<h2 id="c20"><span class="h2line1">19</span> <br/><span class="h2line2">TWO CHOICES</span></h2>
<p>The stern-faced mattern’s name was Dame Quasso; she told
Mircella to show Lalette to a small brown room angled by a
dormer, where a bed with one blanket, a chair and a chiffonier
were the only furniture.</p>
<p>“The dress-room is down here,” said the servant, pointing. “The
regulation is that all demoiselles stir themselves together at the
ringing of the morning-bell, so that the day’s tasks may be
assigned.”</p>
<p>“Why?” said Lalette, sitting down on the edge of the bed (so
glad to hear a voice without malice or innuendo in it that the
words hardly mattered).</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_361">361</div>
<p>The eyes were round and the mouth was round; a series of
rounds. Said Mircella; “It is the regulation. . . . You must dress
your best for evening. It is the day of the diaconals.”</p>
<p>“Ah?”</p>
<p>“Oh, some of them are quite rich. We will have roast meat for
supper. Wouldn’t it be nice if one of them would take you way
up in the mountains?”</p>
<p>Lalette felt her heart contract. “What do you mean?” she asked.
“I am from Dossola, and this is all new to me.”</p>
<p>“Why, the diaconals. Those learners who are in the second
stage, almost Initiates, so they can’t be married, and once a month
they come—”</p>
<p>“Mircella!” came Dame Quasso’s voice, impatiently.</p>
<p>“I must go. You won’t have to work today. You never do on
the first day.”</p>
<p>Lalette thought: what trap am I caught in? It was a diaconal
that Tegval said he was, and that he had chosen me, that horrible
night when—when—. A fierce surge of anger burned through her
at the widow Domijaiek, who had babbled so of love and God, yet
brought her to this dubious resort; and once more, as when she
stood in the mask-maker’s parlor, there was the feeling of being
hemmed in by metal walls. But before her fury could rise to the
performing of the black witchery already forming at the back of
her mind, the door was tapped and a toothless old man brought
in her chest and said Dame Quasso awaited her attendance.</p>
<p>The entrance broke a spell; Lalette was inwardly assuring
herself there was some mistake, the thing might be better than
appearances, while the mattern began in the most ordinary way to
ask her what work she had done or might be fitted for. At last
Dame Quasso said:</p>
<p>“I do not know what you Dossolan girls are trained for by
your mothers, except marriage to counts. No one of you can earn
the worth of her clothing. You know nothing; but I will place you
with the stitchers who work on linen till you have learned something
better. You will find your witchery of little value here. I
suppose the charge is justified?”</p>
<p>Lalette stamped her foot (all the fury returning at this treatment).
“Madame,” she cried, “as I was brought up, a girl sold
into prostitution had already earned the worth of her clothing and
something else beside.”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_362">362</div>
<p>There was a silence, in which the cool, hard eyes did not
change, nor the face around them (and Lalette had the sensation
that if she looked into them any longer, she would drown). Dame
Quasso said; “Sit down. . . . We have had girls like you before,
and always they make me doubtful of those who admit you to the
company of the Myonessae. Nevertheless, it is our task, who conduct
these couvertines, to see that you are instructed to a better
way of life. Listen attentively; there is in this domain of Mancherei
and in our honorable order no question of prostitution, which concerns
those who sell for money what they should give for love.
But it is the wise ordinance of our Prophet that they who would
attain to the state of Initiates shall not marry before quitting this
material body for that life which is the God of love. For marriage
is viewed with approval by the old churches as though it were
something to be desired. Yet it is but a license to serve the god
of Evil, in whose armory no weapon is so potent as the propagation
of further mankind into this bodily world, which he wholly rules.
