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Fruit of Knowledge
It was the first Sabbath. Down the open glades of Eden a breeze stirred softly. Nothing else in sight moved except a small winged head that fluttered, yawning, across the glade and vanished among leaves that drew back to receive it. The air quivered behind it like a wake left in water of incomparable clarity.
From far away and far above a faint drift of singing echoed, "Hosannah . . - hosannah . . - hosannah-"
The seraphim were singing about the Throne.
A pool at the edge of the glade gave back light and color like a great, dim jewel. It gave back reflections, too. The woman who bent over it had just discovered that. She was leaning above the water until her cloudy dark hair almost dipped into the surface. There was a curious shadow all about her, like a thin garment which did not quite conceal how lovely she was, and though no breeze stirred just now, that shadow garment moved uneasily upon her and her hair lifted a little as if upon a breeze that did not blow.
She was so quiet that a pa.s.sing cherub-head paused above the water to look, too, hanging like a hummingbird motionless over its own reflection in the pool.
"Pretty!" approved the cherub in a small, piping voice. "New here, aren't you?"
The woman looked up with a slow smile, putting back the veil of her hair.
"Yes, I am," she answered softly. Her voice did not sound quite sure of itself. She had never spoken aloud before until this moment.
"You'll like the Garden," said the cherub in a slightly patronizing tone, giving his rainbow wings a shake.
"Anything I can do for you? I'm not busy just now. Be glad to show you around."
"Thank you," smiled the woman, her voice sounding a little more confident. "I'll find my way."
The cherub shrugged his colored wings. "Just as you say. By the way, I suppose they warned you about the Tree?"
The woman glanced up at him rather quickly, her shadowy eyes narrowing.
"The Tree? Is there danger?"
"Oh, no. You mustn't touch it, that's all. It's the one in the middle of the Garden, the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil-you can't miss it. I saw the Man looking at it yesterday for quite a while.
That reminds me, have you met the Man?"
The woman bent her head so that the hair swung forward to veil her face. From behind it, in a voice that sounded as if she might be smiling, she said: "He's waiting for me now."
"Oh?" said the cherub, impressed. "Well, you'll find him over by the orange grove east of the Tree. He's resting. It's the Day of Rest, you know." The cherub tilted an intimate eyebrow heavenward and added: "He's resting, too. Hear the singing? He made the Man only yesterday, right out of this very earth you're standing on. We were all watching. It was wonderful- Afterward, He called the man Adam, and then Adam named the animals- By the way, what's your name?"
The woman smiled down at her own veiled reflection in the water. After a moment- "Lilith," she said.
The cherub stared, his eyes widening into two blue circles of surprise. He was speechless for an instant.
Then he purs~d his pink mouth to whistle softly.
"Why," he stammered, "you . . . you're the Queen of Air and Darkness!"
Smiling up at him from the corners of her eyes, the woman nodded. The cherub stared at her big-eyed for a moment longer, too overcome for speech. Then, suddenly, he beat his rainbow pinions together and darted off through the trees without another word, the translucent air rippling in a lazy, half-visible wake behind him. Lilith looked after him with a shadowy smile on her face. He was going to warn Adam. The smile deepened. Let him.Lilith turned for one last glance into the mirror of the pool at the strange new shape she had just put on. It was the newest thing in crea-tion-not even G.o.d knew about it. And rather surprisingly, she thought she was going to like it. She did not feel nearly as stifled and heavy as she had expected to feel, and there was something distinctly pleasant in the softness of the breeze pouring caressingly about her body, the fragrance of springtime sweet in her nostrils, the gra.s.s under her bare feet. The Garden was beautiful with a beauty she had not realized until she saw it through human eyes. Everything she saw through them, indeed, was curiously different now. Here in this flesh all her faculties seemed refocused, as if she, who had always seen with such crystal clarity, now looked through rainbows at everything she saw. But it was a pleasant refocusing. She wished she had longer to enjoy her tenancy in this five-sensed flesh she shared with Adam.
But she had very little time. She glanced up toward the bright, unchanging glory above the trees as if she could pierce the floor of heaven and see G.o.d resting on the unimaginable splendor of the Throne while the seraphim chanted in long, s.h.i.+ning rows about him. At any moment he might stir and lean forward over Eden, looking down. Lilith instinctively shrugged her shadowy garment closer about her. If he did not look too closely, he might not pierce that shadow. But if he did- A little thrill of excitement, like forked lightning, went through the strange new flesh she wore. She liked danger.
