<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XV" id="CHAPTER_XV"></SPAN>CHAPTER XV</h2>
<div class="blockquot"><p>
"Not a drop of her blood was human,<br/>
But she was made like a soft sweet woman."<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 15em;">—</span><span class="smcap">Lilith.</span><br/></p>
</div>
<p>The fog stayed all day. The mist was so dense
that it gave the effect of a solid mass enclosing the
house. No wind stirred it, no cheering beam of sun
pierced it. Through it sounds reached the ear distorted
and magnified. All day I sat in my
room reading.</p>
<p>There are books which should not be preserved.
I, who am a lover of books, who detest any form of
censorship, I do seriously set down my belief that
there exist chronicles which would be better destroyed.
With this few people will agree. My answer
to them is simple: they have not read the books
I mean.</p>
<p>Not all the volumes from the old bookcase were
of that character, of course. Nearly all of them were
well known to classical students, at least by name.
Obscure, fantastic, cast aside by the world they were,
but harmless to a fairly steady head. But there<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_193" id="Page_193"></SPAN></span>
were two that clung to the mind like pitch. I have
no intention of giving their titles.</p>
<p>Ugly and sullen, early night closed in when I
was in a mood akin to it. Dinner with Phillida
and Vere was an ordeal hurried through. We were
out of touch. I felt remote from them; fenced apart
by a heavy sense of guilt and defilement left by those
hateful books, most incongruously blended with contempt
for my companions' childish light-heartedness.
As soon as possible, I left them.</p>
<p>Alone in my room, in my chair behind the writing-table
again, I pushed aside the pile of books and
sank into sombre thought. What should I say to
Desire Michell if she came tonight?</p>
<p>Who was she, who was claimed by the Unspeakable
and who did not deny Its claim? Was I confronted
with two beings from places unknown to
normal humanity? If she was the woman that she had
seemed to be throughout our intercourse, how could
the dark enemy control her? Even I, a common
man with full measure of mankind's common faults
and weaknesses, could hold Its clutch from me by
right of the law that protects each in his place.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_194" id="Page_194"></SPAN></span>Was she one of those who have stepped from the
permitted places?</p>
<p>"<i>Sara the daughter of Ruel—who was beloved
by an evil spirit who suffered none to come to her.</i>"</p>
<p>"<i>There was a young gentlewoman of excellent
beauty, daughter of a nobleman of Mar, who
loved a foule monstrous thing verie horrible to behold,
and for it refused rich marriages.... Until
the Gospel of St. John being said suddenlie the wicked
spirit flue his waies with sore noise.</i>"</p>
<p>I put out my hand and thrust the pile of books
aside from my direct sight. But I could not so
easily thrust from my mind the thoughts these books
had implanted. I could not forget that Desire
Michell herself had alleged jealousy as the Thing's
reason for attacking me.</p>
<p>What if we came to an explanation tonight and
ended this long delirium? Was it not time? Had
not my weeks of endurance earned me this right?
