They walked through the evening.
Dusk had fallen and in the drowsy half-lights the world stretched itself in peacefulness.
They had come to a flat country that whispered in grass; there were no more of the little hills that roll and fall and roll; there were scarcely any trees; here and there in great space a beech swung its slow boughs and made a quiet noise in the stillness; here and there a stiff tree lifted its lonely greenness, and around it the vast horizon stretched away and away to sightlessness.
There was silence here, there was deep silence, and over all the dusk drowsed and folded and increased.
With what slow veils the darkness deepened! the gentle weaver spun herthin webs and drooped soft coverings from the sky to the clay; momently the stars came flashing their tiny signals, gathering their bright hosts by lonely clusters, and one thin sickle of the moon grew from a cloud and stood distantly as a sign of gold.
But the quiet beauty of the heavens and the quiet falling to sleep of the earth had for this night no effect on one of our travellers.
Mac Cann was ill at ease. He was moody and irritable, and he moved from Eileen Ni Cooley to his daughter and back again to Eileen Ni Cooley and could not content himself with either of them.
The angels were treading at the rear of the cart talking among themselves; the slow drone of their voices drifted up the road, and from this murmuring the words God and Beauty and Love would detach themselves and sing recurringly on the air like incantations.
Eileen Ni Cooley trod on the left side ofthe ass. She trod like a featureless shade; her shawl wrapped blottingly about her face and her mind moving within herself and for herself.
Mac Cann and his daughter went together by the right side of the donkey, and, as he looked constantly at his daughter, his eyes were furtive and cunning.
He tapped her elbow.
"Mary," he whispered, "I want to talk to you."
She replied in a voice that was low from his contact.
"I want to talk to yourself," said she.
"What do you want to say?"
"I want to know where you got the money that I saw in your hand when you buried the man?"
"That's what I'm going to tell you about," he whispered. "Be listening to me now and don't make any noise."
"I'm listening to you," said Mary.
"What have we got to do with these lads behind us?" said Patsy urgently. "Theyare nothing to us at all, and I'm tired of them."
"There's a thing to say!" quoth she.
"This is what we'll do. To-night we won't unyoke the ass, and when they are well asleep we'll walk quietly off with ourselves and leave them there. Eileen Ni Cooley will come with us and in the morning we'll be distant."
"I won't do that," said Mary.
He darted at her a sparkle of rage.
"You'll do what I say, you strap, or it'll be the worse for you!" said his violent whisper.
"I won't do that," she hissed, "and I tell you I won't."
"By the living Jingo...!" said Patsy.
She came at him whispering with equal fierceness.
"What have you done on the men?" said she. "What did you do on them that you want to run away from them in the night?"
"Keep your tongue in your teeth, you——!"
"Where were you for a day and a half? Where did you get the money from that I saw in your hand when you buried the man?"
Patsy composed himself with difficulty; he licked his dry lips.
"There's no fooling you, alannah, and I'll tell you the truth."
He glanced cautiously to where the others were coming deep in talk.
"This is what I did. I went to that place by Ard-Martin where we buried the things, and I dug them up."
"Oh!" said Mary.
"I dug them up, and I took them away, and I sold them to a man for money."
"Oh!" said Mary.
"They're sold, do you hear? And there's no going back on it; so do what I tell you about the ass this night and we'll take our own road from now on."
"I won't do it," whispered Mary, and she was almost speechless with rage.
Mac Cann thrust his face close to hers grinning like a madman.
"You won't do it!" said he. "What will you do then against your father?"
"I'll go on to the place with the men," she stammered.
"You'll come with me this night."
"I'll not go," said she harshly.
"You'll come with me this night," said he.
"I'll not go," she screamed at him.
At the sound of her scream everybody came running to them.
"Is there anything wrong?" said Art.
"She's only laughing at a joke I told her," said Patsy. "Make that ass go on, Mary a grah, for it's walking as if it was going asleep."
Caeltia was looking at Mac Cann so fixedly, with such a severe gravity of eye, that the blood of the man turned to water and he could scarcely hold himself upright. For the first time in his life Mac Cann knew what fear was.
"To-morrow," said Caeltia, "we will be going away from you, let us be peaceful then for our last night together."
"Aye," said Patsy, "let us be comfortable for this night of all nights."
He turned away, and with a great effort at carelessness he moved to the donkey's head.
"Come on, Mary," said he.
Eileen Ni Cooley trod beside him for a moment.
"What's wrong with you, Padraig?" said she.
"Nothing at all, Eileen, just leave me alone for a minute for I want to talk to the girl."
"You can count on me for anything, Padraig."
"I don't know whether I can or not," he muttered savagely. "Keep quiet for ten minutes, in the name of God."
For a few dull seconds they paced in quiet. Patsy moistened his lips with his tongue.
"What are you going to do, Mary?"
"I don't know," she replied. "What man did you sell the things to?"
"I sold them to a man that lives near by—a rich man in a big house."
"There's only one big house about here."
"That's the house."
She was silent.
"If you're going to tell the men," said her father, "give me two hours' law this night until I get away, and then you can tell them and be damned to you."
"Listen to me!" said the girl.
"I'm listening."
"There is only one thing to be done, and it has got to be done at once: go you to the place of that rich man and take the things away from his house and bury them back again in the place they were buried. If you want any help I'll go with you myself."
