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The Plague, Pestilence & Apocalypse MEGAPACK™

Page 79

by Robert Reed


  must look to the living .”

  At intervals along the hall Daphne served curtains, and stopping

  before one of them, Thoth drew it aside and revealed a small cell .

  Crouching at the back, like a terrified animal, lay a woman, scant-

  ily clad in a tattered garment made of coarse hair .

  Her figure seemed robust and healthy, but was rendered hideous

  by glaring streaks of paint and devices of unclean animals branded

  on the skin . Still more horrible was her head . She was evidently

  young, but she had no ears, no eyebrows, no hair . Her mouth had

  been distended, and her teeth were sharpened to fine points. She

  grovelled on the ground, as if awaiting torture, and Daphne’s heart

  stood still with horror and indignation .

  Suddenly Thoth addressed the creature in an unknown tongue,

  and after repeating the same thing over and over again, apparently

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  made the woman understand and believe what he said, for suddenly

  she gave a sobbing laugh and crouched to kiss his feet .

  “I have told her,” said Thoth, “that she need labour no more at

  her appointed tasks, and will never again be punished . But the thing

  which pleased her most, and which she could not believe, was that

  without her request she would never see any of the masked rulers .”

  “What were her tasks?” Daphne asked .

  “It would be difficult to explain,” said Thoth. “They were all

  most irksome, most useless, most trifling, but they were exacted

  with dreadful punishments . She had to count grains of sand, to un-

  ravel tangled knots, to learn by rote strings of meaningless sounds,

  and to discover all kinds of intricate puzzles .”

  To confirm his words, Thoth destroyed the various instruments

  of labour, scattered the sand, tore up the parchments, and stamped

  upon the fragments of the broken toys . The woman seemed stupe-

  fied with incredulous surprise, like a dazed child just recovered from

  a fit of terror.

  They passed on, and Thoth drew the curtain of another cell . Here

  again the occupant was a woman, but she was exquisitely clothed

  and both face and form were extremely beautiful . She shuddered

  when the masks entered and hastily began to arrange in a harmoni-

  ous manner various shades of coloured stuffs . She looked anxiously,

  too, at the walls of the cell which were covered with pictures . To

  Daphne the pictures were perfectly unintelligible, and yet they

  seemed excellent both in colour and drawing . They were such pic-

  tures as might be painted by a great artist whose reason had been

  destroyed by some calamity .

  “Her task,” said Thoth, “is to live entirely for colour and form—

  in all other respects she is less intelligent than a butterfly.”

  Daphne looked into her eyes, and saw at once that she was quite

  distraught .

  Again Thoth repeated the same gibberish, and at last seemed

  to make the woman understand in a blinking manner that her life

  would no longer be made a burden . To Daphne, however, it seemed

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  that the message of release had come too late—like longed-for rain

  after the tree has perished with drought .

  Suddenly a thought flashed through her mind, and without asking

  Thoth’s permission, she threw off her disguise and addressed the

  artist . At once she uttered a low cry of pleasure, and ran to em-

  brace Daphne . Then she turned to Thoth and spoke to him in broken

  words . At Daphne’s request Thoth acted as interpreter, and told her

  the woman wished Daphne to remain as her companion . Daphne

  wept with pity, and Thoth led her away, the artist in vain trying to

  repress a cry of despair .

  Thus they visited room after room, and through all the variety of

  occupations in which the miserable women were engaged, the same

  features were conspicuous . Their labour was, without exception,

  either most irksome, most useless, most trifling, or else degrading,

  and yet it evidently required the highest degree of cunning and per-

  severance .

  In appearance, many of the women had been made physically

  most repulsive,—some maimed, some blind, some almost shape-

  less with distortion; and those whose bodies had escaped, had been

  deformed to a much worse extent in mind . Without exception they

  shuddered on the entry of the masks, and showed their terror in the

  most undisguised manner . Apparently Thoth tried to take away their

  fears, and to inform them that for the future they would live happily;

  but they listened with dull incredulity, and seemed quite hopeless .

  In the whole of this vast building there was not a single creature

  who could have kindled a spark of love in the heart of the most

  impassioned of men .

  Daphne was sickened by the spectacle, and oppressed with a

  heavy weight of sadness . She tried to escape, but her companion

  told her it was necessary for her to see more, and that he would show

  her the least revolting of the women . Daphne shrank from imagining

  what worse horrors the building might contain .

  When they at last emerged the very sunlight seemed polluted,

  and the fresh air laden with pestilence .

