A. Merritt - The Fox Woman.txt

(86 KB) Pobierz
Title: The Fox Woman
Author: Abraham Merritt
* A Project Gutenberg of Australia eBook *
eBook No.: 0602021.txt
Edition: 1
Language: English
Character set encoding: Latin-1(ISO-8859-1)--8 bit
Date first posted: June 2006
Date most recently updated: August 2007

This eBook was produced by: Richard Scott

Project Gutenberg of Australia eBooks are created from printed editions
which are in the public domain in Australia, unless a copyright notice
is included. We do NOT keep any eBooks in compliance with a particular
paper edition.

Copyright laws are changing all over the world. Be sure to check the
copyright laws for your country before downloading or redistributing this
file.

This eBook is made available at no cost and with almost no restrictions
whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
of the Project Gutenberg of Australia License which may be viewed online at
http://gutenberg.net.au/licence.html


To contact Project Gutenberg of Australia go to http://gutenberg.net.au


Title: The Fox Woman
Author: Abraham Merritt




CHAPTER I

THE ANCIENT STEPS wound up the side of the mountain through the tall
pines, patience trodden deep into them by the feet of twenty
centuries. Some soul of silence, ancient and patient as the steps,
brooded over them. They were wide, twenty men could have marched
abreast upon them; lichens brown and orange traced strange symbols on
their grey stones, and emerald mosses cushioned them. At times the
steps climbed steep as stairs, and at times they swept leisurely
around bastions of the mountain, but always on each side the tall
pines stood close, green shoulder to shoulder, vigilant.

At the feet of the pines crouched laurels and dwarfed rhododendrons of
a singular regularity of shape and of one height, that of a kneeling
man. Their stiff and glossy leaves were like links on coats-of-
mail...like the jade-lacquered scale-armor of the Green Archers of
Kwanyin who guard the goddess when she goes forth in the Spring to
awaken the trees. The pines were like watchful sentinels, and oddly
like crouching archers were the laurels and the dwarfed rhododendrons,
and they said as plainly as though with tongues: Up these steps you
may go, and down them--but never try to pass through us!

A woman came round one of the bastions. She walked stubbornly, head
down, as one who fights against a strong wind--or as one whose will
rides, lashing the reluctant body on. One white shoulder and breast
were bare, and on the shoulder was a bruise and blood, four scarlet
streaks above the purpled patch as though a long-nailed hand had
struck viciously, clawing. And as she walked she wept.

The steps began to lift. The woman raised her head and saw how steeply
here they climbed. She stopped, her hands making little fluttering
helpless motions.

She turned, listening. She seemed to listen not with ears alone but
with every tensed muscle, her entire body one rapt chord of listening
through which swept swift arpeggios of terror. The brittle twilight of
the Yunnan highlands, like clearest crystal made impalpable, fell upon
brown hair shot with gleams of dull copper, upon a face lovely even in
its dazed horror. Her grey eyes stared down the steps, and it was as
though they, too, were listening rather than seeing...

She was heavy with child...

She heard voices beyond the bend of the bastion, voices guttural and
sing-song, angry and arguing, protesting and urging. She heard the
shuffle of many feet, hesitating, halting, but coming inexorably on.
Voices and feet of the hung-hutzes, the outlaws who had slaughtered
her husband and Kenwood and their bearers a scant hour ago, and who
but for Kenwood would now have her. They had found her trail.

She wanted to die; desperately Jean Meredith wanted to die; her faith
taught her that then she would rejoin that scholarly, gentle lover-
husband of hers whom she had loved so dearly although his years had
been twice her own. It would not matter did they kill her quickly, but
she knew they would not do that. And she could not endure even the
thought of what must befall her through them before death came. Nor
had she weapon to kill herself. And there was that other life budding
beneath her heart.

But stronger than desire for death, stronger than fear of torment,
stronger than the claim of the unborn was something deep within her
that cried for vengeance. Not vengeance against the hung-hutzes--they
were only a pack of wild beasts doing what was their nature to do.
This cry was for vengeance against those who had loosed them, directed
them. For this she knew had been done, although how she knew it she
could not yet tell. It was not accident, no chance encounter that
swift slaughter. She was sure of that.

