VIII
At nine o'clock that night we caught one of the gold-makers.
I do not know how Barris had laid his trap; all I saw of the affair can
be told in a minute or two.
We were posted on the Cardinal road about a mile below
the house, Pierpont and I with drawn revolvers on one side, under a butternut
tree, Barris on the other, a Winchester across his knees.
I had just asked Pierpont the hour, and he was feeling
for his watch when far up the road we heard the sound of a galloping horse,
nearer, nearer, clattering, thundering past. Then Barris'
rifle spat flame and the dark mass, horse and rider,
crashed into the dust. Pierpont had the half stunned horseman by the collar
in a second,—the horse was stone dead,—and, as we lighted a pine knot to
examine the fellow, Barris' two riders galloped up and drew bridle beside
us.
"Hm!" said Barris with a scowl, "it's the 'Shiner,' or
I'm a moonshiner."
We crowded curiously around to see the "Shiner." He was
red-headed, fat and filthy, and his little red eyes burned in his head
like the eyes of an angry pig.
Barris went through his pockets methodically while Pierpont
held him and I held the torch. The Shiner was a gold mine; pockets, shirt,
bootlegs, hat, even his dirty fists, clutched tight and bleeding, were
bursting with lumps of soft yellow gold. Barris dropped this "moonshine
gold,"
as we had come to call in, into the pockets of his shooting-coat,
and withdrew to question the prisoner. He came back again in a few minutes
and motioned his mounted men to take the Shiner in charge. We watched them,
rifle on thigh, walking their horses slowly away into the darkness, the
Shiner, tightly bound, shuffling sullenly between them.
"Who is the Shiner?" asked Pierpont, slipping the revolver
into his pocket again.
"A moonshiner, counterfeiter, forger, and highwayman,"
said Barris, "and probably a murderer. Drummond will be glad to see him,
and I think it likely he will be persuaded to confess to him what he refuses
to confess no me."
"Wouldn't he talk?" I asked.
"Not a syllable. Pierpont, there is nothing more for you
to do."
"For me to do? Are you not coming back with us, Barris?"
"No," said Barris.
We walked along the dark road in silence for a while,
I wondering what Barris intended to do, but he said nothing more until
we reached our own verandah. Here he held out his hand, first to Pienpont,
then to me, saying good-bye as though he were going on a long journey.
"How soon will you be back?" I called out to him as he
turned away toward the gate. He came across the lawn again and again took
our hands with a quiet affection that I had never imagined him capable
of.
"I am going," he said, "to put an end to his gold-making
no-night. I know that you fellows have never suspected what I was about
on my little solitary evening strolls after dinner. I will tell you. Already
I have unobtrusively killed four of these gold-makers,—my men put them
under.ground just below the new wash-out at the four mile stone. There
are three left alive,—the Shiner whom we have, another criminal named 'Yellow,'
on 'Yaller' in the vernacular, and the third—"
"The third," repeated Pierpont, excitedly.
"The third I have never yet seen. But I know who and what
he is,—I know; and if he is of human flesh and blood, his blood will flow
to-night."
As he spoke a slight noise across the turf attracted my
attention. A mounted man was advancing silently in the starlight oven the
spongy meadowland. When he came nearer Barris struck a match, and we saw
that he bore a corpse across his saddle bow.
"Yaller, Colonel Barris," said the man, touching his slouched
hat in salute.
This grim introduction to the corpse made me shudder,
and, after a moment's examination of the stiff, wide-eyed dead man, I drew
back.
"Identified," said Barris, "take him to the four mile
post and carry his effects to Washington,— under seal, mind, Johnstone."
Away cantered the rider with his ghastly burden, and Barris
took our hands once more for the last time. Then he went away, gaily, with
a jest on his lips, and Pierpont and I turned back into the house.
For an hour we sat moodily smoking in the hall before
the fire, saying little until Pierpont burst out with: "I wish Barris had
taken one of us with him to-night!"
The same thought had been running in my mind, but I said:
"Barris knows what he's about."
This observation neither comforted us nor opened the lane
to further conversation, and after a few minutes Pierpont said good night
and called for Howlett and hot water. When he had been warmly tucked away
by Howlett, I turned out all but one lamp, sent the dogs away with David
and dismissed Howlett for the night.