She bent over the pool for one last look at herself, and the pool was a great, dim eye looking back at her, almost sentient, almost aware of her. This was a living Garden. The translucent air quivered with a rhythmic pulsing through the trees; the ground was resilient under her feet; vines drew back to let her pa.s.s beneath them. Lilith, turning away through the swimming air after the cherub, puzzled a little as she walked through the parting trees. The relation was very close be-tween flesh and earth-perhaps her body was so responsive to the beauty of the Garden because it aped so closely flesh that had been a part of the Garden yesterday. And if even she felt that kins.h.i.+p, what must Adam feel, who was himself earth only yesterday?
The Garden was like a vast, half-sentient ent.i.ty all around her, puls-ing subtly with the pulse of the lucent air. Had G.o.d drawn from this immense and throbbing fecundity all the life which peopled Eden? Was Adam merely an extension of it, a focus and intensification of the same life which pulsed through the Garden? Creation was too new; she could only guess.
She thought, too, of the Tree of Knowledge as she walked smoothly through the trees. That Tree, tempting and forbidden. Why? Was G.o.d testing Man somehow? Was Man then, not quite finished, after all? Was there any flaw in Eden? Suddenly she knew that there must be. Her very presence here was proof of it, for she, above all others, had no right to intrude into this magical closed sphere which was G.o.d's greatest work. Yet here she walked through the heart of it, and not even G.o.d knew, yet- Lilith slanted a smile up through the leaves toward the choruses of the seraphim whose singing swelled and sank and swelled again, unut-terably sweet high above the trees.
The animals watched her pa.s.s with wide, bewildered eyes, somehow not quite at ease, although no such thing as fear had yet stirred through the Garden. Lilith glanced at them curiously as she pa.s.sed. They were pretty things. She liked Eden.
Presently a swooning fragrance came drifting to her through the trees, almost too sweet to enjoy, and she heard a small voice piping ex-citedly: "Lilith . . . Air and Darkness- He won't like it! Michael ought to know-"
Liith smiled and stepped clear of the trees into the full, soft glow of Eden's sun. It did not touch the shadow that dimly veiled the pale contours of this newest shape in Eden. Once or twice that intangible breeze lifted her hair in a great, dim cloud about her, though no leaves moved. She stood quiet, staring across the glade, and as she stared she felt the first small tremor of distrust in this new flesh she wore.
For on a gra.s.sy bank in the sunlight, under the blossoming orange trees, lay Adam. And the trees and the flowers of Eden had seemed beautiful to the eyes of this body Lilith wore, and the breezes and the perfumes had delighted it-but here was flawless perfection newly shaped out of the warm red earth ofEden into the image of its Maker, and the sight of him frightened Lilith because it pleased her so. She did not trust a beauty that brought her to a standstill under the trees, not quite certain why she had stopped.
He sprawled in long-limbed magnificence on the gra.s.s, laughing up at the cherub with his curly yellow head thrown back. Every line of him and every motion had a splendid male beauty as perfect as Om-nipotence could make it. Though he wore no clothing he was no more naked than she, for there was a curious glow all about him, a garment of subtle glory that clothed him as if with an all-enveloping halo.
The cherub danced excitedly up and down in the air above him, shrilling: "She shouldn't be here! You know she shouldn't! She's evil, that's what she is! G.o.d won't like it!
She-" Then above Adam's head he caught Lilith's eye, gulped a time or two, piped one last admonis.h.i.+ng, "Better watch out!" and fluttered away among the leaves, looking back over one wing as he flew.
Adam's gaze followed the cherub's. The laughter faded from his face and he got up slowly, the long, smooth muscles sliding beau- tifully under his garment of subtle glory as he moved. He was utter perfection in everything he did, flawless, new-made at the hands of Cod. He came toward her slowly, a s.h.i.+ning wonder on his face.
Lilith stared at him distrustfully. The other glories of the Garden had pleased her abstractly, in a way that left her mistress of herself. But here was something she did not understand at all. The eternal Lilith looked out, bewildered, through the eyes of a body that found something strange and wonderful in Adam. She laid a hand on the upper part of that body which rose and fell with her breathing, and felt something beating strongly beneath the smooth, curved surface of the stuff called flesh.
Adam came toward her slowly. They met in the middle of the glade, and for a long moment neither spoke. Then Adam said in a marveling voice, resonant and deep: "You. . . you're just as I knew you'd be- I knew you'd be some-where, if I could only find you.
'Where were you hiding?"
