"It"s like a fairy story already," he said.
He closed his eyes, and the pictures took up their swift pa.s.sing again.
It was not the drug, but the new thing in this life of his--a woman"s ministering.... She came in presently, her hair loosened. She wore one of his silk night-coats, the sleeves rolled up; and very little, she looked, in the heelless straw sandals. She was pale. He saw the throbbing artery in her white throat. The polished ebon floor had a startling effect upon her black hair.
"You are like Rossetti"s _Pomegranate_ picture," he said, and added with a strange smile, "Do you know there is something true about you--arrow-true?"
She sat down in the chair near him and picked up the Book. "What shall I read?" she asked without looking up. "It must be something that will soothe, and not make you think, except happily."
"It"s all there.... The stately prose of Isaiah--I love the ringing authority of it----"
She read. There were delicate shadings of volume, even in her lowered voice, which lent a fine natural quality to her expression. Bedient knew the words, but he loved the mystery of this giving of hers--her giving of peace to him.... He had obeyed her implicitly, and the morning had become very dear.... Ill and weary, all his nerves smarting with terrific fatigue, as the eyes smart before tears, and yet her ministering had made him a little boy again.... His eyelids were shut and he was happy. It was a bewildering sense, so long had he been, and so far, from a moment like this. His immortal heroine was close once more--she of the answered questions and the healing arms. So real was it, that he thought this must be death.... A sign from _her_ made him know that it was not.... Queer, bright thoughts winged in and out of his mind. There was a drowsy sweep to the atmosphere--no, it was the nuances of the voice that read to him.... "When one comes to see in this life a clearer, brighter way for the conduct of the next, he has not failed." His mind went over this several times.... And presently he felt himself sailing through s.p.a.ce toward one bright star. For eternities he had sailed--dominant, deathless--often wavering in the zones of attraction of other worlds, but never really losing that primal impetus for his own light of the universe.... And so while she read, Bedient drifted afar, sailing on and on toward his star....
She saw that he slept, and her head dropped forward until it touched the edge of his bed, but very softly.... And there, for a long time, she remained, until the woven cane left a white impress upon her forehead.
Late in the afternoon the others met below, but Bedient had not awakened. Miss Mallory joined them and told what she had done, and how ill he had been for need of rest.... When the day was ending she stole through the little room into his. Still he slept, so softly, that she bent close to hear his breathing.... All the furious moments of action in recent days pa.s.sed in swift review, as she stood there in the dark.
And from it all came this:
"It is a good thing for a woman to serve a man, with hand and brain,--as one man might serve another--and there"s high joy in it; but a woman must not serve a man that way--if she"d rather have his love than hope of heaven."
... And when he awakened, she was still beside him.
THIRTY-THIRD CHAPTER
THE HILLS AND THE SKIES
Varied were the emotions of Dictator Jaffier and Coral City generally, while Bedient slept through that long day of surpa.s.sing fortune to the Island. He communicated certain facts to the Dictator next morning, and a day later, the government forces entered and took possession of _The Pleiad_ without firing a shot.
It did not transpire at this time that the vast inflation of war-sentiment in Equatoria was p.r.i.c.ked with a knife, so small that a woman could conceal it in her hair.
Bedient intervened between Jaffier and Senora Rey, and upon the latter a substantial settlement was made, as well as a generous annuity.
Within three days, the Glow-worm had left Coral City for an Antillean port, to connect with a South American steamer. The Sorensons and one Chinese accompanied her. The Glow-worm shone as one lavishly rich, but trembled with fears which she dared not express, until Equatoria should sink from her horizon.
Jaffier"s gunboat, which had followed the _Savonarola_ on principle and deserted for the unlit tramp, drove this latter destiny-maker through the coral pa.s.sage in daylight, and around to the harbor, amid the subdued rejoicing of the Defenders. Subdued, because the Defenders were jerky with fear of a trick, even with the guns and ammunition safely stored in the Capitol--until the message from Bedient to Jaffier made certain mysterious issues clear.
_The Pleiad_ guests were not summarily routed, but the force of law, and the flood of light, suddenly turned upon every corner of this establishment, destroyed the atmosphere for crime and concupiscence.
The paintings and various beautiful collections of the late art-lover-and-patron, were gathered together in one of the great wings of the establishment, and opened to the people. The magnificent grounds became a public park.
Bedient was regarded with something akin to awe for his activity at _The Pleiad_, and on board the _Savonarola_. Jaffier could readily perceive how large were the pecuniary interests of Carreras" heir in the complete demolition of the Spaniard"s power, but such single-handed effectiveness had a supermasculine voltage about it, despite Bedient"s laughing explanations. The Carreras interests became, in Jaffier"s mind, second only to the interests of the government. A handsome present and a rich grant of land were privately conferred upon Miss Mallory, at Bedient"s suggestion, for her brilliant services to the government.... But these are dry externals. A careful resume of happy adjustments from Jaffier down to Monkhouse following the last sail of the Spaniard, would weary.... Three days after the spent and silent six rode up to the _hacienda_, Bedient was left with but two guests, Miss Mallory and Jim Framtree, who were awaiting the New York steamer.... In effect, the parable of the horses had been retold to Framtree. Bedient took him for a night-walk over the hills for this.