I was not inclined to retire for I knew I could not sleep.
There was a book lying open on the table beside the fire and I opened it
and read a page or two, but my mind was fixed on other things.
The window shades were raised and I looked out at the
star-set firmament. There was no moon that night but the sky was dusted
all over with sparkling stars and a pale radiance, brighter even than moonlight,
fell over meadow and wood. Far away in the forest I heard the voice of
the wind, a soft warm wind that whispered a name, Ysonde.
"Listen," sighed the voice of the wind, and "listen" echoed
the swaying trees with every little leaf a-quiver. I listened.
Where the long grasses trembled with the cricket's cadence
I heard her name, Ysonde; I heard it in the rustling woodbine where grey
moths hovered; I heard it in the drip, drip, drip of the dew from the porch.
The silent meadow brook whispered her name, the rippling woodland streams
repeated in, Ysonde, Ysonde, until all earth and sky were filled with the
soft thrill, Ysonde, Ysonde, Ysonde.
A night-thrush sang in a thicket by the porch and I stole
to the verandah to listen. After a while it began again, a little further
on. I ventured out into the road. Again I heard it far away in the forest
and I followed it, for I knew it was singing of Ysonde.
When I came to the path than leaves the main road and
enters the Sweet-Fern Covert below the spinney, I hesitated; but the beauty
of the night lured me on and the night-thrushes called me from every thicket.
In the starry radiance, shrubs, grasses, field flowers, stood out distinctly,
for there was no moon to cast shadows. Meadow and brook, grove and stream,
were illuminated by the pale glow. Like great lamps lighted the planets
hung from the high domed sky and through their mysterious rays the fixed
stars, calm, serene, stared from the heavens like eyes..I waded on waist
deep through fields of dewy golden-rod, through late clover and wild-oat
wastes, through crimson fruited sweetbrier, blueberry, and wild plum, until
the low whisper of the Wier Brook warned me that the path had ended.
But I would not stop, for the night air was heavy with
the perfume of water-lilies and far away, across the low wooded cliffs
and the wet meadowland beyond, there was a distant gleam of silver, and
I heard the murmur of sleepy waterfowl. I would go to the lake. The way
was clear except for the dense young growth and the snares of the moose-bush.
The night-thrushes had ceased but I did not want for the
company of living creatures. Slender, quick darting forms crossed my path
at intervals, sleek mink, that fled like shadows at my step, wiry weasels
and fan muskrats, hurrying onward to some tryst or killing.
I never had seen so many little woodland creatures on
the move at night. I began to wonder where they all were going so fast,
why they all hurried on in the same direction. Now I passed a hare hopping
through the brushwood, now a rabbit scurrying by, flag hoisted. As I entered
the beech second-growth two foxes glided by me; a little further on a doe
crashed out of the underbrush, and close behind her stole a lynx, eyes
shining like coals.
He neither paid attention to the doe nor to me, but loped
away toward the north.
The lynx was in flight.
"From what?" I asked myself, wondering. There was no forest
fine, no cyclone, no flood.
If Barris had passed that way could he have stirred up
this sudden exodus? Impossible; even a regiment in the forest could scarcely
have put to rout these frightened creatures.
"What on earth," thought I, turning to watch the headlong
flight of a fisher-cat, "what on earth has started the beasts out at this
time of night?"
I looked up into the sky. The placid glow of the fixed
stars comforted me and I stepped on through the narrow spruce belt that
leads down to the borders of the Lake of the Stars.
Wild cranberry and moose-bush entwined my feet, dewy branches
spattered me with moisture, and the thick spruce needles scraped my face
as I threaded my way oven mossy logs and deep spongy tussocks down to the
level gravel of the lake shone.
Although there was no wind the little waves were hurrying
in from the lake and I heard them splashing among the pebbles. In the pale
star glow thousands of water-lilies lifted their half-closed chalices toward
the sky.
I threw myself full length upon the shone, and, chin on
hand, looked out across the lake.