Mac Cann's thumb wandered to his chin and a sound as of filing was heardwhile he rubbed it. His voice was quite changed as he replied:
"Begor!" said he.
"You're full of fun," said he, thoughtfully. He covered his mouth with his hand then and stared thoughtfully down the road.
"Will you do that?" said Mary.
He thumped a hand heavily on her shoulder.
"I will so, and I do wonder that I didn't think of it myself, for it's the thing that ought to be done."
And now as they marched the atmosphere had changed; there was once more peace or the precursor of it; from Mac Cann a tempered happiness radiated as of old: he looked abroad without misgiving and he looked at his daughter with the cynical kindliness habitual to him. They trod so for a little time arranging their thoughts, then:
"We are near enough to that house to be far enough from it if there's any reasonto be far," said Mac Cann, "so this is what I say, let us stop where we are for the night and in the morning we'll go on from here."
"Very well," said Mary, "let us stop here."
Her father drew the ass to the side of the road and there halted it.
"We'll go to bed now," he shouted to the company, and they all agreed to that.
"I'm going to unyoke the beast," said Mary with a steady eye on her father.
He replied heartily.
"Why wouldn't you do that? Let him out to get something to eat like the rest of us."
"There isn't any water," he complained a minute later. "What will that animal do? and what will we do ourselves?"
"I have two big bottles of water in the cart," said Mary.
"And I have a little bottle in my pocket," said he, "so we're all right."
The donkey was unyoked, and he wentat once to stand with his feet in the wet grass. He remained so for a long time without eating, but he did eat when that idea occurred to him.
The brazier was lit, the sacks strewn on the ground, and they sat about the fire in their accustomed places and ate their food. After a smoke and a little conversation each person stretched backwards, covering themselves with other sacks, and they went heartily to sleep.
"We will have to be up early in the morning," was Patsy's last remark, "for you are in a hurry to get back your things," and saying so he stretched his length with the others.
When a still hour had drifted by Mary raised cautiously and tip-toed to her father. As she stood by him he slid the sacks aside and came to his feet, and they moved a little way down the road.
"Now," said Mary, "you can do what you said you'd do."
"I'll do that," said he.
"And get back as quick as you can."
"It's a distance there and back again. I'll be here in the morning, but I'll be late."
"Bury the things the way they were before."
"That's all right," and he moved a step backwards.
"Father!" said Mary softly.
He returned to her.
"What more do you want?" said he impatiently.
She put her arms about his neck.
"What the devil are you doing?" said he in astonishment, and he tried to wriggle loose from her.
But she did not say another word, and after a moment he put his own arms about her with a grunt and held her tightly.
"I'm away now," said he, and, moving against the darkness, he disappeared.
For half a minute the sound of his feet was heard, and then the darkness covered him.
Mary returned to her place by the brazier. She stretched close to Eileen Ni Cooley and lay staring at the moving clouds.
In a few minutes she was asleep, although she had not felt any heaviness on her eyes.
No one was awake.
In the brazier a faint glow peeped from the white turf-ash; the earth seemed to be holding its breath, so still it was; the clouds hung immovably each in its place; a solitary tree near by folded its wide limbs into the darkness and made no sound.
Nothing stirred in the world but the ass as he lifted his head slowly and drooped it again; his feet were sunken in a plot of grass and he was quiet as the earth.
Then I came softly, and I spoke to the ass in the darkness.
"Little ass," quoth I, "how is everything with you?"
"Everything is very well," said the ass.
"Little ass," said I, "tell me what you do be thinking of when you fix your eye on vacancy and stare there for a long time?"
"I do be thinking," said the ass, "of my companions, and sometimes I do be looking at them."
"Who are your companions?"
"Last night I saw the Cyclops striding across a hill; there were forty of them, and each man was forty feet high; they had only one eye in their heads and they looked through that; they looked through it the way a fire stares through a hole and they could see well."
"How do you know they could see well?"
"One of them saw me and he called out to the others; they did not wait, but he waited for a moment; he took me in his arms and he stroked my head; then he put me on the ground and went away, and in ten strides he crossed over the mountain."
"That was a good sight to see!"
"That was a good sight."
"Tell me something else you saw."
"I saw seven girls in a meadow and they were playing together; when they weretired playing they lay on the grass and they went to sleep; I drew near and stretched beside them on the grass, and I watched them for a long time; but when they awakened they disappeared into the air and were gone like puffs of smoke.
"I saw the fairy host marching through a valley in the hills; wide, silken banners were flying above their heads; some had long swords in their hands and some had musical instruments, and there were others who carried a golden apple in their hands, and others again with silver lilies and cups of heavy silver; they were beautiful and proud and they marched courageously; they marched past me for three gay hours while I stood on the slope of a hill.
"I saw three centaurs riding out of a wood; they raced round and round me shouting and waving their hands; one of them leaned his elbows on my back, and they talked of a place in the middle of a forest; they pelted me with tufts of grass;then they went by a narrow path into the wood, and they rode away.
"I saw a herd of wild asses in a plain; men were creeping around them in the long grass, but the asses ran suddenly, and they killed the men with their hoofs and their teeth; I galloped in the middle of them for half a night, but I remembered Mary Ni Cahan, and when I remembered her I turned from all my companions and I galloped home again."