With an effort Lilith mastered this odd, swimming warmth in her which she did not understand. After all, he was nothing but a certain limited awareness housed in newly shaped flesh, and it made no real difference at all what shape that flesh wore. Her business was too dan-gerous for her to linger here admiring him because by some accident he was pleasing to the eyes of her newly acquired body. She made her voice like honey in her throat and looked up at him under her lashes, crooning: "I wasn't here at all, until you thought of me."
"Until I-" Adam's golden brows met.
"G.o.d made you in His image," said Lilith, fluttering the lashes. "There's so much of G.o.d in you still-didn't you know you could create, too, if you desired strongly enough?"
She remembered that deep need of his pulsing out and out in great, demanding waves from the Garden, and how it had seemed a call addressed to her alone. She had delighted as she yielded to it, deliber-ately subordinating her will to the will of the unseen caller in the Gar-den. She had let it draw her down out of the swimming void, let it mold flesh around her in the shape it chose, until all her being was in-cased in the strange, soft, yielding substance which was proving so treacherously responsive to the things she was encountering in Eden.
Adam shook his curly head uncomprehendingly. "You weren't here. I couldn't find you," he repeated, as if he had not heard her. "I watched all day among the animals, and they were all in twos but Man. I knew you must be somewhere. I knew just how you'd look. I thought I'd call you Eve when I found you-Eve, the Mother of All Living. Do you like it?"
"It's a good name," murmured Lilith, coming nearer to him, "but not for me. I'm Lilith, who came out of the dark because you needed me." She smiled a heady smile at him, and the shadowy garment drew thin across her shoulders as she lifted her arms. Adam seemed a little uncertain about what to do with his own arms as she clasped her hands behind his neck and tiptoed a little, lifting her face.
"Lilith?" he echoed in a bemused voice. "I like the sound. What does it mean?"
"Never mind," she crooned in her sweetest voice. "I came because you wanted me." And then, in a murmur: "Bend your head, Adam. I want to show you something-"It was the first kiss in Eden. 'When it was over, Lilith opened her eyes and looked up at Adam aghast, so deeply moved by the pleasantness of that kiss that she could scarcely remember the purpose that had prompted it. Adam blinked dizzily down at her. He had found what to do with his arms. He stammered, still in that bemused voice: "Thank G.o.d, you did come! I wish He could have sent you sooner. We-"
Lilith recovered herself enough to murmur gently: "Don't you un-derstand, dear? G.o.d didn't send me. It was you, yourself, waiting and wanting me, that let me take shape out of. . . never mind. . . and come to you in the body you pictured for me, because I knew what wonderful things we could accomplish here in Eden, together. You're G.o.d's own image, and you have greater powers than you know, Adam." The tremendous idea that had come to her in the ether when she first heard his soundless call glowed in her voice. "There's no limit to what we could do here, together! Greater things than even G.o.d ever dreamed-"
"You're so pretty," interrupted Adam, smiling down at her with his disarming, empty smile. "I'm so glad you came-"
Lilith let the rest of her eagerness run out in a long sigh. It was no use trying to talk to him now. He was too new. Powerful with a G.o.dlike power, yes, but unaware of it-unaware even of himself as an individual being. He had not tasted the Fruit of Knowledge and his innocence was as flawless as his beauty. Nothing was in his mind, or could be, that G.o.d had not put there at his shaping from the warm earth of Eden.
And perhaps it was best, after all. Adam was too close to G.o.dhood to see eye to eye with her in all she might want to do. If he never tasted knowledge, then he would ask no questions-and so he must never touch the Tree.
The Tree- It reminded her that Eden was still a testing ground, not a finished creation. She thought she knew now what the flaw in man had been which made it possible for Lilith, of all the creatures of ether, to stand here at the very focus of all the power and beauty and innocence in Eden. Lilith, who was evil incarnate and knew it very well. G.o.d had made Adam incomplete, and not, perhaps, realized the flaw.
And out of Adam's need Adam himself had created woman- who was not complete either. Lilith realized it suddenly, and began to understand the depth of her reaction to this magnificent creature who still held her in his arms.
There was an idea somewhere back of all this which was immensely important, but her mind would not pursue it. Her mind kept sliding off the question to dwell cloudily on the Man upon whose shoulder she was leaning. What curious stuff this flesh was! While she wore it, not even the absorbing question of G.o.d's purpose, not even her own peril here, could quite obliterate the knowledge of Adam's presence, his arm about her. Values had changed in a frightening way, and the most frightening thing of all was that she did not care. She laid her head back on his shoulder and inhaled the honeyed perfume of the orange blossoms, futilely reminding herself that she was dangerously wasting time. At any moment G.o.d might look down and see her, and there was so much to be done before that happened. She must master this delicious fogging of the senses whenever Adam's arm tightened about her. The Garden must be fortified, and she must begin now.
