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"Why do you say that Sanang slew your soul?" asked Recklow, peering at her averted face through the reddening firelight.
She lay still in her chair for a moment, then turned suddenly on him:
"He _did_ slay it! He came to the Lake of the Ghosts as my lover; he meant to have done it there; but I would not have him--would not listen, nor suffer his touch!--I mocked at him and his pa.s.sion. I laughed at his Tchortchas. They were afraid of me!--"
She half rose from her chair, grasped the arms, then seated herself again, her eyes ablaze with the memory of wrongs.
"How dare I show my dear lord that I am in love with him when Sanang's soul caught my soul out of my body one day--surprised my soul while my body lay asleep in the Yezidee Temple!--and bore it in his arms to the very gates of h.e.l.l!"
"Good G.o.d," whispered Recklow, "what do you mean? Such things can't happen."
"Why not? They do happen. I was caught unawares.... It was one golden afternoon, and Yulan and Sansa and I were eating oranges by the fountain in the inner shrine. And I lay down by the pool and _made the effort_--you understand?"
"Yes."
"Very well. My soul left my body asleep and I went out over the tops of the flowers--idly, without aim or intent--as the winds blow in summer.... It was in the Wood of the White Moth that I saw Sanang's soul flash downward like a streak of fire and wrap my soul in flame!... And, in a flash, we were at the gates of h.e.l.l before I could free myself from his embrace.... Then, by the Temple pool, among the oranges, I cried out asleep; and my terrified body sat up sobbing and trembling in Yulun's arms. But the Slayer of Souls had slain mine in the Wood of the White Moth--slain it as he caught me in his flaming arms.... And now you know why such a woman as I dare not bend to kiss the dust from my dear Lord's feet--Aie-a! Aie-a! I who have lost my girl's soul to him who slew it in the Wood of the White Moth!"
She sat rocking in her chair in the red firelight, her hands framing her lovely face, her eyes staring straight ahead as though they saw opening before them through the sombre shadows of that room all the dread magic of the East where the dancing flame of Sanang's blazing soul lighted their path to h.e.l.l through the enchanted forest.
Recklow had grown pale, but his voice was steady.
"I see no reason," he said, "why your husband should not love you."
"I tell you my girl's soul belonged to Sanang--was part of his, for an instant."
"It is burned pure of dross."
"It is _burned_."
Recklow remained silent. Tressa lay deep in her armchair, twisting her white fingers.
"What makes him so late?" she said.... "I sent my soul out twice to look for him, and could not find him."
"Send it again," said Recklow, fearfully.
For ten minutes the girl lay as though asleep, then her eyes unclosed and she said drowsily: "I can not find him."
"Did--did you learn anything while--while you were--away?" asked Recklow cautiously.
"Nothing. There is a thick darkness out there--I mean a darkness gathering over the whole land. It is like a black fog. When the d.a.m.ned pray to Erlik there is a darkness that gathers like a brown mist----"
Her voice ceased; her hands tightened on the arms of her chair.
"_That_ is what Sanang is doing!" she said in a breathless voice.
"What?" demanded Recklow.
"_Praying!_ That is what he is doing! A million perverted minds which he has seized and obsessed are being concentrated on blasphemous prayers to Erlik! Sanang is directing them. Do you understand the terrible power of a million minds all _willing_, in unison, the destruction of good and the triumph of evil? A million human minds! More! For that is what he is doing. That is the thick darkness that is gathering over the entire Western world. It is the terrific materialisation of evil power from evil minds, all focussed upon the single thought that evil must triumph and good die!"
She sat, gripping the arms of her chair, pale, rigid, terribly alert, dreadfully enlightened, now, concerning the awful and new menace threatening the sanity of mankind.
She said in her steady, emotionless voice: "When the Yezidee Sorcerers desire to overwhelm a nomad people--some yort perhaps that has resisted the Sheiks of the Eight Towers, then the Slayer of Souls rides with his Black Banners to the Namaz-Ga or Place of Prayer.
"Two marble bridges lead to it. There are fourteen hundred mosques there. Then come the Eight, each with his shroud, chanting the prayers for those dead in h.e.l.l. And there the Yezidees pray blasphemously, all their minds in ferocious unison.... And I have seen a little yort full of Broad Faces with their slanting eyes and spa.r.s.e beards, sicken and die, and turn black in the sun as though the plague had breathed on them. And I have seen the Long Noses and bushy beards of walled towns wither and perish in the blast and blight from the Namaz-Ga where the Slayer of Souls sat his saddle and prayed to Erlik, and half a million Yezidees prayed in blasphemous unison."
Recklow's head rested on his left hand. The other, unconsciously, had crept toward his pistol--the weapon which had become so useless in this awful struggle between this girl and the loosened forces of h.e.l.l.
"Is that what you think Sanang is about?" he asked heavily.
"Yes. I know it. He has seized the minds of a million men in America.
Every anarchist is to-day concentrating in one evil and supreme mental effort, under Sanang's direction, to will the triumph of evil and the doom of civilisation.... I wish my husband would come home."
"Tressa?"
She turned her pallid face in the firelight: "If Sanang has appointed a Place of Prayer," she said, "he himself will pray on that spot. That will be the Namaz-Ga for the last two Yezidee Sorcerers still alive in the Western World."
"That's what I wished to ask you," said Recklow softly. "Will you try once more, Tressa?"
"Yes. I will send out my soul again to look for the Namaz-Ga."
She lay back in her armchair and closed her eyes.
"Only," she added, as though to herself, "I wish my dear lord were safe in this room beside me.... May G.o.d's warriors be his escort. And surely they are well armed, and can prevail over demons. Aie-a! I wish my lord would come home out of the darkness.... Mr. Recklow?"
"Yes, Tressa."
"I thought I heard him on the stairs."
"Not yet."
"Aie-a!" she sighed and closed her eyes again.
She lay like one dead. There was no sound in the room save the soft purr of the fire.
Suddenly from the sleeping girl a frightened voice burst: "Yulun! Yulun!
Where is that yellow maid of the Baroula.s.s?... What is she doing? That sleek young thing belongs to Togrul Kahn? Yulun! I am afraid of her!
Tell Sansa to watch that she does not stir from the Lake of the Ghosts!... Warn that young Baroula.s.s Sorceress that if she stirs I slay her. And know how to do it in spite of Sanang and all the prayers from the Namaz-Ga! Yulun! Sansa! Watch her, follow her, hearts of flame! My soul be ransom for yours! Tokhta!"
The girl's eyes unclosed. Presently she stirred slightly, pa.s.sed one hand across her forehead, turned her head toward Recklow.
"I could not discover the Namaz-Ga," she said wearily. "I wish my husband would return."
CHAPTER XVI
THE PLACE OF PRAYER