"Those were all good sights to see!"
"They were all good sights."
"Good-bye, little ass," said I.
"Good-bye, you," said he.
He lay along the grass then and he closed his eyes, but I turned back and crouched by the brazier, watching the people while they slept, and staring often into the darkness to see did anything stir before the light came.
Mac Cann strode through the darkness for a little time, but when he found himself at sufficient distance from the camp he began to run.
There was not very much time wherein to do all that he had engaged before the morning dawned, and so he took to this mode of activity, which was not one for which he had any reverence. He was a heavy man and did not run with either grace or ease, but he could hasten his movements to a jog-trot, and, as his physical condition was perfect, he could continue such a trot until hunger brought it to a halt, for he was never fatigued, being as strong and tireless as a bear.
He was the most simple-minded of men. When he was engaged in one affair he could not meddle with anything else, and nowthat he was running he could do nothing but run—he could not think, for instance. When it was necessary to think he would either walk very slowly or stand stock-still, and then he would think with great speed and with great simplicity. His head bade his legs be quiet while it was occupied, and, when they were in motion, his legs tramped hush to his head, which obeyed instantly; and he was so well organised on these lines that there was never any quarrel between the extremities.
It was, therefore, the emptiest of men that now pounded the road. He would deal with an emergency when it was visible, but until then he snapped a finger and forgot it, for he had learned that the first word of an emergency is a warning, the second a direction for escape, its third utterance is in action, and it will only be waited for by a fool.
Exactly what he would do when he arrived at the house he did not know, and as yet he made no effort to deal with thatproblem: he obeyed the prime logical necessity, which was to get there: once there and the second step would push itself against him, and from that cause the most orderly of results would ensue. If there was no trouble he would succeed in his enterprise; if there was trouble he would fly—that was his simple programme.
And meantime there was nothing in the world but darkness and the rhythmic tramping of his feet. These, with a faintly hushing wind, kept his ears occupied. He had much of the cat's facility for seeing in the dark, and he had the sense of direction which some birds have, so he made good progress.
After half an hour's steady movement he came to the house for which he was seeking, and halted there.
It was a long, low building, standing back from the road. There was a stone wall around this house, and the entrance was by an iron gate.
Mac Cann touched the gate, for experience had taught him that gates are not always locked, but this one was locked securely. By the gate was a caretaker's lodge, so he moved quietly from that place and walked by the wall.
There was glass on the top of the wall which halted him for a few moments while he sucked his incautious hand. To cope with this he gathered several large stones and placed them on top of each other and he stood on these, then he threw his coat and waistcoat over the glass and climbed easily across.
He was in a shrubbery. About him every few paces were short, stiff bushes, some of which were armed with spines, which did their duty on his hands and the legs of his trousers; but he regarded these with an inattention which must have disgusted them. He tip-toed among these guardians and was shortly free of them and on a gravel pathway. Crossing this he came on quiet flower-beds, whichhe skirted: the house was now visible as a dark mass distant some hundred yards.
Saving for one window the place was entirely dark, and it was towards that window he directed his careful steps.
"It's better to look at something than at nothing," quoth he.
He was again on a gravel path, and the stones tried to crunch and wriggle under his feet, but he did not allow that to happen.
He came to the window and, standing well to the side, peeped in.
He saw a square room furnished as a library. The entire section of the walls which he could spy was covered from floor to ceiling with books. There were volumes of every size, every shape, every colour. There were long, narrow books that held themselves like grenadiers at stiff attention. There were short, fat books that stood solidly like aldermen who were going to make speeches and were ashamed but not frightened. There were mediocre books bearing themselveswith the carelessness of folk who are never looked at and have consequently no shyness. There were solemn books that seemed to be feeling for their spectacles; and there were tattered, important books that had got dirty because they took snuff, and were tattered because they had been crossed in love and had never married afterwards. There were prim, ancient tomes that were certainly ashamed of their heroines and utterly unable to obtain a divorce from the hussies; and there were lean, rakish volumes that leaned carelessly, or perhaps it was with studied elegance, against their neighbours, murmuring in affected tones, "All heroines are charming to us."
In the centre of the room was a heavy, black table, and upon the highly polished surface of this a yellow light fell from globes on the ceiling.
At this table a man was seated, and he was staring at his hands. He was a man of about thirty years of age. A tall,slender man with a lean face, and, to Patsy, he was of an appalling cleanliness—a cleanliness really to make one shudder: he was shaved to the last closeness; he was washed to the ultimate rub; on him both soap and water had wrought their utmost, and could have no further ambitions; his wristlets gleamed like snow on a tree, and his collar rose upon a black coat as the plumage of a swan emerges spotlessly from water.
His cleanliness was a sight to terrify any tramp, but it only angered Mac Cann, who was not liable to terror of anything but hunger.
"I would like to give you a thump on the head, you dirty dog!" said Patsy, breathing fiercely against the corner of the window-pane, and his use of the adjective was singular as showing in what strange ways extremes can meet.
This was the man to whom he had sold the gear of his companions: an indelicate business indeed, and one which the cleanlinessof the purchaser assisted him to rectify, and it was in this room that the barter had been conducted. By craning his neck a little he could see an oaken settle, and upon this his sacks were lying with their mouths open and the gleaming cloths flooding at the entry.