Therefore it is ordered that when one who has reached the diaconal
estate is overcome by the desires which the god of Evil has
placed in all flesh, he shall seek out the Myonessae, choose one,
and cohabit with her for as long as they both will. It is a matter
of free choice and no compulsion. Yet during such time, the diaconal
is not allowed to continue his studies, thus standing in
danger of never becoming Initiate, but of dying and being reborn
into some ugly form, as a serpent or an insect.”</p>
<p>Said Lalette, nipping a lip in her little white teeth; “And what
of us, who merely satisfy the lusts of these men?”</p>
<p>From severity, the mattern’s face turned to astonishment. “Why,
this is the very service of love, that we offer our bodies, not in
exchange for the sustainment a man gives us and the satisfaction
of our own desires, but in the name of the love of God, that all
may benefit by learning the vanity of earthly wishes.”</p>
<p>“I was not told of this, and I do not think I like it.”</p>
<p>Dame Quasso’s face turned stern again. “Very well,” she said
in an iron voice. “There are some who will not accept instruction.
I will have the account made up of what you owe for the passage
here. When it is paid, you may have a porter take your box
wherever you please.”</p>
<p>(Where, indeed? And how pay? Panic mingled with the anger
that boiled anew in Lalette’s mind.) “Ah,” she said, “you talk of
love and holiness, and—” then burst into tears, leaning forward
with her hands covering her face. The mattern came around and
placed a surprisingly gentle hand on the girl’s shoulder.</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_363">363</div>
<p>“My child,” she said. “It is not I nor the Initiates of Mancherei
that place you under hard compulsion, but this material world,
in which the god of Evil has all power. All you have learned, all
you have gained through witchery is straight from hell. Return to
your room; meditate what I have said until supper, when some of
the diaconals will come, and see for yourself whether it is as sour
a fate to be of the Myonessae as you now think.”</p>
<h3>II</h3>
<p>Rodvard had no meal at noon (lacking money), his eyeballs
ached from toiling under lamplight, and the others had finished
their eating when he reached the Gualdis’ shop. The dame’s voice
was not very pleasant (the Blue Star told him she hoped he was
not going to be as much trouble as—something he could not make
out). But Leece and Vyana, the oldest daughter, reheated for him
some of the stew in a casserole, and made to entertain him by
asking him about his work. (When he told them it was casting
accounts for the Myonessae, there was something behind Vyana’s
eyes that came to him as a shapeless whirl of fear and desire, but
he could neither draw her thought more clear, nor cause the subject
to be pursued.)</p>
<p>Now the talk turned to Dossola, and especially to Count Cleudi,
for the whole family became much excited when they learned
Rodvard had actually seen that famous person in the flesh and
even worked for him. It took him several moments to realize that
here in Mancherei he need not withhold his tongue, for these
people thought the Count as great a villain as did the Sons of the
New Day. Rodvard related the trick Cleudi had played on Aiella
of Arjen (keeping his own name out of it for a reason he did not
quite know), whereupon Leece asked innocently what a “mistress”
might be, and the elders laughed.</p>
<p>His own room was very small, with the window right over the
bed and only space for a garderobe, a cabinet and one chair. The
next morning the girl brought his breakfast very early, and it
needed no Blue Star to see that she wanted to talk, so he made
her sit on the chair and took the tray across his knees, as he asked
why Vyana had been so strange about the Myonessae the night
before.</p>
<p>“Her sweetheart is a learner who has now become diaconal and
wishes to join the sisterhood. But father and mother want her to
marry in the usual way.” She leaned close and in a voice that was
little above a whisper said; “You won’t tell, will you? . . . But we
are afraid he’ll bring an Initiate to persuade them, and then he’ll
find out that father and mother really believe in the old religion,
and he’ll send both of them away for instruction, and all three of
us will have to go into the Myonessae, and I don’t want to.”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_364">364</div>
<p>(So many questions whirled in Rodvard’s head that he could
not find words fast enough; and all his senses were tingling with
the sudden nearness of Leece’s red lips, the swelling breasts and
the message that darted from her eyes, saying she was pleased
with this same nearness, but not as Damaris the maid, she held
herself high and. . . .) He said, rather stupidly, not thinking of
