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<h2> 4. THE WELCOME OF PHORENICE </h2>
<p>Now I can say it with all truth that, till the rival navy met us in the
mouth of the gulf, I had thought little enough of my importance as a
recruit for the Empress. But the laying in wait for us of those ships, and
the wild ferocity with which they fought so that I might fall into their
hands, were omens which the blindest could not fail to read. It was clear
that I was expected to play a lusty part in the fortunes of the nation.</p>
<p>But if our coming had been watched for by enemies it seemed that Phorenice
also had her scouts; and these saw us from the mountains, and carried news
to the capital. The arm of the sea at the head of which the vast city of
Atlantis stands, varies greatly in width. In places where the mountains
have over-boiled, and sent their liquid contents down to form hard stone
below, the channel has barely a river’s wideness, and then beyond, for the
next half-day’s sail it will widen out into a lake, with the sides barely
visible. Moreover, its course is winding, and so a runner who knows his
way across the flats, and the swamps, and between the smoking hills which
lie along the shore, and did not get overcome by fire-streams, or water,
or wandering beasts, could carry news overland from seacoast to capital
far speedier than even the most shrewdly whipped of galleys could ferry it
along the water.</p>
<p>Of course there were heavy risks that a lone traveller would not make a
safe passage by this land route, if he were bidden to sacrifice all
precautions to speed. But Phorenice was no niggard with her couriers. She
sent a corps of twenty to the headland that overlooks the sea-entrance to
the straits; they started with the news, each on his own route; and it
says much for their speed and cleverness, that no fewer than seven of
these agile fellows came through scathless with their tidings, and of the
others it was said that quite three were known to have survived.</p>
<p>Still, about this we had no means of knowing at the time, and pushed on in
fancy that our coming was quite unheralded. The slaves on the galley’s
row-banks were for the most part savages from Europe, and the smell of
them was so offensive that the voyage lost all its pleasures; and as,
moreover, the wind carried with it an infinite abundance of small grit
from some erupting fire mountain, we were anxious to linger as little as
possible. Besides, if I may confess to such a thing without being unduly
degraded, although by my priestly training I had been taught stoicism, and
knew that all the future was in the hands of the Gods, I was frailly human
still to have a very vast curiosity as to what would be the form of my own
reception at Atlantis. I could imagine myself taken a formal prisoner on
landing, and set on a formal trial to answer for my cure of the colony of
Yucatan; I could imagine myself stepping ashore unknown and unnoticed, and
after a due lapse, being sent for by the Empress to take up new duties;
but the manner of my real welcome was a thing I did not even guess at.</p>
<p>We came in sight of the peak of the sacred mountain, with its glare of
eternal fires which stand behind the city, one morning with the day’s
break, and the whips of the boatswains cracked more vehemently, so that
those offensive slaves should give the galley a final spurt. The wind was
adverse, and no sail could be spread, but under oars alone we made a
pretty pace, and the sides of the sacred mountain grew longer, and
presently the peaks of the pyramids in the city, the towers of the higher
buildings, began to show themselves as though they floated upon the
gleaming water. It was twenty years since I had seen Atlantis last, and my
heart glowed with the thought of treading again upon her paving-stones.</p>
<p>The splendid city grew out of the sea as we approached, and to every throb
of the oars, the shores leaped nearer. I saw the temple where I had been
admitted first to manhood; I saw the pyramid in whose heart I had been
initiated to the small mysteries; and then (as the lesser objects became
discernible) I made out the house where a father and a mother had reared
me, and my eyes became dim as the memories rose.</p>
<p>We drew up outside the white walls of the harbour, as the law was, and the
slaves panted and sobbed in quietude over the oar-looms. For vessels thus
stationed there is, generally, a sufficiency of waiting, for a
port-captain is apt to be so uncertain of his own dignity, that he must
e’en keep folks waiting to prove it to them. But here for us it might have
been that the port-captain’s boat was waiting. The signal was sounded from
the two castles at the harbour’s entrance, the chain which hung between
them was dropped, and a ten-oared boat shot out from behind the walls as
fast as oars could drive her. She raced up alongside and the questions