While he stared, the man removed his fingers from his eyes and put them in his pocket, then he arose very slowly and paced thoughtfully towards the window.
Mac Cann immediately ducked beneath the window-ledge. He heard the window opened and knew the man was leaning his elbows on the sill while he stared into the darkness.
"Begor!" said Patsy to himself, and he flattened his body against the wall.
After a time, which felt longer than it could have been, he heard the man moving away, and he then popped up and again peeped through the window.
The man had opened the door of the room which faced the window and wasstanding in the entry. Now his hands were clasped behind his back, his head was sunken forward, and he seemed to be looking at his feet, which is the habit of many men when they think, for when the eyes touch the feet a circuit is formed and one's entire body is able to think at ease.
Suddenly the man stepped into a black corridor and he disappeared. Mac Cann heard about ten steps ringing from a solid flooring, then he heard a door open and shut, then he heard nothing but the shifting and rubbing of his own clothes and the sound his own nose made when he breathed outwards: there was a leathern belt about his middle, and from the noise which it made one would have fancied that it was woven of thunders—there was a great silence; the lighted room was both inviting and terrifying, for it was even more silent than the world outside; the steady globes stared at the window like the eyes of a mad fish, and one could imagine that the room had pricked upinvisible ears and was listening towards the window, and one could imagine also that the room would squeak and wail if any person were to come through anywhere but a door and stand in it.
Mac Cann did not imagine any of these things. He spat on his hands, and in the twinkling of an eye he was inside the window. In three long and hasty paces he placed a hand on each of the sacks, and just as he gripped them he heard a door opening, and he heard the footsteps ringing again on a solid flooring.
"I'm in," said he, viciously, "and I won't go out."
His eyes blinked around like the flash of lightning but there was no place to hide. He stepped across the oaken chest and crouched down. Behind him, from the floor upwards, were books, in front was the big chest, and on top of it the two bulging sacks. He was well screened and he could peep between the sacks.
He stared towards the door.
The clean man came in and stood aside. Following him came a woman who was, if anything, more rigorously washed than he was. Somehow, although she was a tall woman, she seemed as light as a feather. She was clad in a delicate pink gown of such gossamer quality that it balanced and swam on the air with every movement she made. Across her bare shoulders was a lawn veiling, which also sailed and billowed as she moved. Her hair seemed to be of the finest spun gold, light as thistle-down, and it, too, waved and floated in little strands and ringlets.
These two people sat down at different sides of the table, and for a time they did not speak to each other. Then the man raised his head:
"I got a letter from your mother this morning," said he in a low voice.
The woman answered him in a tone that was equally low:
"I did not know you corresponded with her."
The man made a slight gesture:
"Nor did I know that your correspondence was as peculiar as I have found it," said he.
Said the woman coldly:
"You are opening this subject again."
"I am: I have to: your mother confirms everything that I have charged you with."
"My mother hates me," said the woman, "she would confirm anything that was said of me, if it was bad enough."
"She is your mother."
"Oh no, she is not! When I ceased to be a child she ceased to be a mother. We are only two women who are so well acquainted that we can be enemies without any shame of each other."
"Are you not talking nonsense?"
"I have committed a crime against her. She will never forgive me for being younger than she is, and for being pretty in her own fashion. She left my father because he said I was good-looking."
"All that...!" said the man with a movement of his shoulder.
"As to what she would do against me, you should know it well enough considering the things she told you before we were married."
"You admitted that they were not all lies."
"Some of the facts were true, all of the colouring was false—they are the things a loving mother says about her daughter! but that is an old story now, or I had fancied so."
"One forgets the old story until the new story drags it to memory," said he.
She also moved her shoulders slightly.
"I begin to find these conversations tiresome."
"I can understand that.... With her letter your mother enclosed some other letters from her friends—they insist on the facts, and add others."
"Are they letters, or copies of letters?"
"They are copies."
"Of course my mother has forbidden you to disclose the fact that she forwarded her friends' private correspondence to you."
"Naturally."
"Very naturally; the reason being that she wrote these letters herself to herself. There are no originals of these copies."
"Again you are talking nonsense."
"I know her better than you do, better than she knows herself."
There was silence between them again for a few moments, and again it was broken by the man.
"There are some things I cannot do," said he, and paused:
"I cannot search in unclean places for unclean information," he continued, and again the silence fell between these two people.
She could bear that silence, but he could not:
"You do not say anything!" said he.
"This seems to be so entirely your business," was her quiet reply.
He moved a hand at that:
"You cannot divorce yourself from me with such ease. This is our business, and we must settle it between us."
Her hand was resting on the table, and suddenly he reached to her and laid his own hand on hers. She did not withdraw, but the stiffening of her body was more than withdrawal. He drew his hand away again.
"We are reasonable creatures and must question our difficulties," said he gently, "we must even help each other to resolve them."
"These difficulties are not of my making."
"They are, and you are lying to me shamelessly."
Again between these people a silence fell which was profound but not quiet. That soundlessness was tingling with sound; there were screams latent in it; it was atrocious and terrifying. The man's hand was pressed against his forehead and his eyes were closed, but what he waslooking at was known only to himself in the silence of his being. The woman sat upright an arm's-length from him, and although her eyes were wide and calm, she also was regarding that which was free within herself, and very visible to her.
