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The World's Desire by Haggard, H. Rider - Chapter 8

VIII

THE KA, THE BAI, AND THE KHOU

"The Divine Pharaoh Rameses died and was gathered to Osiris. With
these hands I closed his coffin and set him in his splendid tomb,
where he shall rest unharmed for ever till the day of the awakening.
And Meriamun and Meneptah reigned in Khem. But to Pharaoh she was very
cold, though he did her will in everything, and they had but one
child, so that in a while he wearied of her loveliness.

"But hers was the master-mind, and she ruled Pharaoh as she ruled all
else.

"For me, my lot was bettered; she talked much with me, and advanced me
to great dignity, so that I was the first Master Builder in Khem, and
Commander of the legion of Amen.

"Now it chanced that Meriamun made a feast, where she entertained
Pharaoh and Hataska sat beside him. She was the first lady about the
Queen's person, a beautiful but insolent woman, who had gained
Pharaoh's favour for the hour. Now wine worked so with the King that
he toyed openly with the lady Hataska's hand, but Meriamun the Queen
took no note, though Hataska, who had also drunk of the warm wine of
the Lower Land, grew insolent, as was her wont. She quaffed deep from
her cup of gold, and bade a slave bear it to the Queen, crying,
'Pledge me, my sister.'

"The meaning of her message was plain to all who heard; this waiting
lady openly declared herself wife to Pharaoh and an equal of the
Queen. Now Meriamun cared nothing for Pharaoh's love, but for power
she did care, and she frowned, while a light shone in her dark eyes;
yet she took the cup and touched it with her lips.

"Presently she lifted her own cup in turn and toyed with it, then made
pretence to drink, and said softly to the King's paramour, who had
pledged her:

"'Pledge me in answer, Hataska, my servant, for soon, methinks, thou
shalt be greater than the Queen.'

"Now this foolish woman read her saying wrong, and took the golden cup
from the eunuch who bore it.

"With a little nod to the Queen, and a wave of her slim hand, Hataska
drank, and instantly, with a great cry, she fell dead across the
board. Then, while all the company sat in terror, neither daring to be
silent nor to speak, and while Meriamun smiled scornfully on the dark
head lying low among the roses on the board, Pharaoh leaped up, mad
with wrath, and called to the guards to seize the Queen. But she waved
them back, and, speaking in a slow, cold voice, she said:

"'Dare not to touch Khem's anointed Queen lest your fate be as /her/
fate. For thee, Meneptah, forget not thy marriage oath. What, am I
Queen, and shall thy wantons throw their insolence in my teeth and
name me their sister? Not so, for if my eyes be blind yet my ears are
open. Peace, she is rightly served--choose thou a lowlier mistress!'

"And Pharaoh made no answer, for he feared her with an ever-growing
fear. But she, sinking back in her seat of state, played with the gold
kepher on her breast, and watched them bear the body forth to the
House of Osiris. One by one all the company made obeisance and passed
thence, glad to be gone, till at the last there were left only Pharaoh
and Meriamun the Queen, and myself--Rei the Priest--for all were much
afraid. Then Pharaoh spoke, looking neither at her nor at me, and half
in fear, half in anger.

"'Thou hateful woman, accursed be the day when first I looked upon thy
beauty. Thou hast conquered me, but beware, for I am still Pharaoh and
thy Lord. Cross my purpose once again, and, by Him who sleeps at
Philę, I will discrown thee and give thy body to the tormentors, and
set thy soul loose to follow her whom thou hast slain.'

"Then Meriamun answered proudly:

"'Pharaoh, be warned: lift but one finger against my majesty and thou
art doomed. Thou canst not slay me, but I can over-match thee, and I
swear by the same oath! By Him who sleeps at Philę, lift a hand
against me, ay, harbour one thought of treachery, and thou diest. Not
lightly can I be deceived, for I have messengers that thou canst not
hear. Something, Royal Meneptah, do I know of the magic of that Queen
Taia who was before me. Now listen--do this one thing and all shall be
well. Go on thy path and leave me to follow mine. Queen I am, Queen I
will remain, and in all matters of the State mine must be an equal
voice though it is thine that speaks. And, for the rest, we are apart
henceforth, for thou fearest me, and Meneptah, I love not thee, nor
any man.'

"'As thou hast spoken, so be it,' quoth Pharaoh, for his heart sank,
and his fear came back upon him. 'Evil was the day when first we met,
and this is the price of my desire. Henceforth we are apart in bed and
board, but in the council we are still one, for our ends are one. I
know thy power, Meriamun, thou gifted of the evil Gods; thou needest
not fear that I shall seek to slay thee, for a spear cast against the
heavens returns on him who threw it. Rei, my servant, thou art witness
to our oaths; hear now their undoing. Meriamun, the Queen of ancient
Khem, thou art no more wife of mine. Farewell.'

"And he went heavily and stricken with fear.

"'Nay,' she said, gazing after him, 'no more am I Meneptah's wife, but
still am I Khem's dreaded Queen. Oh, thou old priest, I am aweary. See
what a lot is mine, who have all things but love, and yet am sick of
all! I longed for power, and power is mine, and what is power? It is a
rod wherewith we beat the air that straightway closes on the stroke.
Yes, I tire of my loveless days and of this dull round of common
things. Oh, for one hour of love and in that hour to die! Oh that the
future would lift its veil and disclose the face of time to be! Say,
Rei! Wilt thou be bold and dare a deed?' And she clasped me by the
sleeve and whispered in my ear, in the dead tongue known to her and me
--'Her I slew--thou sawest----'

"'Ay, Queen, I saw--what of her? 'Twas ill done.'

"'Nay, 'twas rightly done and well done. But thou knowest she is not
yet cold, nor for a while will be, and I have the art to drag her
spirit back ere she be cold, from where she is, and to force knowledge
from her lips--for being an Osiris all the future is open to her in
this hour.'