Splash, splash, came the waves along the shore, higher,
nearer, until a film of water, thin and glittering as a knife blade, crept
up to my elbows. I could not understand it; the lake was rising, but there
had been no rain. All along the shore the water was running up; I heard
the waves among the sedge grass; the weeds at my side were awash in the
ripples. The lilies rocked on the tiny waves, every wet pad rising on the
swells, sinking, rising again until the whole lake was glimmering with
undulating blossoms. How sweet and deep was the fragrance from the lilies.
And now the water was ebbing, slowly, and the waves receded,
shrinking from the shone rim until the white pebbles appeared again, shining
like froth on a brimming glass.
No animal swimming out in the dankness along the shore,
no heavy salmon surging, could have set the whole shore aflood as though
the wash from a great boat were rolling in. Could it have been the overflow,
through the Weir Brook, of some cloud-burst far back in the forest? This
was the only way I could account for it, and yet when I had crossed the
Wien Brook I had not noticed that it was swollen.
And as I lay there thinking, a faint breeze sprang up
and I saw the surface of the lake whiten with lifted lily pads..All around
me the alders were sighing; I heard the forest behind me stir; the crossed
branches rubbing softly, bark against bark. Something—it may have been
an owl—sailed out of the night, dipped, soared, and was again engulfed,
and far across the water I heard its faint cry, Ysonde.
Then first, for my heart was full, I cast myself down
upon my face, calling on her name. My eyes were wet when I raised my head,—for
the spray from the shore was drifting in again,—and my heart beat heavily;
"No more, no more." But my heart lied, for even as I raised my face to
the calm stars, I saw her standing still, close beside me; and very gently
I spoke her name, Ysonde.
She held out both hands.
"I was lonely," she said, "and I went to the glade, but
the forest is full of frightened creatures and they frightened me. Has
anything happened in the woods? The deer are running toward the heights."
Her hand still lay in mine as we moved along the shore,
and the lapping of the water on rock and shallow was no lower than our
voices.
"Why did you leave me without a word, there at the fountain
in the glade?" she said.
"I leave you!—"
"Indeed you did, running swiftly with your dog, plunging
through thickens and brush,—oh— you frightened me."
"Did I leave you so?"
"Yes—after—"
"After?"
"You had kissed me—"
Then we leaned down together and looked into the black
water set with stars, just as we had bent together over the fountain in
the glade.
"Do you remember?" I asked.
"Yes. See, the water is inlaid with silver stars,—everywhere
whine lilies floating and the stars below, deep, deep down."
"What is the flower you hold in your hand?"
"White water-lotus."
"Tell me about Yue-Laou, Dzil-Nbu of the Kuen-Yuin," I
whispered, lifting her head so I could see her eyes.
"Would it please you to hear?"
"Yes, Ysonde."
"All than I know is yours, now, as I am yours, all than
I am. Bend closer. Is it of Yue-Laou you would know? Yue-Laou is Dzil-Nhu
of the Kuen-Yuin. He lived in the Moon. He is old—very, very old, and once,
before he came to rule the Kuen-Yuin, he was the old man who unites with
a silken cord all predestined couples, after which nothing can prevent
their union. But all that is changed since he came to rule the Kuen-Yuin.
Now he has perverted the Xin,—the good genii of China,—and has fashioned
from their warped bodies a monster which he calls the Xin. This monster
is horrible, for it not only lives in its own body, but it has thousands
of loathsome satellites,—living creatures without mouths, blind, that move
when the Xin moves, like a mandarin and his escort. They are part of the
Xin although they are not attached. Yet if one of these satellites is injured
the Xin writhes with agony. It is fearful—this huge living bulk and these
creatures spread out like severed fingers that wriggle around a hideous
hand."
"Who told you this?"
"My step-father."
"Do you believe it?"
"Yes. I have seen one of the Xin's creatures.
"Where, Ysonde?"
"Here in the woods."
"Then you believe there is a Xin here?"
"There must be,—perhaps in the lake—"
"Oh, Xins inhabit lakes?"
"Yes, and the seven seas. I am not afraid here."
"Why?"
"Because I wear the symbol of the Kuen-Yuin."
"Then I am not safe," I smiled.
"Yes you are, for I hold you in my arms. Shall I tell
you more about the Xin? When the Xin is about to do to death a man, the
Yeth-hounds gallop through the night—"
"What are the Yeth-hounds, Ysonde?"