"There are things I cannot do," said the man, emerging as with an effort from subterranean caves and secret prospects. He continued speaking, calmly but tonelessly:
"I have striven to make a rule of life for myself and to follow it, but I have not sought to impose my laws on any one else—not on you, certainly. Still there are elementary duties which we owe to one another and which cannot be renounced by either of us. There is a personal, I might say, a domestic loyalty expected by each of us...."
"I expect nothing," said she.
"I exact nothing," said the man, "but I expect that—I expect it as I expect air for my lungs and stability under myfeet. You must not withdraw that from me. You are not the individual you think; you are a member of society, and you live by it; you are a member of my household, and you live by it."
She turned her face to him but not her eyes.
"I do not ask anything from you," said she, "and I have accepted as little as was possible."
He clenched his hand on the table, but when he spoke his voice was without emphasis:
"That is part of my grievance against you. Life is to give and take without any weighing of the gifts. You will do neither, and yet our circumstances are such that we must accommodate each other whether we will or not."
"I am an exact man," he continued, "perhaps you find that trying, but I cannot live in doubt. Whatever happens to hinder or assist my consciousness must be known to me. It is a law of my being:it is my ancestral heritage, and I have no command over it."
"I also," said she coldly, "am an heir of the ages, and must take my bequests whether I like them or not."
"I love you," said the man, "and I have proved it many times. I am not demonstrative, and I am shy of this fashion of speech. Perhaps that shyness of speech is responsible for more than is apparent to either of us in a world eager for speech and gesture, but I say the word now in all sincerity, with a gravity, perhaps, which you find repulsive. Be at least as honest with me, no matter how cruel you are. I cannot live in the half-knowledge which is jealousy. It tears my heart. It makes me unfit for thought, for life, for sleep, even for death. I must know, or I am a madman and no man any longer, a wild beast that will bite itself in despair of hurting its enemy."
The woman's tongue slipped over her pale lips in a quick, red flash.
"Have you anything to say to me?" said he.
There was no reply.
He insisted:
"Are the statements in your mother's letter true?"
"My mother's letter!" said she.
"Have I reason for this jealousy?" he breathed.
Her reply was also but a breathing:
"I will not tell you anything," said she.
Once again the silence drowsed and droned between the two people, and again they repaired to the secret places of their souls where energy was sucked from them until they existed only in a torpor. The woman rose languidly from her chair, and, after an instant, the man stood also.
Said he:
"I will leave here in the morning."
"You will let me see the boy," she murmured.
"If," said he, "I ever learn that youhave spoken to the boy I will kill you, and I will kill the boy."
The woman went out then, and her feet tapped lightly along the corridor. The man turned down the lights in the yellow globes and stepped to the door; his footsteps also died away in the darkness, but in a different direction.
Mac Cann stood up:
"Begor!" said he, stretching his cramped knees.
About him was a great darkness and a great silence, and the air of that room was more unpleasant than any atmosphere he had ever breathed. But he had the nerves of a bear and a resolute adherence to his own business, so the excitement of another person could only disturb him for a moment. Still, he did not like the room, and he made all haste to get out of it.
He lifted the sacks, stepped carefully to the window, and dropped them out. Then he climbed through and picked them up.
In five minutes he was on the road again. Along it for some dozen yards he trod like a great cat until he had left the gate-keeper's lodge well behind him; then, with the sacks across his shoulders, he shook to the steady jog-trot which was to last for about three hours.
Mary awakened early.
The morning was grey and the sky flat and solid, with here and there thin furrows marking its gathered fields.
She raised her head, and looked towards her father's place, but he was not there, and the sacks were crumpled on the ground.
Finaun's great length was lying along the ground, and he was straight as a rod. Caeltia was curved a little, and one hand was flung above his head. Art was rolled up like a ball; his hands were gripped about his knees, and he had kicked the sacks off his body. Eileen Ni Cooley had her two arms under her face; she was lying on her breast, and her hair streamed sidewards from her head along the dull grass.
As Mary lay back, for it was still too early to rise, a thought came to her and sherose to her feet again. She thought that perhaps her father had come softly in the night and moved the ass and cart away with him, and that thought lifted her breast in panic.
She ran down the road and saw the cart with its shafts poked in the air, and further away the donkey was lying on his side.
She came back on tip-toe smiling happily to herself, and, with infinite precaution, she restored the sacks to Art's body and composed herself again to sleep. She did not raise the camp, for she wished to give her father all possible time so that he might return unnoticed.
And while she slept the sky unpacked its locked courses; the great galleons of cloud went sailing to the west, and thus, fleet by fleet, relieved those crowded harbours. The black cloud-masses went rolling on the sky—They grew together, touched and swung apart and slipped away with heavy haste, as when down narrow waters an armada weighs, filling listlessly her noisy sails, while the slender spars are hauled tothe breeze; the watchmen stand at the posts, and the fenders are still hung from the pitching sides; almost the vessels touch; the shipmen shout as they bear heavily on their oaken poles; and then they swing again, the great prows bear away, the waters boil between, and the loud farewells sing faintly to the waves.
