"The Face In the Abyss" - читать интересную книгу автора (Merritt Abraham) There was no question of their belief now. It might-be well to put a spur to their own self-interest.
"And still there is one more thing," he said slowly. "Regor has spoken of some purpose. Of that purpose, it may be I know as little as you. But this happened-" He told them of the elfin bugles that had led him across the plain of the monoliths, and finally to the cleft in the ramparts. Huon drew a deep breath and stood erect, hope blazing upon his face, and Regor leaped to his feet, swinging his clubbed arm in a whistling circle. Huon clasped Graydon's shoulders.. "I believe!" he said, voice shaking; he turned to Dorina; "And you?" "Of course it is truth, Huon!" she answered; but some swift calculation narrowed her lids and clouded her face, and Graydon thought for an instant she looked menacingly at him. "You are our guest," said Huon. "In the morning you shall meet the Fellowship, and repeat to them what you have told us. And then you shall decide whether to call upon us for help, or go on alone. All that is ours is yours for the asking. And-Graydon-" he hesitated, and then with abrupt wistfulness-"by the Mother, I hope you throw your lot with ours! Regor, see to it that the little beast is cared for. Take this, Graydon," he stooped and picked up the rifle. "To-morrow you shall show us what it is. I will take you to your quarters. Wait for me, Dorina." He took Graydon by the arm, and led him toward the wall of the room opposite that which he had entered. He parted the webs. "Follow," he bade. Graydon looked back as he passed after him. Dorina was standing, watching him with that menacing speculation stronger upon her face. Graydon passed through the webs, and followed Huon's broad back into another faintly sparkling, black-walled corridor. CHAPTER XI The Deathless People "UP, LAD, bathe and break your fast. The Fellowship will soon be gathering, and I am here to take you to them." Graydon blinked uncomprehendingly at his awakener. Regor stood at the foot of his couch, on his face a broad smile that his scars turned into the grin of a benevolent gargoyle. He had changed the chain armor for the closefitting garments that seemed to be the fashion of YuAtlanchi's men. Black Regor he still was, however, for these were black, and black was the cloak that hung from his immense shoulders. Graydon looked around that chamber to which Huon had led him, at the thick rugs which were like spun silk of silver, the walls covered by the webs of shadowy silver through which ran strange patterns of a deeper argent, webs which were drawn aside at one end of the room to reveal a wide alcove in which a sunken pool sparkled. He drew together the threads of memory. Huon had watched and talked while two silent brown men had bathed and massaged away his weariness and the marks of Kon's talons. And then had sat with him whilst he had eaten unfamiliar meats which two Indian girls, with wide wondering eyes, had set before him in dishes of crystal. Huon himself had poured his wine, asking many questions about the people who dwelt outside the Hidden Land. He had not seemed much interested in their arts or sciences or governments; but avidly so upon how death came to them, and what was done with the old, the customs of mating, whether there were many children and their upbringing. Ever and ever be had returned to the subject of death and the forms in which it came, as though it held for him some overpowering fascination. And, at last, he had sat silent, thinking; then, sighing, had said: "So it was in the old days-and which is the better way?" He had risen, abruptly, and passed out of the chamber; the light had dimmed, and Graydon had thrown himself upon the couch to sink into deep slumber. Why had Huon dwelt so persistently upon death? There was something about that which vaguely troubled Graydon. Suddenly he recalled that Suarra had said her people had closed the Door of Death. He realized that he had not taken her literally. But might it be truth- He roused himself from his reverie, shook himself impatiently, and rising, walked over to the pool, splashed about and dried himself upon silken cloths. He returned to his chamber to find a table set with fruits, and with what seemed like wheaten cakes, and milk. He dressed quickly, and sat down to it Not till then did Regor speak. "Good Lord," exclaimed Graydon, in the Aymara equivalent "There's nothing subtle in that discovery. I warned you I couldn't tell you how-" He stopped, afraid that he had hurt the giant's feelings. But Regor smiled broadly. "I'm not referring to that," he said. "What you were careful not to mention was the reward the Mother promised you if you obeyed her summons-and managed to reach her." Graydon jumped, in his astonishment, choking on a bite of the wheaten cake. "Ho! ho!" roared Regor, and gave him a resounding whack upon the back. "Am I not a subtle one, eh? "Dorina is not here now," he muttered slyly, looking up at the ceiling, "nor am I bound to tell Huon all I hear." Graydon swung around on his stool and looked at him. Regor looked back quizzically, yet with such real friendship in his eyes that Graydon felt his resolve waver. There was something about Huon, as there had been about Lantlu, that made him feel lonely; something alien, something unhuman. Whether it was their beauty, so far beyond any dream of classic, antique sculpture, or whether it lay deeper, he did not know. But he felt none of it concerning this man. Regor seemed of his own world. And certainly he had demonstrated his kindliness. "You can trust me, lad," Regor answered his thought. "You were wise last night, but what was wisdom then may not be so now. Would this help you to decide-that I know Suarra, and love her as my own child?" It turned the scale in Graydon's mind. "A bargain, Regor," he said. "Question for question. Answer mine, and I'll answer yours." "Done!" grunted Regor, "and if we keep them waiting let the Fellowship chew their thumbs." Graydon went straight to the matter that was troubling him. "Huon asked me many questions last night. And the most of them were about death in my own land, its shapes, how it came to us; and how long men lived there. One would think he knew nothing of death except that which comes by killing. Why is Huon so curious about-death?" "Because," said Regor, tranquilly, "Huon is deathless!" "Deathless!" echoed Graydon, incredulously. "Deathless," repeated Regor, "unless, of course, some one kills him, or he should choose to exercise a certain-- choice which all of us have." "Which all of you have!" echoed Graydon again. "You, too, Regor?" "Even I," answered the giant, bowing urbanely. "But surely not the Indians," cried Graydon. "No, not they," Regor replied, patiently. "Then they die," Graydon was struggling desperately to find some flaw in what seemed to him a monstrous condition. "They die, like my people. Then why have they not taught Huon all that death can be? Why ask me?" "There are two answers to that," said Regor with quite a professional air. "First, you-and therefore your race- are much closer to us than are the Emer, or as you call them, the Aymara. Therefore, Huon argues, he might learn from you what would probably come out of the Door of Death for us if it should be decided to reopen that door upon Yu- Atlanchi-all Yu-Atlanchi. It is, by the way, one of the matters that has made us outlaws. The second answer is, however, all-embracing. It is that, except in the rarest of cases, the Emer do not live long enough for any one to find out how they might possibly die except in the distressingly similar manner in which they do. I mean, they are killed before they have opportunity to die otherwise! It is another of the matters that has made us outlaws." Graydon felt a nightmarish creep. Was Suarra too-deathless? And if so, then in the name of God how old was she? The thought was definitely unpleasant. They were unhuman, those hidden people; abnormal! Surely Suarra, with all her sweetness, was not one of these-monsters! He did not dare ask; approached the question obliquely. "Dorina too, I suppose?" he asked. |
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