were put:</p>
<p>“That should be Dason’s galley?”</p>
<p>“It was,” said Tob.</p>
<p>“Oh, I saw Dason’s head on your beak,” said the port-captain. “You were
Tatho’s captain?”</p>
<p>“And am still. Tatho’s fleet was sent by Dason and his friends to the
sea-floor, and so we took this stinking galley to finish the voyage in,
seeing that it was the only craft left afloat.”</p>
<p>The port-captain was roving his eye over the group of us who stood on the
after-deck. “I fear me, captain, that you’ll have but a dangerous
reception. I do not see my Lord Deucalion. Or does he come with some other
navy? Gods, captain, if you have let him get killed whilst under your
charge, the Empress will have the skin torn slowly off you living.”</p>
<p>“What with Phorenice and Tatho both so curious for his welfare,” said Tob,
“my Lord Deucalion seems but a dangerous passenger. But I shall save my
hide this voyage.” He jerked at me with his thumb. “He’s there to put in a
word for me himself.”</p>
<p>The port-captain stared for a moment, as if unbelieving, and then, as
though satisfied, made obeisance like a fellow well used to ceremonial. “I
trust my lord, in his infinite strength, will pardon my sin in not knowing
him by his nobleness before. But truth to tell, I had looked to see my
lord more suitably apparelled.”</p>
<p>“Pish,” I said; “if I choose to dress simply, I cannot object to being
mistaken for a simple man. It is not my pleasure to advertise my quality
by the gauds on my garb. If you think amends are due to me, I pray of your
charity that this inquisition may end.”</p>
<p>The fellow was all bows and obsequiousness. “I am the humblest of my
lord’s servants,” he said. “It will be my exceeding honour to pilot my
lord’s galley into the berth appointed in harbour.”</p>
<p>The boat shot ahead, and our galley-slaves swung into stroke again. Tob
watched me with a dry smile as he stood directing the men at the helms.</p>
<p>“Well,” I said, humouring his whim, “what is it?”</p>
<p>“I’m thinking,” said Tob, “that my Lord Deucalion will remember me only as
a very rude fellow when he steps ashore amongst all this fine gentility.”</p>
<p>“You don’t think,” said I, “anything of the kind.”</p>
<p>“Then I must prove my refinement,” said Tob, “and not contradict.” He
picked up my hand in his huge, hard fist, and pressed it. “By the Gods,
Deucalion, you may be a great prince, but I’ve only known you as a man.
You’re the finest fighter of beasts and men that walks this world to-day,
and I love you for it. That spear-stroke of yours on the lizard is a thing
the singers in the taverns shall make chaunts about.”</p>
<p>We drew rapidly into the harbour, the soldiers in the entrance castle
blowing their trumpets in welcome as we passed between them. The captain
of the port had run up my banner to the masthead of his boat, having been
provided with one apparently for this purpose of announcement, and from
the quays, across the vast basin of the harbour, there presently came to
us the noises of musicians, and the pale glow of welcoming fires, dancing
under the sunlight. I was almost awed to think that an Empress of Atlantis
had come to such straits as to feel an interest like this in any mere
returning subject.</p>
<p>It was clear that nothing was to be done by halves. The port-captain’s
boat led, and we had no choice but to follow. Our galley was run up
alongside the royal quay and moored to its posts and rings of gold, all of
which are sacred to the reigning house.</p>
<p>“If Dason could only have foreseen this honour,” said Tob, with grisly
jest, “I’m sure he’d have laid in a silken warp to make fast on the
bollards instead of mere plebeian hemp. I’m sure there’d be a frown on
Dason’s head this minute, if the sun hadn’t scorched it stiff. My Lord
Deucalion, will you pick your way with niceness over this common ship and
tread on the genteel carpet they’ve spread for you on the quay yonder?”</p>
<p>The port-captain heard Tob’s rude banter and looked up with a face of
horror, and I remembered, with a small sigh, that colonial freedom would
have no place here in Atlantis. Once more I must prepare myself for all
the dignity of rank, and make ready to tread the formalities of vast and
gorgeous ceremonial.</p>
<p>But, be these things how they may, a self-respecting man must preserve his
individuality also, and though I consented to enter a pavilion of crimson
cloth, specially erected to shelter me till the Empress should deign to
arrive, there my complaisance ended. Again the matter of clothes was
harped upon. The three gorgeously caparisoned chamberlains, who had
inducted me to the shelter, laid before me changes of raiment bedecked
with every imaginable kind of frippery, and would have me transform myself
into a popinjay in fashion like their own.</p>
<p>Curtly enough, I refused to alter my garb, and when one of them
