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murmured Druga, looking askance at Eos.
"Whatever might you be thinking, Druga? If such power arced between man and woman they would be consumed!"
"But what a death, what a death," murmured Druga. Her sudden laughter rang through the hall of death incongruously, and at the sound they fell silent again and did not speak for thinking of the corpses waiting there for what would never come.
"How many men has Diana and her friends killed through the years? Enough to populate a couple of planets, I should say?"
"Diana? With her bow and arrows alone she used to account for a good many; and later, as she learned more evil arts, there was no record kept. She has been a most evil G.o.ddess, yet men wors.h.i.+p her."
"Why? A G.o.ddess that kills a man for seeing her is a fiend! And her maidens may not see a man, either. It is a strange life she leads, for a true woman. She must be other than female."
"That could be, Druga," murmured Eos.
The morning sun glittered from the streams and from the little gla.s.s foot-bridge that s.h.i.+mmered magically across and up in a great arc to the door in the side of the cliff. Eos sighed at the beauty.
"This wife of yours was a housekeeper, I note, with an eye for art."
"Her art and her work were always first, Eos. She was an uncommon hard woman to get used to, but she made a man of me."
"That I can see," agreed Eos, and Druga looked at her twice to know what she meant. "You owe everything to Feronia, according to you, and nothing to yourself."
"Very little, G.o.ddess. But I do not exaggerate, she was...."
"Well, never mind it now. I grow weary of Feronia this and Feronia that.
I will judge for myself whether she understood you or no."
"She was extremely understanding," said Druga.
Days pa.s.sed, and much hard work, Eos studying the laboratory notes of Feronia, and Druga himself reading them over and trying to think of some way he himself might strike back at their mutual enemy.
"Nothing that she has developed can be used directly against Diana without her surviving to fight back. This would have been fatal to Dionaea, but after all, as you have said--she is dead."
"She ought to be dead, I cut her head off!"
"That usually does the trick."
They decided to leave the laboratory the next morning, and that evening Druga picked up the stone statue of his Feronia and carried it carefully aboard the disk, placing her there--one woman among the thousand-odd dead heroes of the long dead past. Druga sadly made a place for her at the head of the board. He did not think of it, but Feronia now sat where Eos herself had spent many a sad hour, sitting and gazing at her dead lovers.
With the stone Feronia gone, the vast and multiplex-walled chambers of mystery and magic a.s.sumed a new atmosphere, and Druga found himself talking to Eos that night as if he was not a man whose heart was dead.
She sat in the place from which he had removed the black stone body of Feronia, and Druga could not help but compare the glowing life of her with the dead thing that had sat there.
The hammered sunlight of her hair made curls and waves of beauty about the white sh.o.r.es of her shoulders. She had let the robe of insulative blue drop from her, exposing the very heart of her beauty he had feared to see when she was herself filled with the flow of the Pole of Life Energy. And Druga wondered a little whether she were not still somehow the center and pivot of the energy, for his senses reeled with looking, and his will crumbled into forgotten ashes. He sank to the silken couch beside her, and his eyes burned with flas.h.i.+ng energies like meteors plunging into the Northern lights.
Eos held her breath, and her eyes burned into his with greater and greater force, for she had been dreaming and weeping and waiting there at the Pole-of-all-Life for so many cold empty years--waiting for the curse to be lifted so that she could begin to live again.
With the last shred of her own will Eos murmured: "Let us go into the disk and leave at once for Armora, and think no more of each other or surely we will sink into the raptures we desire and forget to fight.
Then I will awake and find you too turned into stone, and myself again alone against her. I have been unable to fight alone."
"If that is your will, do not fail to s.h.i.+eld your beauty with that robe you wear. For I cannot resist the power in your loveliness any more than a straw in the wind!"
Eos closed the robe against his gaze, and like two people weighted down with lead in every limb, they got up and went out of the darkened chambers, and Druga closed the great doors and locked them. Silently, not touching each other, they walked down the bridge of gla.s.s.
They entered the mansion on the disk, and Eos sent it sharply upward.