"The Yeth-hounds are dogs without heads. They are the
spirits of murdered children, which pass through the woods at night, making
a wailing noise."
"Do you believe this?"
"Yes, for I have worn the yellow lotus—"
"The yellow lotus—"
"Yellow is the symbol of faith—"
"Where?"
"In Yian," she said faintly.
After a while I said, "Ysonde, you know there is a God?"
"God and Xangi are one."
"Have you ever heard of Christ?"
"No," she answered softly.
The wind began again among the tree tops. I felt her hands
closing in mine.
"Ysonde," I asked again, "do you believe in sorcerers?"
"Yes, the Kuen-Yuin are sorcerers; Yue-Laou is a sorcerer.
"Have you seen sorcery?"
"Yes, the reptile satellite of the Xin—"
"Anything else?"
"My charm,—the golden ball, the symbol of the Kuen-Yuin.
Have you seen it change,—have you seen the reptiles writhe—?"
"Yes," I said shortly, and then remained silent, for a
sudden shiver of apprehension had seized me. Barris also had spoken gravely,
ominously of the sorcerers, the Kuen-Yuin, and I had seen with my own eyes
the graven reptiles turning and twisting on the glowing globe.
"Still," said I aloud, "God lives and sorcery is but a
name."
"Ah," murmured Ysonde, drawing closer no me, "they say,
in Yian, the Kuen-Yuin live; God is but a name."
"They lie," I whispered fiercely.
"Be careful," she pleaded, "they may hear you. Remember
that you have the mark of the dragon's claw on your brow."
"What of it?" I asked, thinking also of the white mark
on Barris' arm.
"Ah don't you know that those who are marked with the
dragon's claw are followed by Yue-Laou, for good or for evil,—and the evil
means death if you offend him?"
"Do you believe that!" I asked impatiently.."I know it,"
she sighed.
"Who told you all this? Your step-father? What in Heaven's
name is he then,—a Chinaman!"
"I don't know; he is not like you."
"Have—have you told him anything about me?"
"He knows about you—no, I have told him nothing,—ah what
is this—see—it is a cord, a cord of silk about your neck—and about mine!"
"Where did that come from?" I asked astonished.
"It must be—in must be Yue-Laou who binds me to you,—it
is as my step-father said—he said Yue-Laou would bind us—"
"Nonsense," I said almost roughly, and seized the silken
cord, but to my amazement it melted in my hand like smoke.
"What is all this damnable jugglery!" I whispered angrily,
but my anger vanished as the words were spoken, and a convulsive shudder
shook me to the feet. Standing on the shone of the lake, a stone's throw
away, was a figure, twisted and bent,—a little old man, blowing sparks
from a live coal which he held in his naked hand. The coal glowed with
increasing radiance, lighting up the skull-like face above it, and threw
a red glow oven the sands at his feet. But the face!—the ghastly Chinese
face on which the light flickered,—and the snaky slitted eyes, sparkling
as the coal glowed hotter. Coal! It was not a coal but a golden globe staining
the night with crimson flames—it was the symbol of the Kuen-Yuin.
"See! See!" gasped Ysonde, trembling violently, "see the
moon rising from between his fingers! Oh I thought it was my step-father
and it is Yue-Laou the Maker of Moons—no! no! it is my step-father—ah God!
they are the same!"
Frozen with terror I stumbled to my knees, groping for
my revolver which bulged in my coat pocket; but something held me—something
which bound me like a web in a thousand strong silky meshes. I struggled
and turned but the web grew tighter; it was over us—all around us, drawing,
pressing us into each other's arms until we lay side by side, bound hand
and body and foot, palpitating, panting like a pair of netted pigeons.
And the creature on the shore below! What was my horror
to see a moon, huge, silvery, rise like a bubble from between his fingers,
mount higher, higher into the still air and hang aloft in the midnight
sky, while another moon rose from his fingers, and another and yet another
until the vast span of Heaven was set with moons and the earth sparkled
like a diamond in the white glare.
A great wind began to blow from the east and it bore to
our ears a long mournful howl,—a cry so unearthly that for a moment our
hearts stopped.
"The Yeth-hounds!" sobbed Ysonde, "do you hear!—they are
passing through the forest! The Xin is near!"
