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People Of The Mist, The
CHAPTER XXXV - BE NOBLE OR BE BASE
H.Rider Haggard
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       _ For a while there was silence, then Juanna looked up, searching
       Olfan's face with her eyes. Nothing was to be read there, for it was
       impossible to pierce the mask of solemn calm beneath which, in common
       with all his race, the king was accustomed to hide his thoughts. He
       leant on the shaft of his broad spear, his head bowed slightly as
       though in humility, his dark eyes fixed upon her face, immovable,
       impassive, a picture of savage dignity.
       Indeed, Juanna was fain to confess to herself that she had never seen
       a grander specimen of the natural man than that presented by the chief
       of the People of the Mist, as he stood before her in her rock prison.
       The light of the candles fell full upon him, revealing his great girth
       and stature, beside which those of the finest men of her own race
       would have seemed insignificant. It shone upon the ivory torques,
       emblems of royalty, which were about his neck, wrists, and ankles,
       upon the glossy garments of black goat-skin that hung from his
       shoulders and middle, and the raven tresses of his hair bound back
       from his forehead by a narrow band of white linen, which showed in
       striking contrast against the clear olive colouring of his face and
       breast.
       "Speak, Olfan," said Juanna at length.
       "It was told to me, Queen," he answered in a low, full voice, "that
       you had words to say to me. Nevertheless, now as always, I obey you.
       Queen, I learn that your husband, he whom you loved, is dead, and
       believe me, I sorrow for you. In this shameful deed I had no hand;
       that, together with the end of the other white man and the dwarf, must
       be set down to the account of this priest, who swears that he was
       driven to it by the clamour of the people. Queen, they have all gone
       across the mountains and through the sky beyond, and you, like some
       weary dove, far travelled from a southern clime, are left a prey among
       the eagles of the People of the Mist.
       "But a few hours since I thought you dead also, for with all the
       thousands in the temple I believed that it was your fair body which
       Nam hurled at dawn from the brow of the statue, and I tell you that
       when I saw it, I, who am a warrior, wept and cursed myself, because,
       although I was a king, I had no power to save you. Afterwards this
       man, the high priest, came to me, telling me the truth and a plan that
       he had made for his own ends, whereby you might be saved alive and
       lifted up among the people, and he also might be saved, and my rule be
       made sure in the land." And he ceased.
       "What is this plan, Olfan?" asked Juanna, after a pause.
       "Queen, it is that you should wed me, and appear before the people no
       longer as a goddess, but as a woman who has put on the flesh for her
       love's sake. I know well that I am all unworthy of such honour,
       moreover, that your heart must be sore with the loss of one who was
       dear to you, and little set upon the finding of another husband; also
       I remember certain words that passed between us and a promise which I
       made. All these things I told to Nam, and he answered me saying that
       the matter was urgent, that here you could not be hid away for long,
       and that if I did not take you to wife then you must die. Therefore,
       because my love towards you is great, I said to him, 'Go now and ask
       her if she will smile upon me if I come before her with such words.'
       "Nam went, but before he went he made certain agreements with me on
       matters of policy, under which I must pay a heavy price for you, Lady,
       and forego revenge and forget many an ancient hate, all of which
       things I have promised to do should you smile upon me, so great is my
       love towards you. The hours went by, and Nam came back to me, saying
       that, having weighed the matter in your mind, your answer was
       favourable. To this I replied that I did not trust him, and would take
       it from your lips alone.
       "And now, Queen, I am here to listen to your word, and to offer myself
       to you, to serve you all my life as your husband and your slave. I
       have little to give you who have been bred up in sunnier lands, and
       among a more gentle people; I who am but the wild chief of men whose
       hearts are rugged as our mountains, and gloomy as a winter's day that
       is heavy with snow to come,--only myself, the service of my soldiers'
       spears, and the first place among the Children of the Mist.
       "Now let me hear your answer, and be it what it may, I will accept it
       without a murmur, for least of all things do I desire to force myself
       upon you in marriage. Still I pray you, speak to me plainly once and
       for all, for if I must lose you I would know the worst; nor can I
       bear, when you have smiled upon me, to see you turn away. Nay, I would
       sooner die."
       And once more he bowed his head, leaned upon his spear, and was
       silent.
       Juanna considered the position rapidly. It was hopeless and cruel. Nam
       and Soa were on either side of her, the latter standing near the door
       with the sliding panel beyond which Leonard lay bound, and she knew
       well that did she speak a single word of the truth to Olfan, it would
       be the signal for her lover's death. It was possible that the king
       might be able to protect her own person from violence, but if Leonard
       died it mattered little what became of her. There was but one thing
       that she could do--declare herself willing to become the wife of
       Olfan. Yet it seemed shameless thus to treat this honourable man, the
       only friend that they had found among the People of the Mist. But of a
       truth, such necessities as hers cannot wait while those in their toils
       weigh scruples or the law of honour.