There was blood on her lower lip where she had bit it, and Druga's nails had bitten into his palms.
Druga noted that the great golden glow in the sky had approached near to the valley that Feronia had made her home, and he said:
"This pole of life seems to follow you about! Is there some relation between you and it, so that you cannot be apart?"
Eos looked at him, smiling sadly, her eyes far-off with other thoughts.
"I have been taught, in the far past, that there was a Mother of Life, a real woman, mighty and majestic beyond thinking, who lived there at the pole and ordered life to be as it should be. That she is my ancestor, and that there is some relation between the life energies and myself, may be true, Druga. Whether the pole follows me, or whether coincidence is governed by some magic so that we are never far apart, I know not.
Knowledge is a thing now lost from life, as we know it, Druga. We can only guess at these truths, and never learn them surely."
"Now you are not telling me all you know, Eos."
"I would not tell you what I only guess, Druga. And I do not surely know anything, any more. I have spent so much time brooding and alone."
"Forgive me, Eos. An eagle cannot fly with crows, and I will never again put myself forward. When you have need of me, I will be here, and when you need only your own thoughts, why then go apart; I will not seek you out. I forget who and what you are, for my senses are strained beyond endurance with the power of you."
"You are no crow, Druga. But in me is an adult mind, and you are as a child, whom I must teach and raise up gradually to my estate. Every parent grows impatient of ignorance in their offspring. One day, if time keeps treading the self-same mill, we will be crushed together like grapes and pressed clean. Until then, be my knight, and think not of me, except with pity for the broken heart that beats inside me."
Druga did not look at her more, but went in and sat at the board where the thousand dead stared, each stony eye broodingly centered upon the spot where he had placed Feronia. And as Druga's eye likewise centered upon that seat that had been the scene of a thousand deaths, he felt a wave of anger from the stony body of Feronia, and a sense of guilt came over him. He felt remorse that he should forget her and desire Eos. If he had known that those eyes were not dead, but seeing and remembering all that pa.s.sed before them, he would have been s.h.i.+vering with fear of her anger. But Druga did not know. Yet it seemed to his senses that each of those eyes was likewise angry with him, and he got up in haste from that table of dead men and one dead woman, and went and drank wine by himself until sleep came.
With the first rays of morning light Eos woke him, and Druga learned that she had lowered the disk over the garden of live-oaks beside the palace of Dionaea, and Druga looked out. No one was yet astir; they had not yet been seen. Druga and Eos descended by the ladder of ruby gla.s.s, and went side by side through the garden and Druga took the stairs he knew well up to the sleeping chamber of Dionaea. For in the many-locked cabinets of that chamber were her many acquisitions of magical apparatus, and if anything was there that would help them, they meant to find it.
As they entered the room, opening the door with a pick-lock, Eos cried out in a triumphant voice:
"We are not in vain. The Queen is not dead, Druga!"
The sleepy-eyed Dionaea poked her head above the covers at the sound of their entry. At sight of them, she hissed like a great snake, and writhed the long hideous body of Baena free of the enc.u.mbrance of the quilts, and Baena reared his own hideous, fanged head up beside Dionaea's.
Druga stood astonished to see the fabled Amphis-Baena here in the bed of Dionaea, and with the head of Dionaea! A great laugh broke from him to see the reptilian change the grafting had wrought in Dionaea's beauty.
Dionaea did not say anything, but Baena coiled swiftly on the bed and struck out full length, his fangs meeting in Druga's arm. Druga felt the terrible venom, like fire in his veins, and seized the great serpent-head in his two hands, squeezing in terrible anger. But Eos seized him.
"No, do not kill her! Carry her into the disk, and make her captive. I have conceived of a way of conquering Diana, and we need this creature alive."
Druga wrapped the great body around and around his body and arm, seizing the neck of Dionaea in one hand and the neck of Baena in the other. So burdened, he staggered down the steps and up again into the disk, and the trip took him a good hour, for Baena twisted loose and tried to flee, and he wrestled and fell from the ladder, and only succeeded by tying the writhing pillar of strength into a bow-knot and pulling it up into the s.h.i.+p with a rope.