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  As they made their way to the gate, Thoth spoke to the hideous

  giantess, and she showed the same surprise as her captives . To her

  Thoth spoke in a tongue which Daphne understood, and told her

  that she was to be replaced, and that until another guardian came,

  she was to leave the women unmolested . The ogress ventured to re-

  monstrate, but at the first sentence Thoth sternly cried, “Darest thou

  question me?” and touched her hand with the end of his golden staff,

  whereupon the monster fell as one dead . As if to excuse himself,

  Thoth said—

  “There is no further use for her: it is better thus .”

  Then said Daphne, “Is she dead?”

  “Yes,” he replied,—“dead beyond all aid; and to all her kind will

  I do likewise .”

  They passed through the gate, and as before, every one they saw

  treated Thoth with the utmost respect and reverence . But Daphne

  was silent, weary, and despondent .

  The horrors she had witnessed seemed to pervade every nook and

  cranny of the place . Helplessly she walked by the side of Thoth, and

  the salutations of her little servants when she entered her dwelling

  seemed to be as unreal and distant as if they came from the sky .

  She felt for the first time her reason totter—she had not strength

  sufficient to wish to flee from the place, or to rush upon her death. At

  last she wept passionately, and sank into a troubled sleep .

  CHAPTER X

  THE MYSTERY OF THE WOMEN RESOLVED

  For some days Daphne was utterly prostrated with the scenes

  which she had been compelled to witness . The present was joyless,

  the future hopeless . If she requested to be sent back to Greece, she

  knew not if the whole land would not be desolate; and, worse than

  all, she again distrusted Thoth, and doubted if
he would keep his

  promise . She began to fear that she was reserved for some dreadful

  fate .

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  Thoth neither came to see her nor sent any message, but, as be-

  fore, left the seeds of hope to spring up in quietness . And as the days

  passed by, slowly and gradually the youth and health of Daphne

  began to dissipate the gloomy memories, and wonder and love of

  life took the place of heaviness of spirit and fear of death .

  To her own surprise she again formed the wish to see Thoth, and

  at times almost believed that he would in some wonderful manner

  convert the scenes which she had witnessed into an unreal dream .

  But the belief was momentary and evanescent, and she shuddered as

  she thought of the plight of the miserable women and their deplor-

  able state . Alive they were certainly, and living a life worse than

  death . Hope rose again, however, when she thought of the apparent

  kindness of Thoth, and then she tried to imagine that he was to be

  the saviour of the women who had been cruelly ill-treated by others .

  Surely, she thought, he himself can never have been guilty of such

  crimes .

  When her thoughts had become thus kindly disposed towards

  Thoth, he suddenly appeared, almost as if he had been able to read

  what was passing in her mind .

  His face was as impassive and immobile as ever, and he made

  inquiries concerning Daphne’s welfare as if nothing extraordinary

  had happened .

  But she shuddered at his callousness, and indignantly cried, “Un-

  less thou canst and wilt explain to me the mystery of these women,

  never look on me again .”

  “That,” said he, “is my present purpose . Listen with care .”

  Daphne signified her assent, and Thoth continued—

  “In order to resolve this mystery, I must first make thee under-

  stand how much this city is different from others in every respect—a

  fact, indeed, thou canst not have failed to observe . Tell me, apart

  from these women, what thinkest thou of our people?”

  “They are truly a wonderful race, and surpass dreams in their

  knowledge of arts and sciences .”

  “And, apart from the women, what sayest thou of the govern-

  ment?”

  THOTH, by Joseph Shield Nicholson | 618

  “The people seem happy and contented, and they appear to live

  in the utmost obedience to their rulers through mere love and re-

  spect—except these women .”

  “That,” replied Thoth, “is the plain truth . There is no city under

  the sun in which the people are so happy, contented, and so easily

  governed—except these women .

  “And how,” he continued, “dost thou imagine this wonderful

  state of affairs has arisen? But it is impossible to divine, and I will

  tell thee .

  “Many hundred years ago the father of the rulers of our people, a

  man of a Grecian tribe, held a high office in Egypt. In knowledge he

  surpassed all men, and in knowledge lay his authority . He devised

  many just laws, and was honoured and revered both by the multitude

  and by the king and his rulers . Had he not been thwarted, he would

  have made the Egyptians the most powerful people of the world . But

  he was betrayed and deluded: some time I may tell thee the full his-

  tory—suffice it to say that he was ruined and subjected to dishonour

  through the love of a beautiful woman .

  “Mark this—for it is the key-stone of our policy . He contrived to

  seize the woman, and with a number of devoted followers he fled

  away and founded this city . Of the pure Greek race were only my

  ancestor and this woman, and about half a score of women and men .

  The rest were aliens, but all devoted to him, and prepared to pay him

  most implicit obedience, and his knowledge both of men and things

  was so great that he could exact any obedience .