his words; “And why not? I would think—”</p>
<p>She leaned back again; (the eyes went dead) the thick brows
came together. “Ah, but you do not think like a woman. We—we—want—”</p>
<p>“What, charming Leece?”</p>
<p>She flashed a smile which accepted his tiny apology and announced
they two would play the game so set in motion. “We
want to be loved for ourselves, here in this world. There! I have
said it. Now, when you make your fourth-day report before the
stylarion, you have only to complain that I am out of the law of
Love, and they’ll send me somewhere for instruction, and you
won’t have to be bothered with my questions about Dossola.”</p>
<p>“Defend the day! But tell me, Leece, is it contrary to the law
not to be Amorosian?”</p>
<p>“Oh, no, you don’t understand. It isn’t that hard, really. Only
the Initiates have to see that people don’t do wrong things, and
doing something wrong always begins with thinking, so they send
people away for instruction when they begin to think the wrong
way.”</p>
<p>She rattled this off like a lesson learned. Rodvard said;</p>
<p>“But who decides whether the Initiates themselves are right?”</p>
<p>“Why, they have to be! They learn everything through the God
of love, and one of them couldn’t be wrong without the others
finding it out. That was how they found out that the Prophet was
falling under the power of the god of Evil, when he tried to change
everything and had to leave us.”</p>
<p>Rodvard picked at the bedcover for a moment (deciding it
was as well to change the subject). “But tell me—why can’t your
Myonessae be loved for themselves? I am only two days here, and
know so little about your customs.”</p>
<p>“By the diaconals who choose them, you mean? Ah, no. All the
Myonessae know they are only second choice. The diaconals have
already chosen the service of the God of love first.”</p>
<p>“Then the Myonessae are jealous of the church—or of your
God of love?”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_365">365</div>
<p>“Oh, no. Women think more spiritually than men. You must
go to a service with me and then you’ll understand.” The corner
of her mouth twitched slightly; she reached over to touch his
hand. “I must go,” she said, and was gone.</p>
<p>This was the beginning of a custom, by which she came to
him each morning to be his instructor in all that concerned Mancherei.
Once or twice fat Dame Gualdis wheezed up the stair and
smiled through the door at the two, wishing them good morning
as she went past on some errand, real or pretended; she seemed
to find it decorous that the girl often sat on the edge of Rodvard’s
bed. Their conversation never seemed to fail, and they took delight
in minor contacts, as when he showed Leece the fashion of
sitting wrestle he had learned as a lad, with each opponent gripping
the other’s right elbow and only that arm engaged. Leece
was so nearly as strong as himself as to make the contest a true
one (and she was as greedy as he of the almost-meeting of bodies,
as the Blue Star told him. She would go a long way with him, it
said, perhaps all the way if pressed, but felt a little fearful of her
own desires, and would want him as a husband in permanence.
When she left, he would think of Damaris the maid as he dressed,
and how she also had sat on his bed, and the end of that meeting,
sweet and terrifying, how she had killed his Blue Star, and how
he would surely have been trapped into some regular connection
with her, had not circumstance ordered his flight from Sedad Vix.
At this it seemed to him, walking the street to his daily toil, that
there was nothing in the world so precious as that jewel and the
use to which it must be put, and he must reach Dossola again, and
by no means do the thing that would rob the Blue Star of its virtue;
and then he thought of the penalty Lalette had promised,
which lay at the back of his mind like a dark cloud of dread. But
as he took his place on his stool, the thought came that he had
already earned whatever penalty there was. It was not credible
that the accident of having the Star’s power restored by the old
woman in the hut would disannul what he had to bear; nor was
it likely that the restoration would hide his action from one possessed
of the witch-powers of the far-away girl to whom he was
bound. But why was he bound to Lalette? Now the sweetness of
the touch of Leece and the desire of her body ran through him
like a liquid fire, and he felt as though he were running across
a bridge no wider than a knife-blade over a yawning chasm, toward
a goal hidden in mist, and all his inner organs were wrung.)</p>
<p>“Bergelin!” said the protostylarion. “You will remember that
this work is given to you as a charity, which it will profit you not
to abuse.”</p>
<div class="pagenum" id="Page_366">366</div>
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