Resolution mounted in me, defiant and strong.</p>
<p>The evening had passed to an hour when I might
look for the girl to come. I switched off the lights,
and sat down to keep our nightly tryst.</p>
<p>In the darkness of the haunted room, the thoughts<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_195" id="Page_195"></SPAN></span>
I would have held at bay rushed upon me as clamorous
besiegers.</p>
<p>Desire! Desire of the world! Desire of mine
and of the unhuman Thing, did we grasp at Eve or
Lilith? At the fire on the hearth or the cold phosphorescence
of swamp and marsh?</p>
<p>A drift of fragrance was afloat on the air. A
delicate stir of movement passed by me. I raised my
head from my hands, expectant.</p>
<p>"I am here," her familiar voice told me.</p>
<p>"Desire, you had to come, tonight."</p>
<p>Some quality in my voice carried to her a message
beyond the words. But she did not break into exclamation
or question as another woman might. She
was mute, as one who stands still to find the path
before taking a step.</p>
<p>"You are angry," she said at last. "Something
here has gone badly for you; I knew that before
I entered this room."</p>
<p>"How can you say that?" I challenged. "If
you are like other men and women, how can you
know what happens when you are absent? How do
you know what passes between the Thing from the
Frontier and me?"</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_196" id="Page_196"></SPAN></span>"I do not know unless you tell me, Roger. If I
feel from afar when you are in sorrow, why, so do
many people feel with another in sympathy."</p>
<p>"You feel more than ordinary sympathy can,"
I retorted.</p>
<p>"Then, perhaps it is not an ordinary sympathy
I have for you, Roger."</p>
<p>Her very gentleness struck wrong on my perverted
mood. Was she trying to turn me from my
purpose with her soft speech? She had never granted
me anything so near an admission of love until now.</p>
<p>"It is not an ordinary trial that I have borne
for these meagre meetings where I do not see your
face or touch your hand," I answered. "But that
must end. Put your hand in mine, Desire, and come
with me. Let us go out of this room where shadows
make our thoughts sickly. You shall stay with my
cousin. Or if you choose, we will go straight to
New York or Boston. I am asking you to be my
wife. Let us have done with phantoms and spectres.
I love you."</p>
<p>"No," she whispered. "You do not love me
tonight. Tonight you distrust me. Why?"</p>
<p>"Is it distrusting you to ask you to marry me?"</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_197" id="Page_197"></SPAN></span>"Not this way would you have asked that of me
when I last came! But I will answer you more
honestly than you do me. To go with you would be
the greatest happiness the world could give. To
think of it dazzles the heart. But it is not for me.
Have you forgotten, Roger, that my life is not mine?
That I am a prisoner who has crept out for a little
while? The gates soon close, now, upon me."</p>
<p>"What gates?" I demanded.</p>
<p>"Sacrifice and expiation."</p>
<p>"Expiation of what?" I exclaimed, exasperated.
"Desire, I have read the book of Desire Michell,
downstairs."</p>
<p>I heard her gasp and shrink in the darkness.
Silence bound us both. In the hush, it seemed to
me that the house suddenly trembled as it had done
the night before, a slight shock as from some distant
explosion. In my intentness upon the woman opposite
me the tremor passed unheeded. She must answer
me now, surely! Now——</p>
<p>She spoke with a breathless difficulty, spacing her
words apart:</p>
<p>"How did you—find—the book?"</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_198" id="Page_198"></SPAN></span>"It told me—the Thing from out there," I admitted,
sullenly defiant of her opinion.</p>
<p>She cried out sharply.</p>
<p>"You? You took Its gift? You did that fatal
madness—and you are here? Oh, you are lost, and
the guilt mine! Yet I warned you that danger
flowed from knowing me. You accepted the risk
and the sorrow—yet you have thrown down all for
a bribe of knowledge. Do you not know what it
means to take a gift from the Dark Ones of the
Borderland? To brave the Loathesome Eyes so
long—and fall this way at last! Yet—there may be
a hope—since you still live. But go. Not tomorrow,
not at dawn, but go now. By all that man can dread
for soul or body, go now."</p>
<p>"Not without you."</p>
<p>"Me? Oh, how can I make you understand! I
shall never come here again. Take with you my
gratitude for our hours together, my prayers for all
the years to come. There is no blame to you because
you could not trust a woman on whom falls the
shadow of the awful Watcher that stalks behind me.
I make no reproach—if only you will go. Do not
linger. I do most solemnly warn you not to stay<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_199" id="Page_199"></SPAN></span>
alone in this room one moment after I have gone."</p>
<p>"Desire!" I exclaimed. "Wait. Forgive me.
I trust you. I did not mean what you believe. Do
not leave me this way. Desire——"</p>
<p>I can say honestly that my next action was without
intention. On my table lay, as usual, a small
electric torch. Every member of our household was
provided with one for use in emergencies likely to
occur in a country house, the time of candles being
past. Now, rising in agitation and repentance, my
hand pressed by chance upon the flashlight's button.