stammeringly referred to the Empress’s tastes I asked him with plainness
if he had got any definite commands on this paltry matter from her
mightiness.</p>
<p>Of course, he had to confess that there were none.</p>
<p>Upon which I retorted that Phorenice had commanded Deucalion, the man, to
attend before her, and had sent no word of her pleasure as to his outer
casing.</p>
<p>“This dress,” I said, “suits my temper well. It shields my poor body from
the heat and the wind, and, moreover, it is clean. It seems to me, sirs,”
I added, “that your interfering savours somewhat of an impertinence.”</p>
<p>With one accord the chamberlains drew their swords and pushed the hilts
towards me.</p>
<p>“It would be a favour,” said their spokesman, “if the great Lord Deucalion
would take his vengeance now, instead of delivering us to the tormentors
hereafter.”</p>
<p>“Poof,” I said, “the matter is forgotten. You make too much of a little.”</p>
<p>Nevertheless, their action gave me some enlightenment. They were perfectly
in earnest in offering me the swords, and I recognised that this was a
different Atlantis that I had come home to, where a man had dread of the
torture for a mere difference concerning the cut of a coat.</p>
<p>There was a bath in the pavilion, and in that I regaled myself gladly,
though there was some paltry scent added to the water that took away half
its refreshing power; and then I set myself to wait with all outward
composure and placidity. The chamberlains were too well-bred to break into
my calm, and I did not condescend to small talk. So there we remained, the
four of us, I sitting, they standing, with our Lord the Sun smiting
heavily on the scarlet roof of the pavilion, whilst the music blared, and
the welcoming fires dispersed their odours from the great paved square
without, which faced upon the quay.</p>
<p>It has been said that the great should always collect dignity by keeping
those of lesser degree waiting their pleasure, though for myself I must
say I have always thought the stratagem paltry and beneath me. Phorenice
also seemed of this opinion, for (as she herself told me later) at the
moment that Tob’s galley was reported as having its flank against the
marble of the royal quay, at that precise moment did she start out from
the palace. The gorgeous procession was already marshalled, bedecked, and
waiting only for its chiefest ornament, and as soon as she had mounted to
her steed, trumpets gave the order, and the advance began.</p>
<p>Sitting in the doorway of the pavilion, I saw the soldiery who formed the
head of this vast concourse emerge from the great broad street where it
left the houses. They marched straight across to give me the salute, and
then ranged themselves on the farther side of the square. Then came the
Mariners’ Guild, then more soldiers, all making obeisance in their turn,
and passing on to make room for others. Following were the merchants, the
tanners, the spear-makers and all the other acknowledged Guilds,
deliberately attired (so it seemed to me) that they might make a pageant;
and whilst most walked on foot, there were some who proudly rode on beasts
which they had tamed into rendering them this menial service.</p>
<p>But presently came the two wonders of all that dazzling spectacle. From
out of the eclipse of the houses there swung into the open no less a beast
than a huge bull mammoth. The sight had sufficient surprise in it almost
to make me start. Many a time during my life had I led hunts to kill the
mammoth, when a herd of them had raided some village or cornland under my
charge. I had seen the huge brutes in the wild ground, shaggy, horrid,
monstrous; more fierce than even the cave-tiger or the cave-bear; most
dangerous beast of all that fight with man for dominion of the earth, save
only for a few of the greater lizards. And here was this creature, a giant
even amongst mammoths, yet tame as any well-whipped slave, and bearing
upon its back a great half-castle of gold, stamped with the outstretched
hand, and bedecked with silver snakes. Its murderous tusks were gilded,
its hairy neck was garlanded with flowers, and it trod on in the
procession as though assisting at such pageantry was the beginning and end
of its existence. Its tameness seemed a fitting symbol of the masterful
strength of this new ruler of Atlantis.</p>
<p>Simultaneously with the mammoth, there came into sight that other and
greater wonder, the mammoth’s mistress, the Empress Phorenice. The beast
took my eye at the first, from its very uncouth hugeness, from its show of
savage power restrained; but the lady who sat in the golden half-castle on
its lofty back quickly drew away my gaze, and held it immovable from then
onwards with an infinite attraction.</p>
<p>I stood to my feet when the people first shouted at Phorenice’s approach,
