"What was it--a dagger--a staff?"
"A serpent."
Renfrew could not repress an exclamation.
"Very large and striped. Its skin was like shot silk in the moonlight.
It writhed softly between his hands, and turned its flat head from side to side. It seemed to be trying to bend down towards where I lay. Its tongue shot out like a length of riband out of one of those wooden winders that you buy in cheap shops. I should think its body was quite five feet long, and its colour seemed to change as it turned about.
Sometimes it was pink, then it looked dull green and almost black. Once it wriggled down so near to the ground that I could see two fangs in its open mouth like hooks, and the roof of its mouth was flesh colour."
"How abominable!" said Renfrew, softly.
"I didn"t feel it so at all," Claire said. "I wanted it to come to me,--back into the gra.s.s where such things are safe. But the man wouldn"t let it go. He thrust it into his breast. He wanted to have his hands free."
"Good G.o.d, Claire--what for? Did he--?"
She smiled at his sudden violence, which showed his interest.
"When the snake was safe, he drew out, still smiling and listening, a little pipe that looked as if it were made of straw, very common and dirty. He held it up to his black lips, and began to play very softly and sleepily. Desmond, the tune he played was charmed. It was a tune composed--for--for--"
She broke off.
"You know the Pied Piper had his tune," she said; "the rats had to follow it. Well, this tune was for the serpents."
"To charm them you mean?"
"Wisely--dangerously--almost irresistibly, perhaps in time, Desmond, quite, quite irresistibly. There is a music for all creatures, all reptiles, birds,--everything that lives; this was for the snakes."
"Well, but, Claire, how did you know that?"
She looked at him with a sort of dull amus.e.m.e.nt and pity in her half-shut eyes.
"Shall I tell you?"
"Yes."
"I knew it, because the tune charmed me, Desmond."
"Ah, you are acting! I half suspected it from the first," Renfrew exclaimed almost roughly.
He sat up as a man who has been lying under a spell stirs when the spell is broken. Now he knew that his pipe was out, and he felt for his match-box. But Claire still kept her eyes fixed on him, and laid her hand on his arm gently.
"No, I am not acting," she said. "The tune charmed me. You see I am a woman; and there are many women who feel at moments that what attracts some special creature, thing, of the so-called world without a soul, attracts them too. Some men can whistle a woman as they would a dog, can"t they?"
"Perhaps."
"Yes, and some men can charm a woman as they could charm a serpent."
"I don"t understand you, Claire."
"You don"t choose to. The animal is in us all, hidden deftly by Nature, the artful dodger of the scheme of creation, Desmond; and we know it when the right tune is played to summon it from its slumber in the nest of the human body. Only the right tune can waken it."
"The animal! But--"
"Or the reptile, perhaps. What does it matter? This was the right tune for me. I lay there like a snake in the gra.s.s and it thrilled me! And all the time the black man smiled and listened for the rustling at his feet. You look black, Desmond! How absurd of you to be angry!"
And she closed her fingers over his hand till the frown died out of his face.
"The tune seemed to draw me to the man. I understood just how he had captured the serpent that lay hidden in his bosom. It had once lain in ambush as I lay now, long ago perhaps, in the desert among the rocks, on the sand, Desmond."
"Ah, the sand!" he said, remembering suddenly the strange feeling Claire had described as coming upon her when she was trying to sleep.
"Yes. And he had drawn it from the sand to the oasis among the palms where he stood playing, till he heard its rustling in the gra.s.s about his feet, as it glided nearer to him, and nearer, and nearer, till at last it reared up its body, and wound up him and round him, and laid its flat head between his great hands. Yes, that was how it came."
"You fancy."
"I know. But I would not go. I determined that I would not, and I lay perfectly still. But all the time I longed to go. I had an almost irresistible pa.s.sion for movement towards that tune. It seemed to me a stream of music into which I yearned to plunge, and drown and die. And it flowed up there at the man"s lips! The longing increased as he piped the tune, over and over and over again, almost under his breath. I was sick with it, and it hurt me because I resisted it. And at last I knew that resisting it would kill me. I must either go, or not go, and die.
There was no alternative. That music simply claimed me. It had the right to. And if I denied that right I should cease. I did deny it."
She shuddered in the sun, then added, almost harshly:--
"Like a fool."
"And then, Claire, then--?"
"It seemed to me that I died in most horrible pain. I lived once more when you said, outside my tent, "Claire, time to get up." You see, I slept too much last night."
And again she shuddered. A look of relief shot into Renfrew"s face.
"All this came from your mad performance to those Moors," he said. "You impersonate so vividly that even sleep cannot release your genius, and bring it out from the world which you have deliberately forced it to enter."
"But, Desmond, I impersonated the charmer of the snake, not the snake itself."
"Oh, in a dream the mind always wanders a little from the event that has caused the dream. It is like a faulty mimic who strives to reproduce with exact.i.tude and slightly fails. Time to go, Absalem?"
The dragoman had come up.
As they rode down the mountain a strange thing occurred, strange at least in connection with Claire"s narrative of the night. Mohammed, who was riding just in front of them, pulled up his mule beside a thicket at the wayside, and, turning his head, signed to them to be silent. Then, pursing his lips, he whistled a shrill little tune. In a moment an answer came from the thicket; Claire glanced at Renfrew with a slight smile. Here was a sort of side light of reality thrown upon her dream and upon their conversation. Mohammed whistled again. The echo followed.
And then suddenly a bird flew out, almost into his face, and, startled, swerved and darted away across the gorge into the dense woods beyond.
"A charm of birds," Claire murmured to Renfrew, as they rode on. "The summoning tune--what can resist it?"
"Claire," he said, almost reproachfully, "you speak like a fatalist."
"And I believe I am one," she answered. "Destiny is not only a phantom but also a fact. Mine is marked out for me and known--"
"To whom? Not to yourself?"
"Oh, no!"