A beam of light poured across the darkness.</p>
<p>What did I see, starting out of the black gloom?
A spirit or a woman? Were those a woman's draperies
or part of the night fog that showed mere swirl
upon swirl of pale gray twisting in the path of light?
I glimpsed a face colorless as pearl, the shine of eyes
dark and almond shaped, then a drifting mass of
gray smoke, all intermingled with glittering gold
flashes, seemed to close between us. The whole
apparition sank down out of vision, as aghast, I
lifted my hand and the torch went out.</p>
<p>Shaken out of all ability to speak, I stood in my<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_200" id="Page_200"></SPAN></span>
place. Did I hear a movement, or only a stirring
of the orchard trees beyond the windows?</p>
<p>"Desire?" I ventured, my voice hoarse to
my ears.</p>
<p>No answer. I felt myself alone.</p>
<p>I would not at once turn on the lamps. My
haste might seem an attempt to break faith with her
a second time. I sat down again, folding my arms
upon the table and resting my forehead upon them.</p>
<p>Well, I had seen her at last—but how? A wan
loveliness seemingly painted upon the canvas of the
dark by a brush dipped in moonlight. A white moth
caught fluttering in the ray of the torch. Seen at
the instant of her leaving me forever; insulted by my
suspicions, my love hurled coarsely at her like a
command, my promise of security for her visits
apparently broken. How dared I even hope for
her return?</p>
<p>Now I knew why my enemy had guided me to
those books, that I might read, fill my mind with the
poison of vile thoughts, and destroy the comradeship
that bound me to Desire Michell. How should I
find her? How free us both?</p>
<p>The clock in the hall downstairs struck a single<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_201" id="Page_201"></SPAN></span>
bell. With dull surprise I realized that considerable
time had passed while I sat there. Still I did not
move, weighed down by a profound discouragement.</p>
<p>Suddenly, as a wave will run up a beach in
advance of the incoming tide, impelled by some deep
stir in the ocean's secret places, an icy surge rushed
about my feet. Deathly cold from that current struck
through my whole body. My heart shuddered and
staggered in its beating from pure shock.</p>
<p>"<i>Go! Not tomorrow, not at dawn, but now!</i>"</p>
<p>The wave seeped back, receded away from me
down its invisible beach. Desire's warning hammered
at my mind, striving to burst some barred door
to reach the consciousness within that had loitered too
long. This was the new peril. This was what I
had fled from, unknowing the source of my panic,
the night before.</p>
<p>This was death.</p>
<p>A second surge struck me with the heavy shock
of a veritable wave from some bitter ocean. This
time the tide rose to my knees; boiling and hissing in
its rush. Blood and nerves seemed to freeze. I felt
my heart stop, then reel on like a broken thing.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_202" id="Page_202"></SPAN></span>
Flecks of crimson spattered like foam against
my eyelids.</p>
<p>The wave broke. The mass poured down the
beach, tugging at me in its retreat. With the last
strength ebbing away from me with that receding
current, I dragged the chain of the lamp beside me.</p>
<p>The comfort of light springing up in the room!
The relief of seeing normal, pleasant surroundings!
Truly light is an elixir of courage to man.</p>
<p>That cold had paralyzed me. I had no force
to rise. Nor did I altogether wish to rise and go.
I had lost Desire tonight. Was I to lose my self-respect
also? Was I to run a beaten man from this
peril, after standing against my enemy so long?</p>
<p>Should I not rather stand on this my ground
where I was not the "lame feller"?</p>
<p>Down by the lake, the snarling cry of a terrified
cat broke the night stillness. It was Bagheera's
voice. The cry was followed by sounds indicating a
small animal's frantic flight through the thickets of
goldenrod and willow that edged the banks of the
stream below the dam. The series of progressive
crashes passed back of the house and continued on,
dying away down the creek.</p>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_203" id="Page_203"></SPAN></span>As I braced my startled nerves after this outbreak
of noise, the light was withdrawn from every
lamp in the room. At the same moment, the electric
torch rolled off my table and fell to the floor. I
heard its progress across the muffling softness of the
rug, across the polished wood beyond, and final stoppage
at some point out of my reach.</p>
<p>As vapor rises from some unseen source and
forms in vague growing mass within the curdled air,
so blackening dark the hideous bulk reared Itself in
the night and stared in upon me. As so many times,
I felt the Eyes I could not see; the pressure of a
colossal hate loomed over me, poised to crush, yet
withheld by a force greater than either of us. The
venom of Its malevolence flowed into the atmosphere
about me, fouling the breath I drew. My
lungs labored.</p>
<p>"Pygmy," Its intelligence thrust against mine.