  “He determined to found a new state entirely according to reason .

  The government was to be entirely in the hands of the wisest man,

  and this wisest man was to be first-born of this new royal race. For

  Thoth the first, as he is called of us, forced the woman who deceived

  him to become the mother of his children . And he believed, through

  the secrets which he had wrested from nature, that, by the careful

  choice of a mother, he could combine for the future the right by birth

  with the right by power and wisdom .

  “It is this careful choice according to types which has provided

  this city with dwarfs and giants, and with workers of all kinds, with

  THOTH, by Joseph Shield Nicholson | 619

  aptitudes for peculiar forms of art or science . Thou hast seen for

  thyself the results of the wisdom of the first Thoth. But as regards

  the rulers, he was determined that he would, in the course of time,

  utterly stamp out the love of woman, and replace it with loathing

  and disgust . To this end he himself treated the woman who had

  changed his love into hatred with the utmost cruelty and contempt .

  At the same time, in order to render her offspring healthy and intel-

  ligent, he compelled her to labour both with mind and body, and to

  live so as to unfold her utmost powers . How meet she was to be the

  mother of a race of kings thou canst judge thyself, if thou hast not

  yet forgotten the statue which was her image . Her sons were taught

  from their infancy to loathe their mother, and to regard their sisters

  as necessary evils .

  “It would only be painful and useless were I to tell thee more in

  detail; suffice it to say that in the building of the women thou hast

  seen the natural result of this policy, acted upon for many hundred

  years . Our women of the race of rulers are simply intended to be

  mothers of particular kinds of men, and in the course of generations

  the men of this race have succeeded in acquiring for women a natu-

  ral hatred and loathing .

  “Now thou canst understand why it was my fellows—who were

  also of the rulers, though inferior to me—treated thee and thy com-

  panions with such contempt, and also thou canst to some extent ex-

  plain the mystery of the women whom I showed to thee . Thou seest

  only the will of the first Thoth manifested through his descendants.

  Two principles he has planted in all his people—perfect obedience

  to his vice-regent, for we say that our king is not dead but asleep,

  and love of knowledge and of toil . Thus in all and in us of the ruling

  race, our strongest passion is hatred and contempt for women .”

  As he ended his narration Daphne shuddered, for she thought she

  read in his eyes signs of lust depraved by malignant cruelty, and that

  he regarded her with all the loathing he had just described . Then

  she reflected on her helpless condition and on the misery she had

  witnessed, and swiftly determined to seek a refuge in death . Already

  with this notion in her mind she had provided herself with a dagger,

  THOTH, by Joseph Shield Nicholson | 620

  and with a trembling hand she seized it . Then she raised her courage,

  and looking Thoth steadfastly in the face, she
cried—

  “I at least will never be degraded, and thus I escape from thy

  snare .”

  She raised the knife, and was about to plunge it into her heart

  when Thoth seized her arm, and said—

  “Stay thy hand,—thou hast heard but half the story . Dost thou not

  wonder why, hating women as we do, and being most strict in keep-

  ing our race pure, we have notwithstanding sought to bring strange

  women from beyond the sea, and that we have paid them honour—I

  at least to thee,—thou dost not doubt that?”

  But Daphne replied with undisguised doubtfulness, “Perchance

  it is but some horrible device to make the cruelty more exquisite .”

  * * * *

  “Nay,” said he,—“listen . A generation back one of our vice-

  regents, who was my predecessor in government and also my father,

  thought he observed signs of decay in the race of rulers . He applied

  various tests, and all gave the same result . There was a falling off

  both in mental and bodily power . It seemed to him that in some man-

  ner the training and the selection of the women had been faulty, and

  being confident of the good results of the plan of Thoth the first, he

  ascribed the fault to a want of rigour . Accordingly he redoubled the

  labours and increased the tasks of the women, and, at the same time,

  treated them with still greater cruelty, for his object was to bring the

  mind of women absolutely under control. But desirous of confirm-

  ing his view by reasoning from the opposite, he brought over from

  Greece a female child and caused her to be received with affection

  by the common people, and at the proper age made her one of his

  own wives . But the hatred of women was so strongly implanted in

  him that, though he treated her with forced respect and kindness, he

  could not show her any real love . Yet such is the nature of women,

  she loved him though she lived in constant fear and wretchedness .

  So much did her lord despise her, that he took no pains to conceal

  from her the secrets of our government . He allowed her to discover

  THOTH, by Joseph Shield Nicholson | 621

  that she was only the subject of an experiment, and that if her child

  did not show at an early age signs of superiority, he would be de-

  stroyed . The mother’s instinct was alarmed, and, by the aid of her

  old nurse, she contrived to exchange her son with another infant

 

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