Then all around us in the dry sedge grasses came a rustle
as if some small animals were creeping, and a damp acrid odor filled the
air. I knew the smell, I saw the spidery crablike creatures swarm out around
me and drag their soft yellow hairy bodies across the shrinking grasses.
They passed, hundreds of them, poisoning the air, rumbling, writhing, crawling
with their blind mouthless heads raised. Birds, half asleep and confused
by the darkness, fluttered away before them in helpless fright, rabbits
sprang from their forms, weasels glided away like flying shadows. What
remained of the forest creatures rose and fled from the loathsome invasion;
I heard the squeak of a terrified hare, the snort of stampeding deer, and
the lumbering gallop of a bear; and all the time I was choking, half suffocated
by the poisoned air.
Then, as I struggled no free myself from the silken snare
about me, I cast a glance of deadly fear at the sorcerer below, and at
the same moment I saw him turn in his tracks.."Halt!" cried a voice from
the bushes.
"Barris!" I shouted, half leaping up in my agony.
I saw the sorcerer spring forward, I heard the bang! bang!
bang! of a revolver, and, as the sorcerer fell on the water's edge, I saw
Barris jump out into the white glare and fire again, once, twice, three
times, into the writhing figure at his feet.
Then an awful thing occurred. Up out of the black lake
reared a shadow, a nameless shapeless mass, headless, sightless, gigantic,
gaping from end to end.
A great wave struck Barris and he fell, another washed
him up on the pebbles, another whirled him back into the water and then,—and
then the thing fell over him,—and I fainted.
* * * This, then, is all that I know concerning Yue-Laou
and the Xin. I do not fear the ridicule of scientists or of the press for
I have told the truth. Barris is gone and the thing that killed him is
alive to-day in the Lake of the Stars while the spider-like satellites
roam through the Cardinal Woods. The game has fled, the forests around
the lake are empty of any living creatures save the reptiles than creep
when the Xin moves in the depths of the lake.
General Drummond knows what he has lost in Barris, and
we, Pierpont and I, know what we have lost also. His will we found in the
drawer, the key of which he had handed me. It was wrapped in a bit of paper
on which was written:
"Yue-Laou the sorcerer is here in the Cardinal Woods.
I must kill him or he will kill me. He made and gave to me the woman I
loved,—he made her,—I saw him,—he made her out of a white water-lotus bud.
When our child was born, he came again before me and demanded from me the
woman I loved. Then, when I refused, he went away, and that night my wife
and child vanished from my side, and I found upon her pillow a white lotus
bud. Roy, the woman of your dream, Ysonde, may be my child. God help you
if you love her for Yue-Laou will give,—and take away, as though he were
Xangi, which is God. I will kill Yue-Laou before I leave this forest,—or
he will kill me.
"FRANKLYN BARRIS."
Now the world knows what Barris thought of the Kuen-Yuin
and of Yue-Laou. I see than the newspapers are just becoming excited over
the glimpses that Li-Hung-Chang has afforded them of Black Cathay and the
demons of the Kuen-Yuin. The Kuen-Yuin are on the move.
Pierpont and I have dismantled the shooting box in the
Cardinal Woods. We hold ourselves ready at a moment's notice to join and
lead the first Government party to drag the Lake of Stars and cleanse the
forest of the crab reptiles. But it will be necessary that a large force
assembles, and a well-armed force, for we never have found the body of
Yue-Laou, and, living or dead, I fear him. Is he living?
Pierpont, who found Ysonde and myself lying unconscious
on the lake shore, the morning after, saw no trace of corpse or blood on
the sands. He may have fallen into the lake, but I fear and Ysonde fears
than he is alive. We never were able to find either her dwelling place
or the glade and the fountain again. The only thing that remains to her
of her former life is the gold.serpent in the Metropolitan Museum and her
golden globe, the symbol of the Kuen-Yuin; but the latter no longer changes
color.
David and the dogs are waiting for me in the count yard
as I write. Pierpont is in the gun room loading shells, and Howlett brings
him mug after mug of my ale from the wood. Ysonde bends oven my desk,—I
feel her hand on my arm, and she is saying, "Don't you think you have done
enough to-day, dear? How can you write such silly nonsense without a shadow
of truth or foundation?"
FINIS