"Frail and presumptuous Will that has dared oppose
mine, you are conquered. This is the hour foretold
to you, the hour of your weakness and my strength.
Weakling, feel the death surf break upon you. Fall
down before me. Cower—plead!"</p>
<p>Now indeed I felt a sickness of self-doubt, for<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_204" id="Page_204"></SPAN></span>
the wash of the invisible sea never had come to me
until tonight. And there was Desire's saying that
I had destroyed myself by accepting the Thing's gift
of knowledge of the book. But I summoned
my forces.</p>
<p>"Never," my thought refused It. "Have we not
met front to front these many nights? And who
has drawn back, Breaker of the Law? You return,
but I live. The duel is not lost."</p>
<p>"It is lost, Man, and to me. Have you not taken
my gift that you might spy meanly on the secret of
your beloved? Have you not opened your mind to
the evil thoughts that creep upon the citadel of
strength within and tear down its power? Of your
own deed, you are mine. My breath drinks your
breath. Your life falls down as a lamp that is
thrown from its pedestal. Your spirit rises from
its seat and looks toward those spaces where it shall
take flight tonight. Man, you die."</p>
<p>Again the surge and shock of that frigid sea
rushed upon me. I felt the swirl and hiss of the
broken wave higher about me before it sank away
down whatever dreadful strand it owned. My life<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_205" id="Page_205"></SPAN></span>
ebbed with it, draining low. My enemy spoke the
truth. One more such wave——</p>
<p>My imagination sprang ahead of the event. In
fancy, I saw bright dawn filling this room of mine,
shining on the figure of a man who had been myself.
His head rested on his folded arms so that his face
was hidden. On the table beside him a vase was
overturned; a spray of heliotrope lay near and water
had trickled over scattered sheets of music, staining
the paper. By and by Vere would come to summon
that unanswering figure to the gay little breakfast-table.
Phillida would leave her place behind the
burnished copper percolator she prized so highly and
come running up the stairs. In her gentleness she
would grieve, no doubt. I was sorry for that. But
it was a contentment and pleasure for me to recall
that I had settled my financial affairs so that my little
cousin would never lack money or know any care that
I could spare her. Strange, how she had been rated
below more beautiful or more clever women until the
waif Ethan Vere had set her dearness in full sun for
us to wonder at!</p>
<p>"Pygmy, will you think of another pygmy
now?" raged the Thing. "Yourself! Think of<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_206" id="Page_206"></SPAN></span>
yourself! Crouch! Think of death, corruption, the
vileness of the grave. Think how you are of the
grave. Think how you are alone with me. Think
how you are abandoned to me."</p>
<p>But with that tenderness for Phillida a warmth
had flowed through me like strength.</p>
<p>"Not so," my defiance answered It. "For where
I am, I stand by my own will. With where I shall
stand, you have nothing to do. Back, then, for with
the death of my body your power ends. Back—or
else face me, Thing of Darkness, while we stand in
one place."</p>
<p>At this mad challenge of mine silence closed down
like a shutting trap. Consciousness sank away from
me with a sense of swooning quietness.</p>
<hr style='width: 45%;' />
<p>I stood before the Barrier on the ghostly frontier;
erect, arms folded, fronting the Breach in that inconceivably
mighty wall. Above, away out of vision
on either hand stretched the gray glimmering cliffs.</p>
<p>This I had seen before. But behind me lay that
which I had not seen. The mists I believed to be
eternal had lifted. Naked, a vast gray sea stretched
parallel with the Barrier; like it, without end or even<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_207" id="Page_207"></SPAN></span>
a horizon to bound its enormous desolation. Between
these two immensities on the narrow strand at the
foot of the wall, I stood, pygmy indeed. In the
Breach, as of old, the Thing whose home was there
reared Itself against me.</p>
<p>"Man," It spat, "would you see me? Would
you see the Eyes once seen by the witch-woman, who
fell blasted out of human ken? Creature of clay,
crumbling now in the sea of mortality, do you brave
my immemorial age?"</p>
<p>It reared up, up, a towering formlessness. It
stooped, a lowering menace.</p>
<p>"Man, whenever man has summoned Evil since
the youngest days of the world have I not answered?
