfan loves you, and in these
       troubled times it is necessary that Nam and the priests should gain
       his support, which has been bought but now by the promise that you
       will be given to him in marriage on this very day. For you,
       Shepherdess, although you might have wished to wed one of your own
       race, at the least you will rule a queen, and that is better than to
       perish miserably."
       "I think otherwise, Soa," Juanna answered calmly, for she saw that
       neither passion nor pleading would help her, "and of the two I choose
       to die," and she put her hand to her hair, then started, for she found
       the poison gone.
       "You will choose to die, Shepherdess," said Soa with a cold smile,
       "but this is not always so easy. I have taken your medicine from you
       while you slept, and here there are no other means to compass death."
       "I can starve, Soa," replied Juanna with dignity.
       "That takes some time, Shepherdess, and to-day you will become the
       wife of Olfan. Still it is needful that you should yourself consent to
       marry him, for this chief is so foolish that he declares that he will
       not wed you till you have accepted him with your own mouth and in the
       presence of witnesses."
       "Then I fear that the wedding will not be celebrated," said Juanna
       with a bitter laugh, for she could not refrain from giving some
       outward expression to all the loathing which she felt for this wicked
       woman, who in her fierce love would save the life of her mistress by
       selling her to shame.
       "I think that it will, Shepherdess," answered Soa, "for it seems that
       we have a way by which we can win you to speak those words which Olfan
       desires to hear."
       "There is no way, Soa."
       "What, none, Shepherdess? Think now: he whom you name Deliverer is a
       prisoner beyond that door. What if his life hangs upon your choice?
       What if he were shown to you about to die a fearful death from which
       you alone could save him by speaking a certain word?"
       Now for the first time Juanna fully understood the hideous nature of
       the plot whereby Soa purposed either to force her to become the wife
       of a savage, or to thrust upon her the guilt of causing the death of
       the man whom she loved, and she sank back upon the couch, saying:
       "You would have done better to leave me yonder in the slave camp,
       Soa."
       Then, abandoning the tone of forced calm in which she had spoken
       hitherto, Soa broke out bitterly:
       "When you were in the slave camp, Shepherdess, you loved me who have
       loved you from a child, for then no white dog had come to sow mischief
       between us and to make you hate and distrust me. Then I would have
       died for you, ay, and this I would do now. But also I would be
       revenged upon the white dog, for I, who am husbandless and childless,
       had but this one thing, and he has taken it from me. You were to me as
       mother, and lover, and babe are to other women--my all, and now I am
       left desolate, and I will be revenged upon him before I die. But I
       still love you, Shepherdess, and could any other plan have been found
       to help you, I could not have forced this marriage on you. No such
       plan can be found; thus alone can you live and become great and happy;
       and thus alone can I continue to feast my eyes upon you, though it be
       from far."
       She ceased, trembling with the strength of the passions that shook
       her, to which indeed her words had given but feeble expression.
       "Go," said Juanna, "I would have time to think."
       Then Nam spoke again.
       "We go, Shepherdess, in obedience to your wish, but before evening we
       shall return to hear your answer. Do not attempt to work mischief upon
       yourself, for know that you will be watched though you cannot see the
       eyes that watch you. If you do but so much as lift a hand against your
       life, or even strive to cut off the light that flows through yonder
       hole, then at once you will be seized and bound, and my daughter will
       be set to guard you. Shepherdess, farewell."
       And they went, leaving Juanna alone and a prey to such thoughts as can
       scarcely be written.
       For several hours she sat there upon the couch, allowing no hint of
       what she felt to appear upon her face, for she was too proud to suffer
       the eyes which she knew were spying on her, though whence she could
       not tell, to read her secret anguish.
       As she sat thus in her desolation several things grew clear to Juanna,
       and the first of them was that Soa must be mad. The love and hate that
       seethed in her fierce heart had tainted her brain, making her more
       relentless than a leopard robbed of its young. From the beginning she
       had detested Leonard and been jealous of him, and incautiously enough
       he had always shown his dislike and distrust of her. By slow degrees
       these feelings had hardened into insanity, and to gratify the vile
       promptings of her disordered mind she would hesitate at nothing.
       From Soa, therefore, she could hope for no relenting. Nor had she
       better prospect with Nam, for it was evident that in his case
       political considerations operated as strongly as did those of a
       personal character with his daughter. He was so much involved, he had
       committed himself so deeply in this matter of the false gods, that,
       rightly or wrongly, he conceived Soa's plan to offer the only feasible
       chance of escape from the religious complications by which he was
       surrounded, that threatened to bring his life and power to a
       simultaneous end.