Sighing, she laced her fingers through Adam's and crooned in the softest voice: "I want to see the Garden. Won't you show it to me?"
His voice was warm as he answered: "I want to! I hoped you'd ask me that. It's such a wonderful place."
A cherub fluttered across the valley as they strolled eastward, and paused on beating wings to frown down at them.
"Wait till He looks down," he piped. "Just wait, that's all!" Adam laughed, and the cherub clucked disapprovingly and fluttered off, shaking his head.
Lilith, leaning on Adam's shoulder, laughed, too. She was glad that he could not understand the cherub's warnings, deaf in the perfection of his innocence. So long as she could prevent it he would never taste that Fruit. The knowledge of evil was not in him and it must neverbe. For she was herself, as she realized well, the essence of abstract evil as opposed to abstract good-balancing it, making it possible. Her part was as necessary as G.o.d's in the scheme of creation, for light can-not exist without dark, nor positive without negative, nor good without evil.
Yet she did not feel in the least evil just now. There was no antago-nism at all between her negation and the strong positive innocence of the man beside her.
"Look," said Adam, sweeping a long-armed gesture. A low hillside lay before them, starry with flowers except for a scar in its side where the raw, bare earth of Eden showed through. The scar was already healing over with a faint mist of green. "That's where I was made," said Adam softly. "Right out of that hillside. Does it seem rather.
rather wonderful to you, Lilith?"
"If it does to you," she crooned, and meant it. "Why?"
"The animals don't seem to understand. I hoped you would. It's as if the. . . the whole Garden were part of me. If there are other men, do you suppose they'll love the earth like this, Lilith, for its own sake? Do you think they'll have this same feeling about the place where they were born? Will one certain hill or valley be almost one flesh with theirs, so that they'd sicken away from it and fight and die if they had to, to keep it-as I think I would? Do you feel it, too?"
The air went pulsing past them, sweet with the music of the seraphim, while Lilith looked out over the valley that had brought Adam to birth. She was trying hard, but she could not quite grasp that pa.s.sionate identification with the earth of Eden which beat like blood through Adam's veins.
"Eden is you," she murmured. "I can understand that. You mustn't ever leave it."
"Leave it?" laughed Adam. "Where else is there? Eden belongs to us forever-and you belong to me."
Lilith let herself relax delightfully against his shoulder, knowing suddenly that she loved this irresponsible, dangerous flesh even while she distrusted it. And- Something was wrong. The sudden awareness of it chilled her and she glanced uneasily about, but it was several minutes before her flesh-bound senses located the wrongness. Then she put her head back and stared up through the trees with puckered brows.
"What is it?" Adam smiled down at her. "Angels? They go over quite often, you know."
Lilith did not answer. She was listening hard. Until now all Eden had echoed faintly and sweetly with the chanting of seraphim about the Throne. But now the sounds that sifted down through the bright, translucent air were not carols of praise. There was trouble in heaven. She could hear faraway shouts in great, ringing, golden voices from infinitely high above, the clash and hiss of flaming swords, and now and again a crash as if part of the very walls of heaven had crumbled inward under some unimaginable onslaught.
It was hard to believe-but there was war in heaven.
A wave of relief went delightfully through Lilith. Good-let them fight. She smiled to herself and snuggled closer to Adam's side. The trouble, whatever it might be, would keep G.o.d's attention distracted a while longer from what went on in Eden, and she was devoutly grateful for that. She needed this respite. She had awhile longer, then, to accustom herself to the vagaries of this strange body, and to the strange reaction Adam was causing, before the war was over in heaven and war began in Eden between Lilith and G.o.d.
A shudder of terror and antic.i.p.ation went over her again as she thought of that. She was not sure G.o.d could destroy her if He would, for she was a creature of the darkness beyond His light and her exist-ence was necessary to the structure he was rearing in heaven and upon earth. Without the existence of such as Lilith, the balance of creation might tip over. No, G.o.d would not-perhaps could not-de-stroy her, but He could punish very terribly.
This flesh, for instance. It was so soft, so perishable. She was aware of a definite cleavage between the mind and the body that housed it. Perhaps G.o.d had been wise in choosing this fragile container instead of some imperishable substance into which to pour all the innocence, the power that was Adam. It was dangerous to trust such power in an independent body-as Lilith meant to prove to G.o.d if her plan wentwell. But it was no part of that plan-now-to have an angered G.o.d destroy His fleshly image.