"But Beth showed me very clearly--where I wouldn"t do at all," the big man said intensely. "And clearly, I saw it, too,--raw and unfinished beside her, I was."
"Did she ever show you that little picture of you she painted?" Bedient asked.
"No. All she had of me were a few kodak prints----"
"She probably painted the picture from them," Bedient said. "I saw it on her mantle one day, and instantly our little talk in Coral City recurred to me. I knew you. Beth Truba didn"t mention your name.... The portrait is exquisitely done.... Why, Jim Framtree, that portrait meant more to her than my comings and goings in the flesh----"
"I can"t quite understand that, Bedient!"
"I knew there was some power in her heart that I did not affect. I related it to the picture, and when she told me the parable, I asked her outright if the picture and her heart"s knight were one. She answered "Yes."... And so, Jim, I stand in awe of you. You"ve won and held what is to me the greatest woman of our time. I don"t know anything I wouldn"t do for you--with that light upon you----"
"You"ve got me thinking faster than is safe, Bedient. Do men turn this sort of trick very often for each other?"
"It was glad tidings," Bedient said. "The fact is, I have no better thing to give, than services for such a woman. It"s clear and simple, that my business is to make her as happy as I can from the outside....
And, Jim, she must not know I told you, nor that I hunted you up. It wouldn"t be best.... Just go back to New York, ask to see her, and try again. She"ll be glad----"
"You"re sure of that?"
"Well, I shouldn"t be sure. It"s her province.... I want her to have the chance."
"...You ought to know how I feel about all this, Bedient," Framtree said unsteadily, "since you know her."
Bedient liked that.
"I made it a bit hard for you," he replied, "the way I told it--as if you didn"t count at all with me--only as something she wanted--but you do, Jim----"
"...We"ll come back, or I"ll come back," Framtree said, and he turned away from the other"s eyes.
Bedient had looked upon him that moment, as if he would add his own soul"s strength to the strength of Framtree.... The hours that followed, to the moment of the _Henlopen"s_ sailing, were hours of building. Framtree found himself locked in the concentration of Bedient"s ideals--matters of manhood fitted about him, that he had not aspired to. And it was not easy to fall from them, when Bedient believed in him so truly.
And Miss Mallory lured back Bedient"s strength. He ate, drank and slept at her bidding.... So little she said, so instant to understand, so strange and different she was, waiting upon his words as upon a master"s.... The last evening at the _hacienda_ (the _Henlopen_ had arrived in the harbor) he played for them upon the orchestrelle. Music came forth new and of big import to his consciousness.... He had tried the soul-rousing _heimweh_ from the slow movement of Dvorak"s _New World Symphony_, when Miss Mallory, looking over the rolls, discovered the _Andante_ of Beethoven"s Fifth.
"Don"t you remember--the orchestra--that night?... It"s wonderful and mysterious--won"t you----?" But she saw the look that came into his face, and did not finish. Instead, she put the roll away quickly, knowing she had touched a more vital a.s.sociation than a theatre fright.
"Don"t mind, and please forgive me----"
...That night they stood together at the door of the little room, for she had refused to change. Bedient said:
"Every time I think of you I feel better, Adith Mallory.... I shall think of you often, always as if you were in the little room next to mine."
They went aboard the following night, and sailed at dawn. Bedient rode back to the _hacienda_ during the morning.... How strange it will be--alone, he thought; stranger still, he faced the prospect without dread.... A hush had fallen upon the hills, and upon his heart. Some mysterious movement was stirring at the centres of his life....
A box of pictures had come on the _Henlopen_; also a letter from Torvin. There were three canvases in the latest shipment, and seven had come to the _hacienda_ while he was in New York. He hung them all in a room where there was good North light, and kept the key with him. And so there was a gallery for the Grey One in that house, as well as the little room next to his. He smiled at the thought that a man"s life becomes a house of his friends.... Torvin reported that Miss Grey had disposed of several pictures direct from her studio; that he had marketed eight pictures beside the ones shipped to Equatoria, and that there was a sprightly demand for her work....
That night, as Bedient ascended the stairs, a long sigh escaped him. So uncommon a thing was this, that he stopped to reflect. It was like one casting off a worn garment. Some old, ill, tired part of him pa.s.sed away, and out of the great still house. He did not loathe it, but sped its pa.s.sing, happily, gratefully.... Then the thought came, "Why do I attract all this beauty of friendship and loyalty?"... All the eager activity of others in his behalf recurred--the gracious image of that Mother of myriad services, before all--and the fragrant essence of a hundred deeds of love for him.... "I must hurry to keep pace, but I can"t--with these infinite favors!" he whispered.
A pa.s.sion for service surged through him--to pray, and serve, and love and do; to write and give and lift and smile; always to help; to fall asleep blessing the near and the far; to awake prodigal with strength.... Such a spirit of giving brimmed into his life, that his flesh thrilled with the ecstasy of illimitable service.
The material things about him--walls, staircase, even the lamp-globes--were shadowy and unreal in the midst of these mystically glowing conceptions.
The sense of perfect health came to him--a steady, rhythmic radiation; not a tired, weak fibre, but a singing vitality of every tissue, as if it were cushioned in some life-giving fluid--a pure perfumed bloom of health.