CHAPTER XX - THE SWEEP OF THE
NET
“I am not at all afraid,” I retorted, nettled at
Lazaroff’s sneer, “but how do I get in?”
A dog was yelping somewhere outside the Institute,
and all the dogs in Croydon seemed to have taken up its challenge. It was
difficult for me to make my voice audible above the uproar.
“I am not at all afraid,” I repeated, “but—”
I was back in the cellar with Esther and Lazaroff,
and we were examining the cylinders. As I looked about me, I seemed to be in
the cylinder still, but gradually it expanded, until it became a vast hall, dark,
save for a little window near the ceiling, through whose half-opaque crystal a
little light filtered in dimly.
Lazaroff seemed to have aged. He wore a white
beard, and his touch was very gentle as he bathed my face with water. As I
stared at him he became ... somebody whom I had once known ... Bishop Alfred!
“Now you are better,” said the old man, with his
child-like smile.
I put my hand up to my aching head. There was a
scarred groove along the top of the scalp, where the glow ray had plowed its
passage. I began to remember now.
The howling of the dogs broke out afresh. The din
was terrific, and the mournful tones of the poor animals’ cries made the place
a pandemonium.
“Arnold!” whispered a soft voice at my side.
Elizabeth was kneeling there, and David stood
behind her. Next to David stood the little woman who had been our neighbor in
the Strangers’ House, and a multitude of men and women, and children, too,
watched me through the gloom.
“Where am I? Who are all these?” I asked. Then,
lighting upon a more momentous question, “How long have I been here?”
“Three days, Arnold,” whispered Elizabeth.
“Then in two days—two days—” I gasped.
“No, Arnold, tomorrow is the day,” interposed
David, coming up to me softly. “Sanson has proclaimed a meeting in the Temple
at sunrise, and it is now late afternoon. We are all in his trap. He must have
found you, taken you unaware, and fired at you, but afterward he changed his
mind and brought you here in his dispatchplane, where he found Bishop Alfred
awaiting him, and Elizabeth and myself, who had gone back to find him. I bought
a few days’ respite by surrender, and there was even pleasure in the thought
that my daughter will not meet her fate in Lembken’s palace.”
“Where, then?” I asked, struggling painfully up.
“In the Vivisection Bureau—with these,” he
answered, indicating the assemblage.
“Where are we, David?” I cried in anguish.
“Beneath it. In the vaults where Sanson keeps his
morons, Christians, criminals, and dogs, to await the table.”
I was upon my feet raving like a madman, making my
way round the vault, striking my fists against the damp stone walls, crazed
with the thought of Esther. They followed me, and some laid their hands on me
in restraint, but I thrust them away. They thought I could not bear to share
their wretched fate. But the nearness of the crisis, the thought of Esther in
Sanson’s power deprived me of my senses.
The vault was an enormous one, the only access
being at the far end, by means of an oak gate, heavily barred. In this further
portion were chained, all along the walls, the dogs destined for the
experimental work above. As I drew near the gate the howling broke forth
afresh. It steadied me; I came back to my senses; somebody was at my side,
clasping my arm and speaking a few timid words in my ear.
I swung around and caught at the little woman who
had been our neighbor. She had her children with her, and the three held each
other closely, as if their last hour had begun.
“What are you doing here?” I asked.
I did not know David was near, but at the words he
clasped me in his arms.
“She is here, Arnold,” he answered, “because the
last act of terrorism has brought her. Sanson’s reason has left him, and he has
flung his net wide over London for victims. He has gathered everyone: morons,
Christians, criminals, suspects. She taught her children fairy stories. The
inspectors had long suspected it, and they terrified the little girl into admission
by threatening to kill the mother. They were then adjudged morons. The mother
pleaded to be allowed to accompany them to the table, alleging that her father
had been color-blind. Her prayer was granted; she is going, Arnold; we all are
going—”
“No,” said the old bishop in a regretful tone,
“not one of us is going. You see,” he added in explanation, “the Russians are
in Stockholm, and it will not be long before they arrive in London to free the
world. That is why Sanson lost his self-control. He knows. He wants to finish
his enemies at home before they come.”
“How do you know?” demanded David, while everyone
grew still and listened.
“It is given to me to know,” said Bishop Alfred
simply, beaming and rubbing his hands. “I should like to have followed my dear
master, the Lord Bishop of London, to the fagots, but none of us will go to the
tables now, and we shall all have our two names again.”