She must think of some way to prevent it. Presently she would waken out of this warm, delightful fog that persisted so long as Adam's arm was about her, but there was no hurry yet. Not while war raged in heaven. She had never known a mood like this before, when cloudy emotions moved like smoke through her mind and nothing in creation had real significance except this magnificent male upon whose shoulder she leaned.
Then Adam looked down at her and smiled, and all the noises of war above blanked out as if they had never been. The Garden, half sentient, stirred uneasily from gra.s.s roots to treetops in response to those ringing battle shouts from above; but the Man and the woman did not even hear.
Time was nothing. Imperceptibly it pa.s.sed, and presently a soft green twilight deepened over Eden.
Adam and Lilith paused after a while on a mossy bank above a stream that tinkled over stones. Sitting with her head on Adam's shoulder and listening to the sound of the water, Lilith remembered how lightly life was rooted in this flesh of theirs.
"Adam," she murmured, "awhile ago you mentioned dying. Do you know about death?"
"Death?" said Adam comfortably. "I don't remember. I think I never heard of it."
"I hope," she said, "that you never will. It would mean leaving, Eden, you know."
His arm went rigid around her. "I couldn't! I wouldn't!"
"You're not immortal, dear. It could happen, unless-"
"Unless what? Tell me!"
"If there were a Tree of Life," she said slowly, measuring her words, "a Tree whose fruit would give you immortality as the fruit of that other Tree would give you knowledge, then I think not even G.o.d could drive you out of Eden."
"A Tree of Life-" he echoed softly. "What would it be like?"
Lilith closed her eyes. "A dark Tree, I think," she answered, almost in a whisper. "Dark limbs, dark leaves-pale, s.h.i.+ning fruit hanging among them like lanterns. Can't you see it?"
Adam was silent. She glanced up at him. His eyes were shut and a look of intense longing was on his face in the twilight. There was silence about them for a long while. Presently she felt the tenseness of his body slacken beside her. He breathed out in a long sigh.
"I think there is a Tree of Life," he said. "I think it's in the center of the Garden near the other Tree. I'm sure it's there. The fruit are pale, just as you thought. They send out a light like moonlight in the dark.
Tomorrow we'll taste them."
And Lilith relaxed against his shoulder with a sigh of her own. To-morrow he would be immortal, like herself. She listened anxiously, and still heard the faraway battle cries of the seraphim echoing through the sky. War in heaven and peace on earth- Through the deepening twilight of Eden no sound came except the music of the water and, somewhere off through the trees, a crooning lullaby in a tiny, piping voice as some cherub sang himself to sleep. Somewhere nearer other small voices squabbled drowsily a while, then fell silent. The most delightful la.s.situde was stealing over Lilith's body. She turned her cheek against Adam's shoulder and felt that cloudy fogging of the senses which she was coming to know so well- close like water above her head.
And the evening and the morning were the eighth day.
Lilith woke first. Birds were singing gloriously, and as she lay there on Adam's shoulder a cherub flashed across the stream on dazzling wings, caroling at the top of his piping voice. He did not see them. The pleasant delirium of a spring morning filled the whole wakening Garden, and Lilith sat up with a smile.
Adam scarcely stirred. Lilith looked down at him with a glow of tenderness that alarmed her. She was coming to identify herself with Adam, as Adam was one with the Garden-this flesh was a treacherous thing.
Suddenly, blindingly, she knew that. Terror of what it was doing to the ent.i.ty which was Lilith rolled over her in a great wave, and without thinking, almost without realizing what she did, she sprang up and out of the flesh that was betraying her. Up, up through the crystal morning she sprang, impalpable as the airaround her. Up and up until the Adam that flesh had valued too highly was invisible, and the very treetops that hid him were a feathery green blur and she could see the walls that closed the Garden in, the rivers running out of it like four great blades of silver in the morning sun.
Beside the sleeping Adam nothing was left but the faintest blur of a woman shape, wrapped in shadow that made it almost invisible against the moss. The eye could scarcely have made it out there under the trees.
Lilith swam delightfully through the bright, still emptiness of the early morning. From here she could hear quite clearly the strong hosannahs of the seraphim pouring out in mighty golden choruses over the jasper walls. Whatever trouble had raged in heaven yester-day, today it was resolved. She scarcely troubled her mind about it.