       "Olfan," she said, "I have heard you, and this is my answer: I will
       take you as my husband. You know my story, you know that he who was my
       lord is but this day dead," here Soa smiled approvingly at the lie,
       "and that I loved him. Therefore of your gentleness, you will accord
       me some few weeks before I pass from him to you, in which I may mourn
       my widowhood. I will say no more, but surely you can guess the sorrow
       of my heart, and all that I have left unsaid."
       "It shall be as you wish, Queen," replied Olfan, taking her hand and
       kissing it, while his sombre face grew radiant with happiness. "You
       shall pass into my keeping at that time which best pleases you, yet I
       fear that in one matter you must be troubled now, this very hour."
       "What may that be, Olfan?" asked Juanna anxiously.
       "Only this, Queen, that the rite of marriage as we practise it must be
       celebrated between us. It is necessary for many reasons which will be
       made clear to you to-morrow. Moreover, such was my bargain with Nam
       sealed by an oath sworn upon the blood of Aca, an oath that I do not
       dare to break."
       "Oh, no, no!" said Juanna in acute distress. "Think, Olfan, how can I,
       whose husband is not six hours dead, vow myself to another man upon
       the altar of his grave? Give me some few days, I pray you."
       "Most willingly would I do this, Lady, but I may not, it is against my
       oath. Also, what can it matter? You shall remain alone for so long as
       it shall please you."
       Then Nam spoke for the first time, saying:
       "Shepherdess, waste no breath in words, for learn that though this
       garment of modesty is becoming to one new widowed, yet you must put it
       from you. More depends upon this ceremony than you know of, the lives
       of many hang upon it, our own, perchance, among them, and especially
       the life of one of whom it does not become me to speak," and as though
       by accident Nam let his eyes rest upon the door of the adjoining cell.
       Of his auditors Olfan thought that he was alluding to his own life,
       but Juanna and his daughter knew well that he spoke of that of
       Leonard, which would be sacrificed did the former persist in her
       objections to the instant celebration of the marriage.
       "You hear his words, Queen," said Olfan, "and there is weight in them.
       The times are very dangerous, and if our plot is to be carried
       through, before midnight I must make oath to the captains and the
       Council of the Elders that you have come back from death to be my
       wife."
       "Maybe," answered Juanna, catching at a straw in her despair, "but
       must I, who shall be set over this people as queen, be married thus in
       secret? At the least I will have witnesses. Let some of the captains
       whom you trust, Olfan, be brought here to see us wed, otherwise the
       time may come when I shall be held to be no true wife, and there are
       none to establish my honour by their words."
       "There is little fear of such a thing, Queen," answered Olfan with a
       faint smile, "yet your demands are just. I will bring three of my
       captains here, men who will not betray us, and they shall be witness
       to this rite," and he turned as though he would go to seek them.
       "Do not leave me," said Juanna, catching him by the wrist. "I trust
       you, but these two I do not trust. I fear to be left alone."
       "There is no need for witnesses," exclaimed Nam in a threatening
       voice.
       "The Shepherdess has asked for witnesses, and she shall have them,"
       answered Olfan fiercely. "Old man, you have played with me long
       enough; hitherto I have been your servant, now I will be your master.
       Some hours ago your life was forfeit to me, for the white dawn had
       turned to red, and I meant to take it, but you bribed me with this
       bait," and he pointed to Juanna. "Nay, do not lay your hand upon your
       knife; you forget I have my spear. Your priests are without, I know
       it, but so are my captains, and I have told them where I am; if I
       vanish as many vanish here, my life will be required at your hands,
       for, Nam, your power is broken.
       "Now, obey me. Bid that woman summon him who guards without. No, you
       do not stir," and he lifted the spear till its keen blue point
       quivered over the high priest's naked breast. "Bid her go to the door
       and summon the guard. I said to the door, but not beyond it, or
       beware!"
       Nam was cowed: his tool had become his master.
       "Obey," he said to Soa.
       "Obey, but no more," echoed Olfan.
       Snarling like a wolf, the woman slipped past them to the door, and
       opening it a little way, she whistled through the crack.
       "Hide yourself, Lady," said Olfan.
       Juanna retreated into the shadow behind the candle, and at that moment
       a voice spoke through the open door, saying, "I am here, father."
       "Now, speak," said Olfan, advancing the spear an inch nearer Nam's
       heart.