David drew me aside. “Arnold,” he said, “this
situation would have robbed stronger men of their wits. I am afraid that our
case is hopeless. One of the Guard, who knows me, has told me that Sanson is
preparing for a holocaust of victims tomorrow, to celebrate his coup. He will
stop at nothing to appease his blood thirst. Arnold, all our people know who you
are. For their sake you must lead and show them how to die, as the first
Christians died. It is hard, my dear boy—”
I knew he was not thinking of death, but of my
tragedy.
“Your capture has rendered our plans abortive,” he
went on. “But still there may be some hope unguessed by us. Unto the last we
will not impugn God’s power. Now, my friends,” he added, turning toward the
crowd, which circulated in the vault slowly, always following me, “let us show
the Guard where our strength lies.”
In the gloom of the vast vault, above the howling
of the dogs, the hymn was raised, old Bishop Alfred leading, in a voice
singularly sweet, although in speech the tones were broken. All kneeled.
Afterward David spoke briefly. He reminded us of
the brave traditions of martyrdom and its happy expectancy. We were going to
face our fate together, strengthened by our companionship and in the knowledge
that our death would create a revulsion of sentiment that would sweep Sanson
from power and restore Christianity to the world. They cried out their
approval, and there was no face but reflected David’s dauntless resolution.
Then it was as if some soul of merriment swept over us all. I saw strangers
embracing, there was clapping of hands, and the concluding hymn was shouted so
joyously that a slit in the little window overhead was thrust back, and I saw
the face of a sentinel stare in on us with something of superstitious awe.
The glass must have been sound-proof, like that
which enclosed Lembken’s gardens, for, as the slit was pushed back, I heard the
cries of the multitude in the courts above:
“Sanson! Sanson! Sanson!” they howled. “Out with
the Christian morons! To the Rest Cure! The Rest Cure!”
The slit was pushed into place, cutting off all
sound. Darkness was falling. The little light within the vault faded. Gradually
the voices died away. Sometimes a hymn would be started, but mostly we sat
silent now, and even the dogs ceased howling, and only stirred and whined at
intervals. I heard the little woman’s children whimper, and fancied her
motherly face bent over them as she quieted their fears. I only felt
Elizabeth’s presence, and that of David, good, fatherly man, on whom I leaned
more than he knew. At last the only sounds were the bishop’s mumbling voice, as
he talked to himself, and the staccato tapping of his stick on the stone
floors.
A man near me leaped up and craned his neck,
looking into the gloom
“They are coming,” I heard him say. “They are
gathering up the Stockholm fleets. They will be here—”
“Who?” I burst out.
“The Russians,” he answered gently. “See them
coming; big men, with bloody crosses on their breasts.”
A man near me leaped up and craned his neck,
looking into the gloom. One or two cried out at the old bishop’s words, and
some listened and whispered eagerly. Time passed. Most of the prisoners slept.
I was still too sick and dizzy from my wound; I waited in a sort of apathy, and
I seemed to see Esther within the opening cylinder, and Sanson, creeping like a
foul beast of prey toward her.
I had been dozing. I started up at the sound of
bolts being withdrawn, the heavy door at the far end of the vault was opened,
and flashing lights shone in on us. The dogs, awakened, began to howl again.
There was the stamping of heavy boots upon the stones, and a detachment of the
Guard appeared before us.
They numbered seven. Six of them were privates,
carrying solar torches and Ray rods; and in their midst stood a tall man with a
black beard and a curved sword sheath that clanked on the stones. I recognized
in him Mehemet, the Turkish commander.
Some, who had slept and mercifully forgotten all,
sat up in bewilderment, others leaped up, thinking the hour had come. As we
stood blinking at the lights, Mehemet spoke a few words, and the soldiers
flashed their torches into our faces until they lighted on mine. Then Mehemet
stepped forward and laid his hand on my shoulder, and drew me toward him; and
the soldiers closed about us.
David sprang toward them.
“You shall not take him alone!” he cried. “Let us
go with him, every one of us. We shall go to death together.”
And others sprang forward too, clamoring,
beseeching. “Take us all!” they cried. “Take us together!”
Mehemet shrugged his shoulders and turned away.
The captives flung themselves before the soldiers, who hesitated.
It was then that the old bishop, who had never
ceased to mumble, I think, came quietly up to us.
“It is all right. Let him go,” he said gently. “He
will come to no harm.”
A tall man with a black beard and a curved sword
sheath that clanked on the stones.
I recognized in him Mehemet the Turkish commander
“It is my orders,” said Mehemet, looking with
respect at Bishop Alfred. “I have come for him alone.”
