登陆注册
6146800000045

第45章 CHAPTER III(1)

THE DAUGHTER OF THE MOON

For the fourth time since we were cast away on this island the huge full moon shone in a sky of wondrous blue. Kari and I watched it rise between the two snow-clad peaks far away that he had called a gateway to his land, which was so near to us and yet it would seem more distant than Heaven itself. Heaven we might hope to reach upon the wings of spirit when we died, but to that country how could we come?

We watched that great moon climb higher and higher up a ladder of little bar-like clouds, till wearying we let our eyes fall upon the glittering pathway which its light made upon the bosom of the placid sea. Suddenly Kari stared and stared.

"What is it?" I asked idly.

"I thought I saw something yonder far away where Quilla's footsteps make the waters bright," he said, speaking in his own language in which now we often talked together.

"Quilla's?" I exclaimed. "Oh! I forgot: that is the lady moon's name in your tongue, is it not? Well, come, Quilla, and I will wed and worship you, as 'tis said the ancients did, and never turn to look upon another, be she woman, or goddess, or both. Only come and take me from this accursed isle and in payment I'll die for you, if need be, when first I've taught you how to love as star or woman never loved before."

"Hush!" said Kari in a grave voice, when he had listened to this mad stuff that burst through my lips from the spring of a mind distraught by misery and despair.

"Why should I hush?" I asked. "Is it not pleasant to think of the moon wearing a lovely woman's shape and descending to give a lonely mortal love and comfort?"

"Because, Master, to me and my people the moon is a goddess who hears prayer and answers it. Suppose, then, that she heard you and answered you and came to you and claimed your love, what then?"

"Why, then, friend Kari," I raved on, "then I should welcome her, for love goes a begging, ready as ripe fruit to be plucked by the first hand if it be fair enough, ready to melt beneath the first lips if they be warm enough. 'Tis said that it is the man who loves and the woman who accepts the love. But that is not true. It is the man, Kari, who waits to be loved and pays back just as much as is given to him, and no more, like an honest merchant; for if he does otherwise, then he suffers for it, as I have learned. Therefore, come, Quilla, and love as a Celestial can and I swear that step by step I'll keep pace with you in flesh and spirit through Heaven, or through Hell, since love I must have, or death."

"I pray you, talk not so," said Kari again, in a frightened voice, "since those words of yours come from the heart and will be heard. The goddess is a woman, too, and what woman will turn from such a bait?"

"Let her take it, then. Why not?"

"Because, O friend, because /Quilla/ is wed to /Yuti/; the Moon is the Sun's wife, and if the Sun grows jealous what will happen to the man who has robbed the greatest of the world's gods?"

"I do not know and I do not care. If Quilla would but come and love me, I'd take my chance of Yuti whom as a Christian I defy."

Kari shuddered at this blasphemy, then having once more scanned that silver pathway on the waters, but without avail for the great fish or drifting tree or whatever he had seen, was gone, prayed after his fashion at night, to Pachacamac, Spirit of the Universe, or to the Sun his servant, god of the world, I know not which, and rolling himself in his rug of skins, crept into our little hut to sleep.

But as yet I did not sleep, for though Kari hated both, this talk of love and women had stirred my blood and made me wakeful. So I took a rough comb that I had fashioned from the shell of a turtle, and dragged it through my long fair beard, which, growing fast, now hung down far upon my breast, and through the curling hair that lay upon my shoulders, for I had become as other wild men are, and sang to myself there by the little fire which we kept burning day and night and tried to think of happy things that never should I know again.

At length the fit passed and I grew weary and laid myself down by the fire, for the night being so fine and warm I would not go into the hut, and there sleep found me.

I dreamed in my sleep. I dreamed that a very beautiful woman who wore upon her naked breast the emblem of the moon fashioned in crystal, stood over me, looking down upon me with large dark eyes. And as she looked she sighed. Thrice she sighed, each time more deeply than the last. Then she knelt down by me--or so it seemed in my dream, and laid a tress of her long dark hair against my yellow locks, as though she would match them together. She did more, indeed--in my dream--for lifting that tress of fragrant hair, she let it fall like thistledown across my face and mouth, and then kissed the hair, for I felt her breath reach me through its strands.

The dream ended thus, though I wished very much that it would go on, and I felt as though it had gone away as such visions do. Awhile later, as I suppose, I awoke quite suddenly, and opened my eyes.