       "My son," said the priest, "go to the entrance by which the king
       entered, where you will find three captains, generals of the king.
       Lead them hither."
       "And see that you speak to no one on the way," whispered Olfan in
       Nam's ear.
       "And see that you speak to no one on the way," repeated Nam.
       "I hear you, father," replied the priest, and went.
       Some ten minutes passed and the door opened again. "The captains are
       here," whispered a voice.
       "Let them enter," said Nam.
       The order was obeyed, and three great men armed with spears stalked
       into the narrow chamber. One of them was brother to the king, and the
       two others were his chosen friends. Then the door closed.
       "My brethren," said Olfan, "I have sent for you to acquaint you with a
       mystery and to ask you to witness a rite. The goddess Aca, who this
       day was hurled into the pool of the Snake, has returned to earth as a
       woman, and is about to become my wife,"--here the captains started--
       "nay, brethren, ask no questions; these things are so, it is enough.
       Now, priest, play your part."
       After that, for a while all seemed a dream to Juanna, a dream of which
       she was never able to recover any exact memory. She could recollect
       standing side by side with Olfan, while Nam muttered prayers and
       invocations over them, administering to them terrible oaths, which
       they took, calling upon the names of Aca and of Jal, and swearing by
       the symbol of the Snake. Beyond that everything went blank. Indeed,
       her mind flew back to another marriage ceremony, when she stood beside
       Leonard in the slave camp, and the priest, Francisco, prayed over them
       and blessed them. It was that scene which she saw, and not the one
       enacting before her eyes, and with its visions were mixed up strange
       impersonal reflections on the irony of fate, which had brought it
       about that she should figure as the chief actor in two such dramas,
       the first of which Leonard had gone through to save her, and the
       second of which she must go through to save him.
       At last it was done, and once more Olfan was bowing before her and
       kissing her hand.
       "Greeting, Shepherdess. Hail! Queen of the People of the Mist," he
       said, and the captains repeated his words.
       Juanna awoke from her stupor. What was to be done now? she wondered.
       What could be done? Everything seemed lost. Then of a sudden an
       inspiration took her.
       "It is true that I am a queen, is it not, Olfan?"
       "It is true, Lady."
       "And as Queen of the People of the Mist I have power, have I not,
       Olfan."
       "Even to life and death," he answered gravely; "though if you kill,
       you must answer to the Council of the Elders and to me. All in this
       land are your servants, Lady, and none dare to disobey you except on
       matters of religion."
       "Good," said Juanna. Then addressing the captains in a tone of
       command, she added, "Seize that priest who is named Nam, and the woman
       with him."
       Olfan looked astonished and the captains hesitated. As for Nam, he did
       not hesitate, but made a bound towards the door.
       "Stay awhile, Nam," said the king, making a barrier before him with
       his spear; "doubtless the Queen has reasons, and you would wish to
       hear them. Hold them, my captains, since the Queen commands it."
       Then the three men sprang upon them. Once Nam tried to draw his knife,
       but failing in his attempt he submitted without further struggle. With
       Soa it was different. She bit and tore like a wild-cat, and Juanna saw
       that she was striving to reach the panel and to speak through it.
       "On your lives do not suffer her to come to that door," she said;
       "presently you shall know why."
       Then the brother of the king dragged Soa to the couch, and throwing
       her down upon it stood over her, his spear-point at her throat.
       "Now, Queen," said Olfan, "your will is done, and perhaps it may
       please you to explain."
       "Listen, King, and listen, you, captains," she answered. "These liars
       told you that the Deliverer was dead, was it not so? He is not dead,
       he lies bound in yonder cell, but had I spoken a word to you, then he
       would have died. Olfan, do you know how my consent was won to be your
       wife? A shutter within that door was opened, and he, my husband, was
       shown to me, gagged and bound, and being held over the mouth of a
       hideous pit in the floor of his prison, that leads I know not
       whither.
       "'Consent, or he dies,' they said, and for my love's sake I consented.
       This was the plot, Olfan: to marry me to you, partly because the woman
       yonder, who was my nurse, did not desire my death, and partly that Nam
       might use me to save himself from the anger of the people. But do not
       think that you would have kept me long, Olfan; for this was in the
       plot also, that when you had served their purpose you should die by
       secret means, as one who knew too much."
       "It is a lie," said Nam.
       "Silence!" answered Juanna. "Let that door be opened, and you shall
       see if I have lied."
       "Wait awhile, Queen," said Olfan, who appeared utterly overcome. "If I
       understand you right, your husband lives, and therefore you say that
       the words which we have spoken and the oaths that we have sworn mean
       nothing, for you are not my wife."