Half quieted by the bishop’s intervention, my
fellow-prisoners ceased to offer forcible resistance. But they wept and prayed,
and David grasped me by the hand.
“We shall be together in spirit, Arnold!” he
cried. “God be with you. God be with you.” He flung his arms about me, and the
guards, touched by the scene, permitted him to accompany me as far as the door.
They picked their way carefully by the light of their torches, to avoid
treading on the dogs, which crept to their feet or strained, yelping, upon
their chains. At the door I found Elizabeth.
“We shall be with you in your hour, Arnold!” she
said, embracing me and fighting back her sobs valiantly. “We shall all think of
you tomorrow.”
The crowd dispersed. The last thing that I saw was
the white, terrified, maternal face of the little woman, as she clutched her
children to her breast, and, over her, the bishop’s pastoral staff, held up as
if to shield her.
The door was closed behind me, and the soldiers
shot the bolts home. In front of me was a flight of winding concrete stairs,
dividing at a central space into two portions that ran right and left
respectively. We took the left. I expected to emerge into the Vivisection
Bureau, to see the eager students of the medical school, and Sanson, the
presiding devil, there. But instead I saw a gate above me; a guard unlocked it.
Then I found myself standing alone beside Mehemet, in the interior court
between the Temple and the Airscouts’ Fortress, between the Science Wing and
the Council Building.
High above me the bridges crossed, spanning the
gulf in whose recess we stood. I saw once more the palms against the upreared
crystal walls.
As I watched I saw the battleplanes take their
flight once more, one by one, from the roof of the Airscouts’ Fortress, rising
into the dark night like luminous balloons. In the distance London glowed like
day.
Behind us, in the outer courts, a multitude was
shrieking curses upon the Christians; and, for the first time, I heard threats
against Lembken, and realized that Sanson’s plans were made for that coup which
I was never to see.
“We are going to Sanson?” I asked Mehemet, nerving
myself for his affirmative reply.
He spat. “The jackal!” he said. “Sooner would I
become a Christian than serve such spawn. We are going to the People’s House.”
Evidently Sanson did not know that the main prop
of his new house had fallen.
CHAPTER XXI - AMARANTH
I stepped out of the elevator into a part of the
Palace that I had not seen before. The room into which the waiting negro
ushered me was completely dark, though a thin line of light at the further end
showed me that there was a lighted room beyond.
I strained my eyes, striving to penetrate the
gloom. I took a few steps forward, stretching out my hands to feel if any
obstacle were in the way. Looking back, I could not even discern the heavy
curtain that had dropped soundlessly behind me.
I knew that there was someone in the room, and
that it was not Lembken. I waited; I heard the rustle of a woman’s garment.
Then swiftly the room was flooded with the soft solar light.
It was bare, except for the rugs and a low divan
pushed against one wall, with a little table beside it. Everything was of the
color of gold: the walls, the ceiling, the rugs upon the floor. And before me,
clothed from head to foot in a sheer, trailing garment of dull gold, stood the
girl Amaranth.
Her dark hair was bound back in a loose Grecian
knot, her sandaled feet gleamed white on the gold fabric under them; she
stretched out her white arms to me and, taking me by the hand, led me to the
divan and placed me at her side.
“Poor Arnold!” she began in a caressing tone, “you
have suffered so much in your ignorance and your desire to help your friends.
But all your troubles are ended now, and your friends shall not be harmed. Do
you think you can love me, Arnold?”
She looked at me with neither boldness nor
hesitation, and then, folding her arms, drummed her sandal heels against the
foot of the divan.
“Are you not lucky, Arnold, to have won my love!”
she continued. “I gave my love to you from the moment when I first saw you
enter the room in which I sat with Lembken, looking so stern, so resolute, like
one of those adventurous heroes of the twentieth century of whom we read in our
romances. That is why I made Lembken tell Mehemet to bring you here. He was so
hurt by your departure that I think he would have let his plans go to ruin
rather than himself plead with you. He is very sensitive and kind.
“You are not afraid to love me, Arnold?” she
continued, looking at me with curious scrutiny. “You need not be afraid.
Lembken has grown tired of me, so I must find another. He has taken a fancy to
Coral, my blue, an absurd little yellow-haired thing. You shall see her.”
She clapped her hands twice, and a door opened,
apparently a part of the wall. A fair-haired girl, dressed in a loose blue
tunic and Zouave trousers, entered, carrying a tray on which were two golden
winecups.