It was like a pulse, that cry for vengeance; a pulse whose rhythm
grew, deadening grief and terror, beating strength back into her. It
was like a bitter spring welling up around her soul. When its dark
waters had risen far enough they would touch her lips and she would
drink of them .. . and then knowledge would come to her . .. she would
know who had planned this evil thing, and why. But she must have
time--time to drink of the waters--time to learn and avenge. She must
live...for vengeance ...

Vengeance is mine, saith the Lord!

It was as though a voice had whispered the old text in her ear. She
struck her breast with clenched hands; she looked with eyes grown hard
and tearless up to the tranquil sky; she answered the voice:

"A lie! Like all the lies I have been taught of--You! I am through
with--You! Vengeance! Whoever gives me vengeance shall be my God!"

The voices and the feet were nearer. Strange, how slowly, how
reluctantly they advanced. It was as though they were afraid. She
studied the woods beyond the pines. Impenetrable; or if not, then
impossible for her. They would soon find her if she tried to hide
there. She must go on--up the steps. At their end might be some hiding
place...perhaps sanctuary...

Yes, she was sure the hung-hutzes feared the steps... they came so
slowly, so haltingly...arguing, protesting...

She had seen another turn at the top of this steep. If she could reach
it before they saw her, it might be that they would follow her no
further. She turned to climb...

A fox stood upon the steps a dozen feet above her, watching her,
barring her way. It was a female fox, a vixen. Its coat was all silken
russet-red. It had a curiously broad head and slanted green eyes. On
its head was a mark, silver white and shaped like the flame of a
candle wavering in the wind.

The fox was lithe and graceful, Jean Meredith thought, as a dainty
woman. A mad idea came, born of her despair and her denial of that God
whom she had been taught from childhood to worship as all-good, all-
wise, all-powerful. She thrust her hands out to the fox. She cried to
it:

"Sister--you are a woman! Lead me to safety that I may have
vengeance--sister!"

Remember, she had just seen her husband die under the knives of the
hung-hutzes and she was with child... and who can know upon what
fantastic paths of unreality a mind so beset may stray.

As though it had understood the fox paced slowly down the steps. And
again she thought how like a graceful woman it was. It paused a little
beyond reach of her hand, studying her with those slanted green eyes--
eyes clear and brilliant as jewels, sea-green, and like no eyes she
had ever seen in any animal. There seemed faint mockery in their gaze,
a delicate malice, but as they rested upon her bruised shoulder and
dropped to her swollen girdle, she could have sworn that there was
human comprehension in them, and pity. She whispered:

"Sister--help me!"

There was a sudden outburst of the guttural singsong. They were close
now, her pursuers, close to the bend of the steps round which she had
come. Soon they must turn it and see her. She stood staring at the fox
expectantly...hoping she knew not what.

The fox slipped by her, seemed to melt in the crouching bushes. It
vanished.

Black despair, the despair of a child who finds itself abandoned to
wild beasts by one it has trusted, closed in on Jean Meredith. What
she had hoped for, what she had expected of help, was vague,
unformulated. A miracle by alien gods, now she had renounced her own?
Or had her appeal to the vixen deeper impulse? Atavistic awakenings,
anthropomorphic, going back to that immemorial past when men first
thought of animals and birds as creatures with souls like theirs, but
closer to Nature's spirit; given by that spirit a wisdom greater than
human, and more than human powers--servants and messengers of potent
deities and little less than gods themselves.

Nor has it been so long ago that St. Francis of Assisi spoke to the
beasts and birds as he did to men and women, naming them Brother Wolf
and Brother Eagle. And did not St. Conan baptize the seals of the
Orkneys as he did the pagan men? The past and all that men have
thought in the past is born anew within us all. And sometimes strange
doors open within our minds--and out of them or into them strange
spirits come or go. And whether real or unreal, who can say?

The fox seemed to understand--had seemed to promise--something. And it
had abandoned her, fled away! Sobbing, she turned to climb the steps.

Too late! The hung-hutzes had rounded the bend.

There was a howling chorus. With obscene gestures, yapping threats,
they ran toward her. Ahead of the pack was the pock-faced, half-breed
Tibetan leader whose knife had been the first to cut her husband down.
She watched them come, helpless to move, unable even to close her
eyes. The pock-face saw and understood, gave q...
Zgłoś jeśli naruszono regulamin