       "That is so, Olfan."
       "Then now I am minded to turn wicked and let him die," said the king
       slowly, "for know this, Lady, I cannot give you up."
       Juanna grew pale as death, understanding that this man's passions, now
       that once he had given them way, had passed beyond his control.
       "I cannot give you up," he repeated. "Have I not dealt well with you?
       Did I not say to you, 'Consent or refuse, as it shall please you, but
       having once consented you must not go back upon your words'? What have
       I to do with the reasons that prompted them? My heart heard them and
       believed them. Queen, you are wed to me; those oaths that you have
       sworn may not be broken. It is too late; now you are mine, nor can I
       suffer you to pass from me back to another man, even though he was
       your husband before me."
       "But the Deliverer! must I then become my husband's murderer?"
       "Nay, I will protect him, and, if it may be, find means to send him
       from the land."
       Juanna stood silent and despairing, and at this moment Soa, lying on
       the couch, broke into a shrill and mocking laugh that stung her like a
       whip and roused her from her lethargy.
       "King," she said, "I am at your mercy, not through any wanton folly of
       my own, but because fate has made a sport of me. King, you have been
       hardly used, and, as you say, hitherto you have dealt well with me.
       Now I pray you let the end be as the beginning was, so that I may
       always think of you as the noblest among men, except one who died this
       day to save me. King, you say you love me; tell me then if my life
       hung upon a word of yours, would that word remain unspoken?
       "Such was my case: I spoke the word and for one short hour I betrayed
       you. Will you, whose heart is great, bind me by such an oath as this,
       an oath wrung from me to save my darling from the power of those dogs?
       If this is so, then I have erred strangely in my reading of your mind,
       for till now I have held you to be a man who would perish ere he fell
       so low as to force a helpless woman to be his wife, one whose crime is
       that she deceived him to save her husband."
       She paused, and, clasping her hands as though in prayer, looked up
       into his troubled face with beseeching eyes; then, as he did not
       speak, she went on:
       "King, I have one more word to say. You are the strongest and you can
       take me, but you cannot hold me, for that hour would be my last, and
       you but the richer by your broken honour and a dead bride."
       Olfan was about to answer when Soa, fearing lest Juanna's pleading
       should prevail against his passion, broke in saying, "Be not fooled,
       King, by a woman's pretty speeches, or by her idle threats that she
       will kill herself. She will not kill herself, I know her well, she
       loves her life too much; and soon, when you are wed, she will love you
       also, for it is the nature of us women to worship those who master us.
       Moreover, that man, the Deliverer, is not her husband, except in name;
       for months I have lived with them and I know it. Take her, King, take
       her now, this hour, or live to mourn her loss and your own folly all
       your life's days."
       "I will not answer that slave's falsehoods," said Juanna, drawing
       herself up and speaking proudly, "and it were more worthy of you not
       to listen to them, King. I have spoken; now do your will. Be great or
       little, be noble or be base, as your nature teaches you."
       And suddenly she sank to the ground and, shaking her long hair about
       her face and arms, she burst into bitter weeping.
       Twice the King glanced at her, then he turned his head as though he
       dare look no more, and spoke keeping his eyes fixed upon the wall.
       "Rise, Queen," he said hoarsely, "and cease your tears, since you are
       safe from me. Now as always I live to do your will, but I pray you,
       hide your face from me as much as may be, for, Lady, my heart is
       broken with love for you and I cannot bear to look on that which I
       have lost."
       Still sobbing, but filled with admiration and wonder that a savage
       could be thus generous, Juanna rose and began to murmur thanks, while
       the captains stared, and Soa mocked and cursed them both.
       "Thank me not," he said gently. "It seems that you, who can read all
       hearts, have read mine aright, or perchance you fashioned it as you
       would have it be. Now, having done with love, let us to war. Woman,
       what is the secret of that door?"
       "Find it for yourself," snarled Soa. "It is easy to open when once you
       know the spring--like a woman's heart, Olfan. Or if you cannot find
       it, then it can be forced--like a woman's love, Olfan. Surely you who
       are so skilled in the winning of a bride need not seek my counsel as
       to the opening of a door, for when I gave it but now upon the first of
       these matters, you would not hearken, Olfan, but were melted by the
       sight of tears that you should have kissed away."
       Juanna heard and from that moment made up her mind that whatever
       happened she had done with Soa. Nor was this wonderful, for few women
       could have pardoned what she had suffered at her hands.
       "Drive the spear into her till she speaks, comrade," said Olfan.
       Then at the touch of steel Soa gave up mocking and told the secret of
       the door. _