Amaranth took the nearest cup in her hands,
touched the rim with her lips, and held it out to me.
“Drink with me, Arnold,” she said.
But I would not drink, lest the corruption of the
wine should dull me and disarm my strength in the spell of that enervating
hell. I handed back the cup to her.
Amaranth looked at me for an instant with
quivering lips. Then she burst into tears and hurled the cup at the maid. She
flung the other also. The first missed its mark and fell against the base of
the wall, where it shed its ruby contents in a widening stain. The second cup
struck the maid’s cheek and cut it, and the wine drenched the blue tunic.
The maid smiled, biting her lips, stooped down,
picked up both cups, and, placing them on the tray, departed silently. Amaranth
sobbed as if her heart was broken. Then suddenly she turned and flung her arms
about me.
“Arnold, I love you!” she cried. “You saw her? She
is Lembken’s favorite now, that yellow-haired fool with the blue eyes like
saucers. Lembken means us for each other. Can you not love me?”
I sat in silence, trying to pick my path
cautiously through the mists of bewildering doubt. Amaranth unclasped her arms
from about my neck, and her face assumed a look of mockery.
“Oh, I know!” she said, “it is that Elizabeth of
yours whom you think you love. And you think you can only love one at a time,
in your romantic twentieth-century way. Well, I will match myself against her.
You shall bring her here, Arnold, and I will fight her for you, and I will be
your blue and she shall be your white, and I will serve you obediently till I
have won your heart. Look on me, Arnold! See how beautiful I am! For I was born
here; I am Boss Rose’s daughter, and I have never left the People’s House. Look
at the whiteness of my skin! The sun has never shone on it. Look at my lips,
Arnold! Put your mouth to my cheek—it is as soft as the bloom upon a nectarine.
Do you think, then, I am afraid to match myself against your Elizabeth?”
She smiled contemptuously, and tilted back her
head, and clasped her hands behind it, and watched me through her lashes. Yet I
detected a resource of feverish resolve in her; and I knew that she and I,
Mehemet, Sanson, were that night weaving the threads in a fabric upon the loom
of destiny, and that each word we spoke flashed like the thread-bearing shuttle
over it.
So, piecing my words together with infinite care,
because the lives of Esther and all those who were dear to me hung on them, I
answered her:
“Forgive my sullen mood. You have promised that my
friends shall go free; yet they expect to die at sunrise, and it is hard to be
at ease. How can I save them?”
Amaranth unclasped her hands and turned to me with
a quick gesture of penitence.
“Ah, it was wrong of me to speak of love first,
when you have such a burden of sorrow, Arnold!” she answered. “I had forgotten
that men’s minds are troubled in the world below. Here we are free and have no
cares, except how we shall take our pleasures. And to think that you left us to
help your friends, when Lembken would have done everything you wished!
“Now I will set your mind at rest. Lembken has
already given the command that your friends shall live until Sanson has spoken
in the Temple, and when he has spoken he will no longer have power—if you obey
Lembken. But he was deeply hurt by your leaving him, for he is very sensitive
to unkindness, and so he asked me to speak to you on his behalf. Now, if you
act loyally, you may save your friends and the world. Tomorrow there will be an
end to all of Sanson’s mad schemes of tyranny. Mehemet and his guards have
abandoned him. Lembken knows everything; he knows all the desperate plans his
poor people have made, and his heart is wrung for them.”
She paused, and placing her hand on mine, looked
very earnestly at me.
“Arnold, you know that Sanson has been poisoning
the people’s minds against Lembken, in pursuance of his plan to depose him,”
she continued. “So your part, which will be detailed to you later, will be to
enter the Temple tomorrow among the priests. You will defend Lembken against
Sanson. You will remind the people how they elected him from year to year,
because he was their friend. Tell them he has not changed. And in return
liberty shall be established and the hated Guard disbanded. Lembken asks only
for his dignity and wealth, and his friends in the People’s House. He is
growing old, Arnold, and desires power no more.”
She watched me with that centuries-old look, and
in my heart I knew I had not fathomed hers. This was what I had meant to
propose. Yet—yet I doubted her.
“It is agreed, then,” she cried gaily, “and now
you will be one of us. It is past midnight, Arnold, and in a few short hours
you shall be hidden in the priests’ room to be coached for your part. Till
then—”
She ceased suddenly, as the sound of voices came
from the room beyond the further door. She slipped from the divan.