and remained in the porchway of my scarlet pavilion till her vast steed
had halted in the centre of the square, and then I advanced across the
pavement towards her.</p>
<p>“On your knees, my lord,” said one of the chamberlains behind me, in a
scared whisper.</p>
<p>“At least with bent head,” urged another.</p>
<p>But I had my own notions of what is due to one’s own self-respect in these
matters, and I marched across the bare open space with head erect, giving
the Empress gaze for gaze. She was clearly summing me up. I was frankly
doing the like by her. Gods! but those few short seconds made me see a
woman such as I never imagined could have lived.</p>
<p>I know I have placed it on record earlier in this writing that, during all
the days of a long official life, women have had no influence over me. But
I have been quick to see that they often had a strong swaying power over
the policies of others, and as a consequence I have made it my business to
study them even as I have studied men. But this woman who sat under the
sacred snakes in her golden half-castle on the mammoth’s back, fairly
baffled me. Of her thoughts I could read no single syllable. I could see a
body slight, supple, and beautifully moulded; in figure rather small. Her
face was a most perfect book of cleverness, yet she was fair, too, beyond
belief, with hair of a lovely ruddiness, cut short in the new fashion, and
bunching on her shoulders. And eyes! Gods! who could plumb the depths of
Phorenice’s eyes, or find in mere tint a trace of their heaven-made
colour?</p>
<p>It was plain, also, that she in her turn was searching me down to my very
soul, and it seemed that her scrutiny was not without its satisfaction.
She moved her head in little nods as I drew near, and when I did the
requisite obeisance permitted to my rank, she bade me in a voice loud and
clear enough for all at hand to hear, never to put forehead on the ground
again on her behalf so long as she ruled in Atlantis.</p>
<p>“For others,” she said, “it is fitting that they should do so, once,
twice, or several times, according to their rank and station, for I am
Empress, and they are all so far beneath me; but you are Deucalion, my
lord, and though till to-day I knew you only from pictures drawn with
tongues, I have seen you now, and have judged for myself. And so I make
this decree: Deucalion is above all other men in Atlantis, and if there is
one who does not render him obedience, that man is enemy also of
Phorenice, and shall feel her anger.”</p>
<p>She made a sign, and a stair was brought, and then she called to me, and I
mounted and sat beside her in the golden half-castle under the canopy of
royal snakes. The girl who stood behind in attendance fanned us both with
perfumed feathers, and at a word from Phorenice the mammoth was turned,
bearing us back towards the royal pyramid by the way through which it had
come. At the same time also all the other machinery of splendour was put
in motion. The soldiers and the gaudily bedecked civil traders fell into
procession before and behind, and I noted that a body of troops, heavily
armed, marched on each of the mammoth’s flanks.</p>
<p>Phorenice turned to me with a smile. “You piqued me,” she said, “at
first.”</p>
<p>“Your Majesty overwhelms me with so much notice.”</p>
<p>“You looked at my steed before you looked at me. A woman finds it hard to
forgive a slight like that.”</p>
<p>“I envied you the greatest of your conquests, and do still. I have fought
mammoths myself, and at times have killed, but I never dared even to think
of taking one alive and bringing it into tameness.”</p>
<p>“You speak boldly,” she said, still smiling, “and yet you can turn a
pretty compliment. Faugh! Deucalion, the way these people fawn on me gives
me a nausea. I am not of the same clay as they are, I know; but just
because I am the daughter of Gods they must needs feed me on the pap of
insincerity.”</p>
<p>So Tatho was right, and the swineherd was forgotten. Well, if she chose to
keep up the fiction she had made, it was not my part to contradict her.
Rightly or wrongly I was her servant.</p>
<p>“I have been pining this long enough for a stronger meat than they can
give,” she went on, “and at last I have sent for you. I have been at some
pains to procure my tongue-pictures of you, Deucalion, and though you do
not know me yet, I may say I knew you with all thoroughness even before we
met. I can admire a man with a mind great enough to forego the silly gauds
of clothes, or the excesses of feasts, or the pamperings of women.” She
looked down at her own silks and her glittering jewels. “We women like to
carry colours upon our persons, but that is a different matter. And so I
sent for you here to be my minister, and bear with me the burden of
ruling.”</p>
<p>“There should be better men in broad Atlantis.”</p>
<p>“There are not, my lord, and I who know them all by heart tell you so.
They are all enamoured of my poor person; they weary me with their empty
phrases and their importunities; and, though they are always brimming with
their cries of service, their own advancement and the filling of their own
treasuries ever comes first with them. So I have sent for you, Deucalion,
the one strong man in all the world. You at least will not sigh to be my
lover?”</p>
<p>I saw her watching for my answer from the corner of her eyes. “The
Empress,” I said, “is my mistress, and I will be an honest minister to
her. With Phorenice, the woman, it is likely that I shall have little
enough to do. Besides, I am not the sort that sports with this toy they
call love.”</p>
<p>“And yet you are a personable man enough,” she said rather thoughtfully.
“But that still further proves your strength, Deucalion. You at least will
not lose your head through weak infatuation for my poor looks and graces.”—She
turned to the girl who stood behind us.—“Ylga, fan not so
violently.”</p>
<p>Our talk broke off then for the moment, and I had time to look about me.
We were passing through the chief street in the fairest, the most
wonderful city this world has ever seen. I had left it a score of years
before, and was curious to note its increase.</p>
<p>In public buildings the city had certainly made growth; there were new
temples, new pyramids, new palaces, and statuary everywhere. Its greatness
and magnificence impressed me more strongly even than usual, returning to
it as I did from such a distance of time and space, for, though the many
cities of Yucatan might each of them be princely, this great capital was a
place not to be compared with any of them. It was imperial and gorgeous
beyond descriptive words.</p>
<p>Yet most of all was I struck by the poverty and squalor which stood in
such close touch with all this magnificence. In the throngs that lined the
streets there were gaunt bodies and hungry faces everywhere. Here and
there stood one, a man or a woman, as naked as a savage in Europe, and yet
dull to shame. Even the trader, with trumpery gauds on his coat, aping the
prevailing fashion for display, had a scared, uneasy look to his face, as
though he had forgotten the mere name of safety, and hid a frantic heart
with his tawdry outward vauntings of prosperity.</p>
<p>Phorenice read the direction of my looks.</p>
<p>“The season,” she said, “has been unhealthy of recent months. These lower
people will not build fine houses to adorn my city, and because they
choose to live on in their squalid, unsightly kennels, there have been
calentures and other sicknesses amongst them, which make them disinclined
for work. And then, too, for the moment, earning is not easy. Indeed, you
may say trade is nearly stopped this last half-year, since the rebels have
been hammering so lustily at my city gates.”</p>
<p>I was fairly startled out of my decorum.</p>
<p>“Rebels!” I cried. “Who are hammering at the gates of Atlantis? Is the
city in a state of siege?”</p>
<p>“Of their condescension,” said Phorenice lightly, “they are giving us
holiday to-day, and so, happily, my welcome to you comes undisturbed. If
they were fighting, your ears would have told you of it. To give them
their due, they are noisy enough in all their efforts. My spies say they
are making ready new engines for use against the walls, which you may
sally out to-morrow and break if it gives you amusement. But for to-day,
Deucalion, I have you, and you have me, and there is peace round us, and
some prettiness of display. If you ask for more I will give it you.”</p>
<p>“I did not know of this rebellion,” I said, “but as Your Majesty has made
me your minister, it is well that I should know all about its scope at
once. This is a matter we should be serious upon.”</p>
<p>“And do you think I cannot take it seriously also?” she retorted. “Ylga,”
she said to the girl that stood behind, “set loose my dress at the
shoulder.”</p>
<p>And when the attendant had unlinked the jewelled clasp (as it seemed to me
with a very ill grace), she herself stripped down the fabric, baring the
pure skin beneath, and showing me just below the curve of the left breast
a bandage of bloodstained linen.</p>
<p>“There is a guarantee of my seriousness yesterday, at any rate,” she said,
looking at me sidelong. “The arrow struck on a rib and that saved me. If
it had struck between, Deucalion would have been standing beside my
funeral pyre to-day instead of riding on this pretty steed of mine which
he admires so much. Your eye seems to feast itself most on the mammoth,
Deucalion. Ah, poor me. I am not one of your shaggy creatures, and so it
seems I shall never be able to catch your regard. Ylga,” she said to the
girl behind, “you may link my dress up again with its clasp. My Lord
Deucalion has seen wounds before, and there is nothing else here to
interest him.”</p>
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