There, near to me, glittering in the full light of the brilliant moon, stood the woman of my dream, only now her naked breast was covered with a splendid cloak broidered with silver, and on her dark locks was a feathered headdress in front of which rose the crescent of the moon, likewise fashioned in silver. Also in her hand she held a little silver spear.

I stared at her, for move I could not. Then remembering my crazy talk with Kari, uttered one word, only one. It was--/Quilla/.

She bowed her head and answered in a voice soft as the murmur of the wind through rushes, speaking in the rich language called Quichua that Kari had taught me. In this tongue, as I have told, we talked together for practice during our journeys and on the island. So that now I knew it well.

"So indeed am I named after my mother, the 'Moon,'" she said. "But how did you know it, O Wanderer, whose skin is white as the foam of the sea and whose hair is yellow as the fine gold in the temples?"

"I think you must have told me when you knelt over me just now," I said.

I saw the red blood run to her brow, but she only shook her head, and answered:

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 蓝色从来不是眼里的忧伤

    蓝色从来不是眼里的忧伤

    “不可能的,许冉,”乔侨的脸蛋现在粉扑扑的,她醉的已经翩翩起舞,在似有似无地呢喃着,“不可能的了。” 她的十指穿梭在黑夜中,想要抓住那缕凉快的晚风。那一刻的月光倾城,鲜花着锦,白雪纷飞,时光也凝结成永远,雕琢成了琥珀。 “没有比这更美好的感觉了。”
  • 澎湃的卫河

    澎湃的卫河

    《澎湃的卫河》是朱润祥所著的一部长篇小说。《澎湃的卫河》讲述:共城市发现了一处大型煤田,营建坑口电厂遂被提上议事日程。关于坑口电厂的选址问题,卫河市、共城市两级政府各有各的考虑,选址问题出现矛盾,各色人物粉墨登场,不同价值观发生激烈碰撞。坑口电厂到底要建在哪里?是发现煤矿的共城市还是距煤矿二百五十公里的宽河县?卫河市市委市政府为何坚持要把电厂建在宽河县?郎忠杰的参与对电厂选址问题的最终决定将起到什么作用?共城市政府是否能够推翻上级政府的决定,最终赢得电厂落户安家?
  • 初景悠悠

    初景悠悠

    你到底是谁?幽远深宫,少女抬起头望着少年低沉的眉宇“不管谁是太子,我都是太子妃,这就是命!”荒蛮戈壁,落日余晖里,绯丽的女孩拉住男孩的衣袖“你让我当皇后,我就跟你走啊!”两个来自未来的女孩,是改变命运?还是正视历史?谁能得到帝王真心?谁能成为后宫之主?
  • 天行

    天行

    号称“北辰骑神”的天才玩家以自创的“牧马冲锋流”战术击败了国服第一弓手北冥雪,被誉为天纵战榜第一骑士的他,却受到小人排挤,最终离开了效力已久的银狐俱乐部。是沉沦,还是再次崛起?恰逢其时,月恒集团第四款游戏“天行”正式上线,虚拟世界再起风云!
  • 旋风少女之花若凝馨

    旋风少女之花若凝馨

    百草是否能和若白幸福在一起?晓萤能否认清自己的心?李恩秀和方廷皓将是什么关系?婷宜和初原究竟将成为兄妹,还是恋人?
  • 八戒是大师兄

    八戒是大师兄

    别名《八戒的开挂人生》,《我是八戒,我是挂壁》。讲述了穿越到西游的八戒开挂装什么的故事。
  • 元素之城

    元素之城

    异界大陆混乱,两个小男孩遭遇种种挫折,最后千辛万苦,成为了新世界的神。
  • 大天师传

    大天师传

    古风长河重拾长矛,叶落瘦马再挥腰刀。相思难断满疆荒草,蓑衣背剑江山缥缈。浊酒笙歌一饮逍遥,八面神州同根拜老。阴谋难取正气烈豪,家国怀胸身死笑傲。只掌遮阳焚祭天骄,仙传杀令鸿蒙绽苞。
  • 都市之至尊龙主

    都市之至尊龙主

    十二年前,他遭人迫害,她陪他同甘共苦背井离乡,筚路蓝缕十二载,无怨无悔。十二年后,他为她遭人暗杀怒而归来,杀尽天下欺他挚爱之人,护她万世平安无波岁月静好!
  • 星夜LV2

    星夜LV2

    全新的世界,全新的玩法,全新的战斗……一群活在这个时代青年参加了一场独特的比赛,开始了一场无止境的冒险,创造出另一个自己。