Have I not brought my presence to the magician's
lamp? Have I not shadowed the alchemist at his
crucible? When the woman called upon me with
ancient knowledge, did I not come. I am the guardian
of the Barrier. Whoever would pass this way
must pass me. Have you the power? Die, then,
and begone."</p>
<p>With a long heaving sound of waters in movement,
the gray sea stirred from its stillness. As if
drawn to some center out of sight, the tide began to<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_208" id="Page_208"></SPAN></span>
recede down that strange beach. Then realization
came to me that here was the ocean which, invisible,
had surged icy death upon me a while past. The
ocean now gathered for the final wave that should
overwhelm the defeated.</p>
<p>"Braggart!" my thought answered the taunt.
"If the witch-woman was yours, the girl Desire is
mine. This I know: as little as man has to do with
you, so little have you to do with the human and
the good. Living or dead, our path is not yours.
I did not summon you. I do dare look upon you, if
you have visible form."</p>
<p>Now in the hush a sound that I had faintly heard
as a continuing thing seemed to draw nearer. A
sound of light, swift footsteps hurrying, hurrying;
the steps of one in pitiful eagerness and haste. But
I heeded this slightly. My gaze was upon that which
took place within the cleft in the great wall. For
there the cold darkness was writhing and turning,
visible, yet obscure; as the rapids of a glassy, twisting
river might look by night. And as one might glimpse
beneath the smooth boil and heave of such a river
the dim shape of crocodile or water-monster, so in
that moving dark there seemed to lie Something from<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_209" id="Page_209"></SPAN></span>
which the mind shrank, appalled. Now gigantic
tentacles rolled about a central mass, groping out in
unsatisfied greed. Now an ape-like shape seemed
to stalk there, rearing up its monstrous stature until
all that Breach was choked with it. It fell down
into vagueness, where huge coils upraised and sank
their loops. But through all change steadily fixed
upon me I felt the eyes of the Unseen.</p>
<p>I stood my ground. With what pain and draining
cost to my poor endurance there is no need to say.
Each instant I anticipated the surge of that returning
sea whose flood should smother out the human spark
upon its shore. This I had brought upon myself.
Yes, and would again to help Desire Michell! If
I had sheltered her for one hour——!</p>
<p>The Thing halted, stooped.</p>
<p>"Man, cast off the woman," It snarled at me.
"Fool, evil goes with her. For her you suffer.
Thrust her from your breast."</p>
<p>I looked down. Wavering against my breast,
just above my heart glimmered a spot of light. The
little hurrying steps had ceased. I thought, if the
bright head of Desire Michell were rested there
against me, how I would strive to shield her from<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_210" id="Page_210"></SPAN></span>
sight of the Thing yonder. In the sweep of that
will to protect, I drew my coat about the spot of
hovering brightness.</p>
<p>I felt her press warm against me. I heard the
roar of the death-wave far out in that sea.
Before me——</p>
<p>Oh Horror of the Frontier, what broke through
the dread Breach. What formed there, more
inhuman from Its likeness to humanity? What
Hand reached for me—for—us——</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_211" id="Page_211"></SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />