<SPAN name="CHAPTER_XX" id="CHAPTER_XX"></SPAN><hr />
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_139" id="Page_139"></SPAN></span><br/>
<h3>CHAPTER XX.<span class="totoc"><SPAN href="#toc">ToC</SPAN></span></h3>
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<ANTIMG border="0" src="images/image06.png" width-obs="100%" alt="CHAPTER XX." /></div>
<p>Cyclona had gone to Seth's dugout and found a note from him on the
table. It contained few words, but they held a world of meaning.
Simple words and few, tolling her knell of doom.</p>
<p>"I have gone to Celia," it read.</p>
<p>Cyclona crushed the paper, flung it to the floor and ran from the hole
in the ground, afraid of she knew not what, engulfed in the awful fear
which encompasses the hopeless,—the fear of herself.</p>
<p>She sprang to her saddle and urged her broncho on with heel and whip,
upright as an Indian in her saddle, her face set, expressionless in
its marble-like immobility.</p>
<p>She scarcely heeded the direction she took. She left that to her
broncho, who sped into the heat of the dusty daylight, following hard
in the footsteps of the wind.</p>
<p>What she wished to do was to go <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_140" id="Page_140"></SPAN></span>straight to God, to stand before Him
and ask him questions.</p>
<p>If within us earthworms there is the Divine Spark of the Deity, if we
are in truth His sons and daughters, she reasoned, then we have some
rights that this Deity is bound to respect.</p>
<p>What earthly father would knowingly permit his children to stumble
blindly along dangerous pathways into dangerous places?</p>
<p>What earthly father would demand that his children rush headlong into
danger unquestioningly?</p>
<p>What earthly father would create hearts only to crush them?</p>
<p>Why had He thrust human beings onto this earth against their will,
without their volition, to suffer the tortures of the damned?</p>
<p>Why had He created this huge joke of an animal, part body, part soul,
all nerves keen to catch at suffering, only to laugh at it?</p>
<p>Why had He taken the pains to fashion this Opera Bouffe of a world at
all? Why had He made of it a slate upon which to draw lines of human
beings, then wipe them aimlessly off as would any child?</p>
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_141" id="Page_141"></SPAN></span>For mere amusement after the manner of children?</p>
<p>If not, then why? Why? Why?</p>
<p>She could have screamed out this "Why" into the way of the wind.</p>
<p>She wanted to ask Him why he whirled body-clad souls out of the
Nowhere, dragged them by the hair of their heads through ways thronged
with thorns, then thrust them back again into the Nowhere, to lie
stone still in their chill damp graves, in their straight grave
clothes, awaiting His pleasure?</p>
<p>Why had He seen fit to fashion some all body and no soul?</p>
<p>Why had He made others all soul?</p>
<p>Why had He created the Seths to weary for love of the Celias and the
Cyclonas to eat out their hearts for love of the Seths?</p>
<p>Some of these questions she had been wont to put to Seth, who had
answered them as best he could in his patient way.</p>
<p>There was a hidden meaning in it all, he had said, meaningless as it
often seemed. Some meaning that would show itself in God's good time.</p>
<p>We are uncut diamonds, was one of his explanations. We had much need
of polishing before we could attain <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_142" id="Page_142"></SPAN></span>sufficient brilliancy to adorn a
crown. We must have faith and hope, he had said. Much faith and hope
and patience. And above all we must have the belief that it would all
come out in the Great White Wash of Eternity, in God's good time.</p>
<p>But there were those who succumbed before God's good time, who would
never know the explanation until they had passed into the Beyond,
where they would cease to care.</p>
<p>She rode on and on, asking herself these questions and finding no
answer in the whirl and eddy of dust blown at her by the wind, in the
limitless stretch of prairie, in the suffocating thickness of heat
which enveloped the way of the wind.</p>
<p>Intense heat. Sultry, parching, enervating, sure precursor, if she had
thought to remember, if she had been less engrossed in the bitterness
of her questionings, of a storm.</p>
<p>Soon, aroused by the intensity of this heat, which burned like the
blast from an oven, she whirled about and turned her broncho's head
the other way.</p>
<p>It was time, for that way lay her home and danger threatened it.</p>
<p>At the moment of her turning a blast <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_143" id="Page_143"></SPAN></span>blew with trumpet-like warning
into the day, blazing redly like a fire of logs quickened by panting
breaths.</p>
<p>A lurid light, like the light of Judgment Day or the wrath of God
spread while she looked.</p>
<p>It enveloped her.</p>
<p>It was as if she gazed upon earth and sky through a bit of bright red
stained glass.</p>
<p>In the southern skies, in the direction of her home, clouds piled
high, black, threatening.</p>
<p>Then she heard a rushing sound of wind, wailing, moaning, threshing,
roaring sullenly in the distance.</p>
<p>She spurred her broncho into the darkness lit by flashes of this lurid
light.</p>
<p>A flash of light.</p>
<p>Then darkness, thick as purple velvet.</p>
<p>Furiously she urged the animal forward into this horrible unknown
which had the look of the wrath of God come upon her for her doubting,
pressed on by an innate feeling of affection for those two who had
befriended her, hurrying to their aid, spurred by an instinctive
foreboding of impending evil in this awful roaring, whirling,
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_144" id="Page_144"></SPAN></span>murderous sound of the wild winds gone suddenly stark mad.</p>
<p>As she sped on, something swept past her with a great hoarse roar,
distinguishable above the deafening roar of the wind.</p>
<p>It was Seth's herd, stampeding, running with the wind and bellowing
with fear.</p>
<p>She winged her way into the terror of the darkness.</p>
<p>Ready an hour before for death in any form, she now all at once found
herself panting with fear of it, gasping with a deadly fear of a
ghastly fate, of being crushed and mangled, of dying by inches beneath
some horrible weight, but this did not deter her.</p>
<p>Afraid to breathe a prayer to the God whom she had dared to question,
she winged her way breathlessly on and on.</p>
<p>Then sheets of water, as if the skies had opened and emptied
themselves,—and a vivid flash of lightning revealing the wind's wet
wings, its wild whirling fingers dripping.</p>
<p>Cyclona saw it coming in that flash, a fiendish thing apparently
alive, copper-colored, funnel-shaped, ghastly. She threw herself
forward on the neck of her <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_145" id="Page_145"></SPAN></span>broncho, grasping his mane. Then a blow
from a great unseen hand out of the darkness struck them both, felling
them.</p>
<p>During the next few minutes of inky blackness, of indescribable
terror, of flying missiles armed with death, Cyclona lay unconscious.
When she opened her eyes a calm light of the evenness of twilight had
spread over the track of the cyclone, and her head lay pillowed on
Hugh Walsingham's shoulder. Close beside her was a ragged bough and
her broncho lay dead near by. The bough was the hand that had struck
them out of the darkness, had thrown her to the sod and killed her
animal.</p>
<p>"I came very near," she sighed, "to standing before God."</p>
<p>By and by with Walsingham's help she stood.</p>
<p>"Where is the house?" she asked, bewildered by the barrenness of the
spot on which the topsy turvy house had stood for so many years.</p>
<p>"It is gone," said he.</p>
<p>Cyclona pressed both hands to her face and rocked back and forth,
sobbing.</p>
<p>God had spared her, true, but He had <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_146" id="Page_146"></SPAN></span>offered her this delicate irony
of leaving her homeless.</p>
<p>Hugh looked moodily out over the place of the topsy turvy house, his
own mind awhirl with the maddening force of the furious winds through
which he had passed.</p>
<p>"In Kansas," said he, grimly, "it is the wind that giveth and the wind
that taketh away."</p>
<p>Then, looking tenderly at the girl in his arms, he added softly:
"Blessed be the name of the wind!"</p>
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