Parables of a Province - LightNovelsOnl.com
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"He did evil? He is--" he paused.
"He is dead," she said. "It is better so." Her eyes wandered round the room restlessly, and then fixed upon the sleeping child, and a smile pa.s.sed over her face. She pointed to the lad.
The old man nodded. "He brought me here," he said gently. Then he got to his feet. "You must sleep now," he added, and he gave her a cordial. "I must go forth and save the sick."
"Is it a plague?" she asked.
He nodded. "They said you would not come to save them," she continued reproachfully. "You came to me because I was your Carille, only for that?"
"No, no," he answered; "I knew not who you were. I came to save a mother to her child."
"Thank G.o.d!" she said.
With a happy smile she hid her face in the pillow. At last, leaving her and the child asleep, old Felion went forth into the little city, and the people flocked to him, and for many days he came and went ceaselessly.
And once more he saved the city, and the people blessed him: and the years go on.
THE FORGE IN THE VALLEY
He lay where he could see her working at the forge. As she worked she sang:
"When G.o.d was making the world, (Swift is the wind and white is the fire) The feet of his people danced the stars; There was laughter and swinging bells,
And clanging iron and breaking breath, The hammers of heaven making the hills, The vales on the anvil of G.o.d.
(Wild is the fire and low is the wind.)"
His eyes were s.h.i.+ning, and his face had a pale radiance from the reflected light, though he lay in the shadow where he could watch her, while she could not see him. Now her hand was upon the bellows, and the low, white fire seethed hungrily up, and set its teeth upon the iron she held; now it turned the iron about upon the anvil, and the sparks showered about her very softly and strangely. There was a cheerful gravity in her motions, a high, fine look in her face.
They two lived alone in the solitudes of Megalon Valley.
It was night now, and the pleasant gloom of the valley was not broken by any sound save the hum of the stream near by, and the song, and the ringing anvil. But into the workshop came the moist, fragrant smell of the acacia and the maple, and a long brown lizard stretched its neck sleepily across the threshold of the door opening into the valley.
The song went on:
"When G.o.d had finished the world (Bright was the fire and sweet was the wind) Up from the valleys came song, To answer the morning stars, And the hand of man on the anvil rang; His breath was big in his breast, his life Beat strong on the walls of the world.
(Glad is the wind and tall is the fire.)"
He put his hands to his eyes, and took them away again, as though to make sure that the song was not a dream. Wonder grew upon his thin, bearded face, he ran his fingers through his thick hair in a dazed way.
Then he lay and looked, and a rich warm flush crept over his cheek, and stayed there.
There was a great gap in his memory.
The evening wore on. Once or twice the woman turned towards the room where the man lay, and listened--she could not see his face from where she stood. At such times he lay still, though his heart beat quickly, like that of an expectant child. His lips opened to speak, but still they remained silent. As yet he was like a returned traveller who does not quickly recognise old familiar things, and who is struggling with vague suggestions and forgotten events. As time went on, the woman turned towards the doorway oftener, and s.h.i.+fted her position so that she faced it, and the sparks, flying up, lighted her face with a wonderful irregular brightness.
"Samantha," he said at last, and his voice sounded so strange to him that the word quivered timidly towards her.
She paused upon a stroke, and some new note in his voice sent so sudden a thrill to her heart that she caught her breath with a painful kind of joy. The hammer dropped upon the anvil, and, in a moment, she stood in the doorway of his room.
"Francis, Francis," she responded in a low whisper. He started up from his couch of skins. "Samantha, my wife!" he cried, in a strong proud voice.
She dropped beside him and caught his head, like a mother, to her shoulder, and set her warm lips on his forehead and hair with a kind of hunger; and then he drew her face down and kissed her on the lips. Tears hung at her eyes, and presently dropped on her cheeks, a sob shook her, and then she was still, her hands grasping his shoulders.
"Have I been ill?" he asked.
"You have been very ill, Francis."
"Has it been long?"
Her fingers pa.s.sed tenderly through his grizzled hair. "Too long, too long, my husband," she replied.
"Is it summer now?"
"Yes, Francis, it is summer."
"Was it in the spring, Samantha?--Yes, I think it was in the spring," he added, musing.
"It was in a spring."
"There was snow still on the mountain-top, the river was running high, and wild fowl were gathered on the island in the lake--yes, I remember, I think."
"And the men were working at the mine," she whispered, her voice shaking a little, and her eyes eagerly questioning his face.
"Ah, the mine--it was the mine, Samantha!" he said abruptly, his eyes flas.h.i.+ng up. "I was working at the forge to make a great bolt for the machinery, and some one forgot and set the engine in motion. I ran out; but it was too late... and then..."
"And then you tried to save them, Francis, and you were hurt."
"What month is this, my wife?"
"It is December."
"And that was in October?"
"Yes, in October."
"I have been ill since? What happened?"
"Many were killed, Francis, and you and I came away."
"Where are we now? I do not know the place."
"This is Megalon Valley. You and I live alone here."
"Why did you bring me here?"
"I did not bring you, Francis; you wished me to come. One day you said to me: 'There is a place in Megalon Valley where, long ago, an old man lived, who had become a stranger among men--a place where the blackbird stays, and the wolf-dog troops and hides, and the damson grows as thick as blossoms on the acacia. We will go there.' And I came with you."