       It was out of the question, therefore, to expect help from the high-
       priest, who was in the position of a man on a runaway horse with
       precipices on either side of him, unless, indeed, she could show him
       some safer path. Failing this, it would avail her nothing that he
       hated and feared Olfan, and only promoted this marriage in order to
       bribe the king into standing his friend during the expected political
       convulsions. Indeed, as she guessed rightly, Nam would much better
       like to know her safely over the borders of the Mist-land than to be
       called upon to greet her as its queen. This was obvious, seeing that
       should she return to power, religious or temporal, it was scarcely to
       be hoped that she would forget the wrongs which she had suffered at
       his hands. The marriage was merely a temporary expedient designed to
       ward off immediate evil, but should it come about and the crisis be
       tided over, it was plain that the struggle between the false goddess
       and the perjured priest must be carried on until it ended in the death
       of one or both of them. However, all these things lay in the future as
       Nam foretold it, a future which Juanna never meant to live to see.
       There remained Leonard and Olfan. The former, of course, was
       powerless, at least for the present, having suffered himself to be
       entrapped, though his lack of caution mattered little, for doubtless
       if guile had failed, force would have been employed. It was she who
       must save Leonard, for he could do nothing to save her.
       The more Juanna thought of the matter, the more she became convinced
       that her only hope lay in Olfan himself, who had sworn friendship to
       her, and who certainly was no traitor. She remembered that in their
       conversation of the day before he had admitted that she could be
       nothing to him while Leonard lived. Probably Nam had told her that the
       Deliverer was dead, and then it was, actuated by his passion which she
       knew to be genuine enough, that he had entered into a bargain with the
       priest. These must be the terms of the compact, that the game of the
       false gods being played, Olfan undertook to support Nam and the rest
       of his party to the best of his power, for the consideration to be
       received of her hand in marriage, stipulating, however, that she
       should give it of her own free will.
       This of course she would never do; therefore Olfan's proviso gave her
       a loophole of escape, though Juanna was well aware that it would not
       be wise to rely too implicitly on the generosity of the savage chief
       in matters upon which savages are apt to be neither generous nor
       delicate. On this she must fall back as a last resource, or rather as
       a last resource but one. Meanwhile, she would fight Nam and Soa step
       by step, yielding only when she saw that further obstinacy on her part
       would involve Leonard's destruction. It was possible, indeed it was
       probable, that everything might fail her, and in that event she must
       not fail herself; in other words, although the poison had been taken
       from her, she must find a means of death.
       Having thought these problems out so far as it was in her power to do,
       Juanna rose and began to walk up and down the cell, noting its
       construction and peculiarities. Doubtless Leonard was behind yonder
       door, but it was so thick that she could hear nothing of his
       movements. For the rest, it seemed clear that escape was impossible.
       Excepting the doors, the shaft in the rock was the only other opening
       that she was able to see, but through this no child could pass, and if
       he might it would be to fall into the pool of raging water.
       Had Otter lived through the fight with the snake god, she wondered?
       There was small chance of it, but at least he had made an end worthy
       of his reputation, and she felt proud of him. And the other--
       Francisco. Of him also she was proud indeed, but for herself she was
       ashamed, for she knew that she had been to blame, though not
       designedly. Who would have guessed that this frail timid man could
       prove himself such a hero, or who could estimate the power of the
       unsought and unhappy love which enabled him to conquer the fear of
       death?
       She had been wrong to be angry with Leonard, for she knew well that,
       if it could have been so, he would gladly have given his own life for
       hers. Alas! it seemed that she was always wrong, for her temper was
       quick and the tongue is an unruly member. They had both of them been
       ready to die for her, and one of them had done so; well, now it was
       probable that the tables would be turned before many hours were over,
       and that she would be called upon to offer herself to save her lover.
       If this came about, she would not forget the example of Francisco, but
       would rather try to equal it in the heroism of her end.
       The day passed slowly, and at length the gloom gathering in the little
       cell told her that night was near. Before it fell, however, Soa and
       Nam entered, bearing candles, which they fixed upon brackets in the
       walls.
       "We come, Shepherdess, to hear your answer," said Nam. "Will you
       consent to take Olfan for a husband, or will you not?"
       "I will not consent."
       "Think again, Shepherdess."
       "I have thought. You have my answer."