And now the sky was a bright sea sown with islands; they shrank and crumbled and drifted away, islands no more, but a multitude of plumes and flakes and smoky wreaths hastily scudding, for the sun had lifted his tranquil eye on the heavens; he stared afar down the grey spaces, and before his gaze the mists went huddling and hiding in lovely haste; the dark spaces became white, the dark blue spaces became light blue, and earth and sky sparkled and shone in his radiant beam.
The camp awakened before Mary did, and again the enquiry went as to the whereabouts of her father:
"He will be here shortly," said Mary. "He must have gone along the road to see if there was anything he could find for us to eat," and she delayed the preparation of their breakfast to the last possible moment. She spilled a pot of boiling water to that end, and she overturned the brazier when the water boiled again.
They were about sitting to their food when Mac Cann came in sight, and she held the meal until his arrival with his hat far to the back of his head, the happiest of smiles on his face, and a newspaper bundle in his hand.
Mary gave him a look of quick meaning:
"Were you able to find anything for the breakfast?" said she, and then she was astonished.
"I was indeed," he replied, and he handed her the bulky newspaper package.
She used that occasion to whisper to him:
"Well?"
"That's all right," said he, nodding at the bundle, but really in answer to her query.
She opened the parcel.
There were slices of bacon in it and slices of beef; there were ten sausages in it and the biggest half of a loaf—these, with a small flat bottle full of rum and two pairs of stockings, made up the parcel.
"Put the sausages in a pan," said Patsy, "and share them round and we'll eat them."
Mary did put them on the pan, and when they were cooked she shared them round, and they were fairly eaten.
After breakfast the pipes were lit, but they rose almost immediately to continue the journey.
"This evening," said Finaun, "we will be saying good-bye."
"Aye," said Mac Cann, "I'm sorry you're going, for we had a good time together."
The ass took his instructions, and they went down the road. Their places were now as they had always been—Finaun and Eileen Ni Cooley and Mary Mac Cannwent with the ass, and there was no lack of conversation in that assembly, for sometimes they talked to one another and sometimes they talked to the ass, but the donkey listened no matter who was being talked to, and not a person objected to him.
Patsy and Caeltia marched sturdily at the tailboard, and they were close in talk.
Behind them Art was ranging aimlessly, and lilting snatches of song. He did not know the entire of any song but he knew verses of many, and he was able to relate the tunes of these so harmoniously, with such gradual slipping of theme into theme, that twenty minutes of his varied lilting could appear like one consecutive piece of music.
"That lad has a great ear," said Patsy. "He could make his fortune at the music."
"He is a musician," Caeltia replied. "That is his business when we are in our own place, and, as you can see, it is his pleasure also."
Patsy was in high spirits. Now that hehad successfully undone that which he had done a real weight had lifted from him. But the thing was still so near that he could not get easily from it. His head was full of the adventures of the last few days, and although he could not speak of them he could touch them, sound them, lift the lid of his mystery and snap it to again, chuckling meanwhile to himself that those who were concerned did not know what he was talking about, and yet he was talking to himself, or to one cognisant, in hardy, adequate symbol. A puerile game for a person whose youth had been left behind for twenty years, but one which is often played nevertheless and by the most solemn minds.
It was with an impish carelessness that he addressed Caeltia:
"It won't be long before we are there," said he.
"That is so," was the reply.
"You'll be feeling fine, I'm thinking, when you get your own clothes on again."
"I have not missed them very much."
"I hope your wings and your grand gear will be all right."
"Why should you doubt it?" returned the seraph.
"What," said Patsy, "if they were robbed on you! You'd be rightly in the cart, mister, if that happened."
Caeltia puffed quietly at his pipe.
"They were robbed," said he.
"Eh!" cried Mac Cann sharply.
The seraph turned to him, his eyes brimming with laughter.
"Aye, indeed," said he.
Mac Cann was silent for a few seconds, but he did not dare to be silent any longer.
"You're full of fun," said he sourly. "What are you talking about at all?"
"Finaun and I knew all about it," said Caeltia, "and we were wondering what would be done by the person."
"What did he do?" said Patsy angrily.
Caeltia returned the pipe to his mouth.
"He put them back," said he.
"Only for that," he continued, "we might have had to recover them ourselves."
"Would you have been able to get them back?" said Mac Cann humbly.
"We would have got them back; there is nothing in the world could stand against us two; there is nothing in the world could stand against one of us."
Patsy jerked a thumb to where Art was lilting the open bars of "The Wind that shakes the Barley":
"Wouldn't the boy help?" said he. "How old is the lad?"
"I don't know," smiled Caeltia. "He remembers more than one Day of a Great Breath, but he has no power for he has never had being, and so did not win to knowledge; he could give help, for he is very strong."
"Could you have licked Cuchulain that day?" said Patsy timidly.
"I am older than he," replied Caeltia, "that is to say I am wiser than he."
"But he was up there with yourself and could learn the tricks."
"There is no secrecy in this world or in the others, and there are no tricks: there is Knowledge, but no person can learn more than his head is ready to welcome. That is why robbery is infantile and of no importance."
"It fills the stomach," replied Patsy cunningly.