“Sanson has been with Lembken,” she whispered. “He
is coming this way. Arnold, do you want to see your enemy broken? That will be
a glorious beginning to this first night of ours, and afterwards we shall go to
the revels in the garden. I shall be proud of you, Arnold, for now the girls
are taunting me because Lembken is tired of me. How I shall be envied! But come
here quickly!”
She took me to the door in the wall through which
the girl Coral had come. At a distance of a few paces it was invisible. I
wondered how many more such doors were set in the walls of Lembken’s palace.
“You shall listen here,” she said, “I trust you
Arnold. You will not lose your self-control and enter, no matter what you hear?
Ah, I shall test your love for that Elizabeth! But I trust you, and the
beginning of this night’s masque shall be the humbling of your enemy. Stay here
until I call you!”
She thrust me behind the door and withdrew,
closing it. I heard the rustle of her garment as she crossed the room—then
nothing.
I found myself standing in a dim corridor that ran
as far as I could see in either direction. The nameless horror of the Palace
overcame me, and it was with a strong effort that I controlled my wild impulse
of flight.
As I stood there I heard the sound of stealthy
footsteps, and, looking up, saw the maid Coral coming softly toward me. She was
carrying the tray, with two full winecups, and she stopped beside me and set it
down on the carpet.
She stood looking at me. Her eyes were blazing
with anger, and her slim body shook under the blue tunic. But on her mouth was
the same set smile that I had seen when she picked up the cups.
She said nothing, but, placing her hand against
the door, opened it an inch or two without the slightest sound. At that moment
I heard a door opened, the rustle of Amaranth’s robe, and a lithe tread on the
floor.
Sanson spoke. “I have said all that there is to
say,” he answered. “Why do you plead with me? Do you think a woman can plead
with me where Lembken failed? He shall have his honors and residence here—no
more.”
“But spare your prisoners, Sanson,” said Amaranth
softly. “Spare Arnold. For my sake,” she said, pleading.
Sanson spoke curtly. “All Christians and all
morons must be tomorrow’s sacrifice to the new era,” he answered.
“Do not go, Sanson,” Amaranth besought him, as he
moved away from her. “Listen to me! You, who are so merciless and cruel, why do
you not take all?”
“I have all that I need,” he said impatiently.
“What more?”
“Why have you spared Lembken? Why do you not slay
him and rule with us? We hate him. He is a tyrant, and you know the fate of his
women when they have ceased to please. You who have made yourself the master of
the world, for whose sight we throng the sides of the crystal walls as you
cross the courts below—why have you refused the pleasures that are for the
world’s masters?”
He stood still; I fancied that he was looking at
her, trying to measure his problem in the balances once more. Coral cast a
glance at me. The smile was still on her face, but she nodded her head
thoughtfully, as if she, too, had her problem.
“Listen, Sanson,” continued Amaranth fiercely,
“when Boss Rose climbed to power he built the People’s House and made it a
pleasure-palace for the world’s elect. Then he died under a murderer’s dagger,
and Lembken, who had long envied him, came to rule in his place. He, too, has
lived his time. Now he is broken. You, the next ruler of the world—why do you
not do as he did? We are tired of him. We want another lord, Sanson.”
I knew that she was clinging to him as she had
clung to me. I did not look at Coral, but I knew that she was still smiling.
“You can set us free, Sanson,” continued Amaranth
gently. “You can rid us of our tyrant.”
The murmuring voice went on and on, and Sanson
made no answer.
“You have not entered the People’s House for seven
years until tonight. Do you think we have forgotten that you exist? Do you
think we have not wondered why the master of the world has left us to the whims
of that fat old man? Sit by me, Sanson. Do you not see how you have toiled
while Lembken has taken his ease? You have waited so long for one woman. Oh,
yes, I know; all a great man’s secrets are known everywhere, though he thinks
them in sanctuary, securely guarded. You can take her—but take us too. Live
your life, Sanson! Save us and reign over us! Take me, Sanson—”
I heard the man breathe as if in a trance. That
strange pity which he inspired in me awoke again. All the long tragedy of his
life, the vigil of five and thirty years, the love that must prove vain—I
realized it all. For this vain love he had ensnared the world, and now the
world leaped at him to ensnare him. Devil as he was, in will his life had been,
in one respect, a hero’s.
“Drink with me, Sanson,” I heard Amaranth murmur.
“You do not know the taste of wine. A pledge to our love. A pledge to our
lives!”
She was conquering. The tyrant of the world was
almost prostrate at the feet of this girl of twenty years. Attila’s fate was to
be his. I heard him groan in bitterness of conflict.