       At the words Nam seized her arm, saying, "Come hither, Shepherdess; I
       would show you something," and he led her to that door in passing
       which Leonard had been entrapped. At the same time Soa extinguished
       one of the candles, and taking the other in her hand she left the
       cell, bolting the door behind her, so that Nam and Juanna stood in
       darkness.
       "Shepherdess," said Nam sternly, "you are about to see him whom you
       name the Deliverer. Now remember this, if you cry out or speak above a
       whisper--he dies."
       Juanna made no answer, although she felt her heart grow faint within
       her. Five minutes or more passed, and of a sudden a panel slid back in
       the upper part of the door which connected the two cells, so that
       Juanna could see through it, although those who stood on the further
       side could not see her, for they were in light and she was in
       darkness.
       And this was what she saw: Ranged against the wall of the second
       prison, and opposite to her, were three priests holding candles in
       their hands, whereof the light shone upon their sullen, cruel faces,
       and the snake's head tattooed on their naked breasts. In front of
       these men stood two other priests, and between them was Leonard bound
       and gagged.
       On the hither side of the cell, and not more than two feet from the
       open panel, stood Soa, on whom the eyes of the executioners were
       fixed, as though awaiting a command. Between Soa and these men yawned
       an open hole in the rock floor.
       When Juanna had gazed upon this scene for some twenty seconds the
       sliding panel was closed, apparently by Soa, and Nam spoke:
       "You have seen, Shepherdess," he said, "that the Deliverer is bound,
       and you have seen also that before him is a hole in the floor of the
       prison. He who falls down that hole, Shepherdess, finds himself in the
       den of the Snake beneath, from the visiting of whom no man has ever
       returned alive, for it is through it that we feed the Water-dweller at
       certain seasons of the year, and when there is no sacrifice. Now,
       Shepherdess, you must choose between two things; either to wed Olfan
       of your own free will this night, or to see the Deliverer thrown to
       the Snake before your eyes, and afterwards to wed Olfan whether you
       will it or not. What do you say, Shepherdess?"
       Juanna took counsel with herself, and came to the conclusion that she
       would resist a little longer, for she thought that this scene might
       have been planned merely to try her fortitude.
       "I refuse to marry Olfan," she answered.
       Then Nam opened the panel and whispered a word into the ear of Soa,
       who uttered a command. Instantly the two executioner priests flung
       Leonard on to his back upon the ground, an easy task seeing that his
       legs were fastened with ropes, and dragged him forward until his head
       hung over the oubliette-like hole. Then they paused as though waiting
       for some further order. Nam drew Juanna some few paces away from the
       door.
       "What is your word now, Shepherdess?" he said. "Is the man to die or
       be saved? Speak swiftly."
       Juanna glanced through the opening and saw that now Leonard's head and
       shoulders had vanished down the oubliette, while one of the priests
       held him by the ankles, watching Soa for the sign to let him fall.
       "Loose him," said Juanna faintly. "I will marry Olfan."
       Stepping forward, Nam whispered to Soa, who issued another order.
       Thereupon the priests drew Leonard from his perilous position, and,
       unwillingly enough, rolled him to the side of the cell, for they would
       have preferred to be rid of him. At that moment also the shutter was
       closed.
       "I said /loose him/," repeated Juanna; "now the man lies unable to
       move like a fallen tree, on the ground."
       "No, Shepherdess," replied Nam; "perchance you may yet change your
       mind, and then it would be troublesome to bind him afresh, for he is
       very strong and violent. Listen, Shepherdess; when Olfan comes
       presently to ask your hand, you must say nothing of that man yonder,
       for he deems him to be dead, and the moment you speak of him he will
       be dead. Do you understand?"
       "I understand," answered Juanna, "but at least the gag might be taken
       from his mouth."
       "Fear not, Shepherdess, it shall be done--when you have spoken with
       Olfan. And now, at what hour will it be your pleasure to see him?"
       "When you will. The sooner it is finished the better."
       "Good. My daughter," he added to Soa, who just then entered the cell,
       "be pleased to make fire, and then summon the king Olfan, who waits
       without."
       Soa departed upon her errand, and, overcome with terror which she
       would not show, Juanna sank upon the couch, hiding her face in her
       hands. For a while there was silence, then the door opened again and,
       heralded by Soa, Olfan, the king, stood before her.
       "Be careful, Shepherdess," whispered Nam as they entered; "one word--
       and the Deliverer dies." _