"The stomach has to be filled," said Caeltia. "Its filling is a necessity superior to any proprietarial right or disciplinary ethic, and its problem is difficult only for children; it is filled by the air and the wind, the rain and the clay, and the tiny lives that move in the clay. There is but one property worth stealing; it is never missed by its owners, although every person who has that property offers it to all men from his gentle hands."
"You're trying to talk like Finaun," said Patsy gloomily.
They walked then in silence for tenminutes. Every vestige of impishness had fled from Mac Cann; he was a miserable man; his vanity was hurt and he was frightened, and this extraordinary combination of moods plunged him to a depression so profound that he could not climb therefrom without assistance.
Said Caeltia to him after a little:
"There is a thing I would like to see done, my friend."
Mac Cann's reply came sagging as he hauled his limp ideas from those pits.
"What's that, your honour?"
"I would like to see the money thrown into this ditch as we go by."
Patsy's depression vanished as at the glare of a torch and the trumpet of danger. He nosed the air and sniffed like a horse.
"Begor!" said he. "You're full of——. There's no sense in that," said he sharply.
"That is what I would like to see, but everybody must act exactly as they are able to act."
"I tell you there isn't any sense in it;give me a reasonable thing to do in the name of God and I'll do it."
"That is the only thing I want done."
"What's the use of making a fool of me?"
"Am I demanding anything?"
When they had walked a few paces:
"What is it, after all!" said Patsy proudly.
He thrust his hands into his pockets and exhibited them full of gold and silver.
"Just a pitch of my hand and it's gone!" said he.
"That is all," said Caeltia. "It's easily done."
"So it is," growled Patsy, and he swung his arm.
But he dropped the hand again.
"Wait a minute," and he called Eileen Ni Cooley to his side.
"Walk with ourselves, Eileen, and don't be a stranger. There's something I want to show you."
He opened his hand before her and it was flooding and flashing in gold.
She stared with the awe of one who looks on miracles.
"There's a great deal of money there," she gasped.
"There's fifteen golden pounds and some shillings in it," said Patsy, "and here's all I care for them."
He flung his hand then and sped the money at the full force of his shoulder.
"That's all I care for the stuff," said he, and he gripped her arm to prevent her bounding to its recovery.
"Come on, woman dear, and leave the ha'pence alone."
Said Caeltia:
"There is something I must throw away also, for I am getting too fond of it."
"What's that?" said Mac Cann curiously.
"It's this pipe," the seraph replied, and he balanced it by the mouthpiece.
"Don't throw away the good pipe," cried Eileen Ni Cooley. "Am I walking beside a pair of wild men this day?"
Patsy interrupted also.
"Hold on for a minute. Give me the pipe and you can take this one." He took Caeltia's silver-mounted briar and he passed to the seraph his own blackened clay.
"You can throw that one away," said he, and he popped Caeltia's pipe into his own mouth.
"It will do that way," said Caeltia sadly.
He held the pipe by the stem, and with a sharp movement snapped it in halves; the head fell to the ground and a small tight wad of burning tobacco jumped from it at the shock.
"There it is," said Caeltia.
He jerked the piece of broken stem from his hand, and after sighing deeply they marched on.
Eileen Ni Cooley was angry.
"Padraig," said she, "what made you throw all the golden money away, and the silver money?"
Patsy regarded her with the calm eye of a king.
"Stick your arm through mine, Eileen," said he, "and let us be comfortable as we go along, for the pair of us haven't had a talk for a long time, and Caeltia here wants to talk to you as well as me."
"That is so," said Caeltia.
Eileen did put her arm in his, and as they stepped briskly forward she stared at him with eyes that were round with admiration and astonishment.
"Aren't you the queer man, Padraig!" said she.
"I suppose," said Patsy, "that you'll be slipping away from us some time to-night?"
"Not if you want me to stay, Padraig."
They opened a new conversation on that.
That day they did not stay their travel, even to eat.
Finaun was urgent, and they ate from their hands as they marched. The ass moved his slender legs briskly, the cart rumbled, and the metals in it clashed and thumped as the wheels jolted on the rutty path.
They met no person as they went.
From the fields near by came the fresh odour of wild grass that out-breathed again to the sun his living breath; and the sun shone, not fiercely, but kindly, tempering down the oblique ways his potent fire; above their heads and slanting away on wide wings the birds were sailing, calling a note as they went and calling again; here were trees once more; their grave shadows slept on the road, stamping the golden light with a die of ebony, and their grave voiceswhispered busily, quietly, like the voices of many mothers who fold against fruitful breasts the little children; so they crooned and sang rocking their ample greenery on the air.
In the afternoon they reached the hill, close to the top of which the angels' finery was buried.
When they had ascended this hill for nearly an hour the donkey struck work.
He stood, and nothing would induce him to move further in that direction. Indeed, he slewed the cart completely round, and pointed his nose and his shafts in the direction which he considered reasonable.
They halted.
"He'll not go up there," said Mary, and she pulled the long nose to her bosom.
"He will not," said her father. "Will you leave that ass alone, Mary. Give him back his snout and behave yourself like a Christian girl."
"You leave me alone," said Mary, "what harm am I doing to yourself?"
"It's that I don't like to see a woman kissing an ass."
"Well, if you don't look at me you won't see anything."
"You're full of fun," said her father sternly.