Amaranth clapped twice. Instantly the girl Coral
stooped down, pushing me fiercely from the door, and, taking up the tray, went
in. Amaranth took the brimming winecup and touched it with her lips.
“Drink, Sanson!” she murmured.
I was watching them now. I saw Sanson rise and
raise the cup in his hand. He did not drink, neither did he reject it, but
stood like one in a daze, all movement inhibited by the fierceness of that
inner struggle. Amaranth seized the second cup from the tray, leaped from the
couch, and raised it on high.
“To our love, Sanson!” she cried, and drained it.
At that moment the jagged cut on the girl Coral’s
face grew red with blood again.
Coral stood holding the tray, and she looked at
Amaranth and smiled. She stood like a tinted statue.
Sanson was still standing in front of the divan.
He had not drunk; he held the cup in his hand and was himself as immobile as a
statue.
“Will you not drink the pledge that I have drunk?”
asked Amaranth, laying her fingers lightly on his arm and leaning toward him.
And I had underestimated Sanson after all. Now, at
the moment of surrender, his indomitable will flamed out, seeming to possess
his body and mold each feature, every muscle to its unconquerable resolve.
“I will not drink!” he cried, and flung the cup to
the floor.
He turned and strode from the room like the
conqueror he was. He passed the curtain, which fell behind him. He had won his
hardest battle, taken unaware, fighting against a cunning ambush; and I knew
now that hardly an earthly enemy could conquer him.
I was in the room now, for there was no need to
hide myself any longer. I watched Amaranth, who, as statuesque as Sanson had
been, stood looking after him. A minute passed.
Suddenly she wheeled about and clapped her hands
to her side. She staggered; a spasm of pain crossed her face, and she looked
searchingly at Coral. The maid in the blue tunic looked back at her, smiling.
Their eyes did not waver until Amaranth swayed
backward and fell on the divan. A scream broke from her lips, and then another;
a third; she wrung her hands and moaned.
I kneeled before her. “What is it, Amaranth?” I
cried.
Sanson’s indomitable will flamed out. “I will not
drink!” he cried, and flung the cup to the floor
She raised herself and looked wildly at me. Her
face was ashen pale, the features pinched; dark rings had crept beneath her
eyes.
“She gave me the—wrong cup,” she whispered.
I tried to go for aid, but Amaranth clung to me.
“There is no hope,” she sobbed. “I must die. Stay with me, Arnold!”
Her head fell back and she breathed heavily. I
turned and saw Coral beside me, a smiling, waxen doll, the new queen of the
harem by the dying one.
“Go!” I thundered at her.
She shrugged her shoulders daintily and went,
leaving the winecups on the floor.
Amaranth’s hand trembled upon my sleeve. I bent
over her. Her eyes fixed themselves on mine.
“Put your hand under me,” she muttered; “raise me.
All is lost now. Sanson has beaten Lembken, and everything is ended. Save your
Elizabeth if you can.”
She drew my face toward hers and spoke in panting
accents:
“It was Lembken’s plot. He learned that Sanson
held you in the vaults. His case was desperate. He asked Mehemet’s aid. Mehemet
said he—his men would not desert Sanson while he lived, but if he died they
would follow him for Lembken. I was to poison Sanson and thus win over the
Guard. I was to drug you only, and keep you out of the way. Lembken liked you;
he would not let you be killed. He has been communicating with the American
bosses. The plan—the plan—”
She gathered her strength with a last effort of
will.
“The plan was of long standing. Events hastened
it. Mehemet knew it. Britain was to have a God again, Mehemet’s God, and the
American Mormons were to unite with us, for their faith is nearly the same. The
people would have a god, and this would unite all nations against the Christian
Russians. They are in Stockholm. The American battleplanes are on their way to
help us against them. When Sanson was dead the guards were to join the
airscouts. Now you must go. Save your Elizabeth. Kill Sanson. I can say no
more. Escape—”
She muttered something that I could not hear, and
then her eyes, which had closed, reopened and wavered on mine again.
“I loved you, Arnold,” she said in a weak, clear
voice. “I’m glad I died before I lost you. I used to wish I had been born in
other days ... the twentieth-century days, when ... women were different ...
all different ... men mated one only ... give the people those days again if
you beat Sanson, Arnold.”
She tried to stretch out her hands to me. Her
eyelids quivered, and she sighed very deeply.
I saw a crimson stain upon my hands. It was the
wine from Sanson’s winecup.