He shrugged his shoulders and turned to Finaun:
"He did this once before on us and we going up a tall hill in Connaught, and although I hammered the skin off his back he wouldn't move a step; he's a great ass, mind you, mister, and maybe we ought to have looked for a gentler way up this hill."
Finaun was feeding tufts of grass to the donkey, and the donkey was eating these with appetite.
"There is no need to come further," said Finaun. "We are almost in sight of the place and can make our adieus here."
"Oh! we'll leave the beast," cried Mac Cann, "and we'll all go up to see the last of you."
"It is better that we should part here,"said Finaun gently. "We do not wish to be seen at the last."
"You can have it your own way," said Patsy sulkily.
Finaun stood towering over Mac Cann; he placed his hands on Patsy's shoulders and solemnly blessed him in round language, then he kissed him tenderly on either cheek.
"Begor!" said Patsy.
And Finaun did the same for Eileen Ni Cooley and for Mary, and he kissed the two of them on their cheeks, then he laid his palm on the donkey's muzzle and blessed that beast, and he strode mightily up the hill.
Caeltia advanced to Patsy, but Mac Cann was embarrassed. He had been kissed by a man, so he lit his pipe in self-defence and kept it in his mouth.
"You're going off?" said he to Caeltia, and he puffed like a chimney.
"I'm going off," replied Caeltia in a low voice.
Patsy took the pipe from his mouth and put it into the seraph's hand.
"Here," said he, "take a last pull at that and ease your heart."
Caeltia did take it, and he smoked it, and it did ease his heart.
"I'll give you the spade out of the cart," continued Patsy, "for you'll have to dig the things up. There it is, and it doesn't matter whether it's lost or not."
"It is good-bye now," said Caeltia, shouldering the spade, and he returned the pipe to Patsy, who put it instantly in his mouth.
Caeltia held out his hand and Mac Cann put his own into it.
While their hands were together Patsy was seized with compunction—he drew the seraph aside a few paces:
"Listen!" said he. "I played a trick on you the time I was taking the money out of my pocket to throw it away."
"Yes?" said Caeltia.
"I let one of the gold pieces slip throughmy fingers, and it's lying at the bottom of my pocket at this minute, but I'll throw it away, mister honey, if you say so."
Caeltia looked at him, and a smile of great contentment crept over his lips.
"If I were you," said he, "I'd keep it."
Mac Cann nodded at him very solemnly:
"I'll keep it," said he earnestly, "and I'll spend it."
Caeltia then said his adieus to the others, and he tramped up the hill with the spade balanced in his hand.
The piece of gold was burning in Patsy's pocket. He turned to Art:
"Well, young boy! there's my hand and good luck be with you; give up racing about and climbing trees and you'll be all right; you've the makings of a good hand on you, and that's a great thing, and you've got the music."
"Good-bye," said Art, and they shook hands.
Eileen Ni Cooley took his hand also, thenshe and Patsy strode to the cart, and with the donkey they moved down the hill.
Mary stood in front of Art, and she did not look at him; she turned her grave face away, and stared sidewards where the late sunshine drowsed in gold on the rough slopes. She put her hand out to him.
He took her hand and held it between his own; he raised it to his lips and he held it there pressing against his mouth.
He dropped it, and stood back a pace staring at her; he struck his hands together in a wild movement; he turned and ran swiftly after his companions.
These two had never spoken to each other.
Near the top of the hill he came on Finaun and Caeltia, and the three went together.
In a little they reached the point in the road where they had slept during their first night on earth, and where they had eaten their first meal on a sunny morning. Distant a few paces they saw the tree.
Caeltia dug there until he uncovered the sacks. He pulled these from the clay and opened them, and each of the angels retrieved his own belongings from the medley.
Finaun was urgent and thoughtful. He apparelled himself hastily, while, with less speed, Caeltia also achieved his change. But Art sat on the ground fingering his raiment, and seemed to be lost in a contemplation of the grass beside him.
Finaun was ready. He stood upright, a kingly figure, shimmering in purple folds. On his head a great crown, closed at the top; across his shoulder a chain of heavy gold, and depending on his breast a broad plaque of gold that blazed.
He looked at the others and nodded, then he leaped, and at a hundred feet the sun flashed from his wings, and he looked like a part of the rainbow.
Now Caeltia was ready, standing in cloth of gold and lovely ornaments of hammered silver. He scanned once morethe drowsing landscape; he smiled on Art; he sprang aloft and abroad and sped upwards in a blinding gleam.
Art raised himself.
He lifted the crimson robe that was dashed with gold, the crimson buskins feathered at the heel, the wide crown of short points. He placed these on the ground and stood for a time looking down the road, while the many-coloured pinions streamed lengthily from his hand.
Suddenly he frowned, and, with the wings still dragging, he ran down the path.
In five minutes he came to the place where they had left the ass, but it was no longer there. Far below on the curving ways he saw the donkey moving quietly. Mac Cann and Eileen Ni Cooley were going by each other's side, and Patsy's arm was about the woman.
He looked around, and at a little distance saw the girl beside a bush. She was lying on her breast, her face was hidden into the ground, and she was motionless.
He walked to her.
"Mary," said he, "I have come to say farewell."
She moved as at a shock. She rose to her feet, and she did not look at him, and this was the first time that these two had talked together.
He bent to her beseechingly:
"I have come to say farewell," said he.