"'Nay, nay,' I cried. 'It is unholy--not lightly may we disturb the
dead, lest the Guardian Gods be moved to anger.'

"'Yet will I do it, Rei. If thou dost fear, come not. But I go. I am
fain for knowledge, and thus only may I win it. If I die in the dread
endeavour, write this of Meriamun the Queen: That in seeking the to-be
--she found it!'

"'Nay, Royal Lady,' I answered, 'thou shalt not go alone. I too have
some skill in magic, and perchance can ward evil from thee. So, if
indeed thou wilt dare this dreadful thing, behold now, as ever, I am
thy servant.'

"'It is well. See, now, the body will this night be laid in the
sanctuary of the Temple of Osiris that is near the great gates, as is
the custom, to await the coming of the embalmers. Come ere she be
colder than my heart, come with me, Rei, to the house of the Lord of
the Dead!'

"She passed to her chamber, wrapped herself about in a dark robe, and
hurried with me to the Temple doors, where we were challenged by the
guards.

"'Who passes? In the name of the Holy Osiris speak.'

"'Rei, the Master Builder and the anointed Priest, and with him
another,' I made answer. 'Open.'

"'Nay, I open not. There is one within who may not be wakened.'

"'Who, then, is within?'

"'She whom the Queen slew.'

"'The Queen sends one who would look on her she slew.'

"Then the priest gazed on the hooded form beside me and started back,
crying, 'A token, noble Rei.'

"I held up the Royal signet, and, bowing, he opened. Being come within
the Temple I lit the tapers that had been prepared. Then by their
feeble light we passed through the outer hall till we came to the
curtains that veil the sanctuary of the Holy Place, and here I
quenched the tapers; for no fire must enter there, save that which
burns upon the altar of the dead. But through the curtains came rays
of light.

"'Open!' said Meriamun, and I opened, and hand in hand we passed in.
On the altar that is in the place the flame burnt brightly. The
chamber is not wide and great, for this is the smallest of the temples
of Tanis, but yet so large that the light could not reach its walls
nor pierce the overhanging gloom, and by much gazing scarcely could we
discover the outline of the graven shapes of the Holy Gods that are
upon the walls. But the light fell clear upon the great statue of the
Osiris that was seated behind the altar fashioned in the black stone
of Syene, wound about with the corpse-cloths, wearing on his head the
crown of the Upper Land, and holding in his hands the crook of
divinity and the awful scourge of punishment. The light shone all
about the white and dreadful shape that was placed upon his holy
knees, the naked shape of lost Hataska who this night had died at the
hand of Meriamun. There she bowed her head against the sacred breast,
her long hair streaming down on either side, her arms tied across her
heart, and her eyes, whence the hues of life had scarcely faded,
widely staring at the darkness of the shrine. For at Tanis to this day
it is the custom for a night to place those of high birth or office
who die suddenly upon the knees of the statue of Osiris.

"'See,' I said to the Queen, speaking low, for the weight of the
haunted place sank into my heart, 'see how she who scarce an hour ago
was but a lovely wanton hath by thine act been clad in majesty greater
than all the glory of the earth. Bethink thee, wilt thou dare indeed
to summon back the spirit to the body whence thou hast set it free?
Not easily, O Queen, may it be done for all thy magic, and if
perchance she answereth thee, it may well be that the terror of her
words shall utterly o'erwhelm us.'

"'Nay,' she made answer, 'I am instructed. I fear not. I know by what
name to call the Khou that hovers on the threshold of the Double Hall
of Truth, and how to send it back to its own place. I fear not, but if
perchance thou fearest, Rei, depart hence and leave me to the task
alone.'

"'Nay,' I said. 'I also am instructed, and I go not. But I say to thee
that this is unholy.'

"Then Meriamun spoke no more--but lifting up her hands she held them
heavenwards, and so for a while she stood, her face fixed, as was the
face of dead Hataska. Then, as must be done, I drew the circle round
us and round the altar and the statue of Osiris, and that which sat
upon his knee. With my staff I drew it, and standing therein I said
the holy words which should ward away the evil things that come near
in such an hour.

"Now Meriamun threw a certain powder into the flame upon the altar.
Thrice she threw the powder, and as she threw it a ball of flame rose
from the altar and floated away, each time that she threw did the ball
of fire rise; and this it was needful to do, for by fire only may the
dead be manifest, and therefore was a globe of fire given to each of
the three shapes that together make the threefold spirit of the dead.
And when the three globes of fire had melted into air, passing over
the head of the statue of Osiris, thrice did Meriamun cry aloud:

"'/Hataska! Hataska! Hataska!/

"'By the dreadful Name I summon thee.

"'I summon thee from the threshold of the Double Hall.

"'I summon thee from the Gates of Judgment.

"'I summon thee from the door of Doom.

"'By the link of life and death that is between thee and me, I bid
thee come from where thou art and make answer to that which I shall
ask of thee.'

"She ceased, but no answer came. Still the cold Osiris smiled, and
still the body on his knee sat with open eyes gazing into nothingness.

"'Not thus easily,' I whispered, 'may this dreadful thing be done.
Thou art instructed in the Word of Fear. If thou darest, let it pass
thy lips, or let us be gone.'

"'Nay, it shall be spoken,' she said--and thus she wrought. Passing to
the statue she hid her head within her cloak and with both hands
grasped the feet of the slain Hataska.

"Seeing this I also crouched upon the floor and hid my face, for it is
death to hear that Word with an uncovered face.

"Then in so soft a whisper that scarce had its breath stirred a
feather on her lips, Meriamun spoke the Word of Fear which may not be
written, whose sound has power to pass all space and open the ears of
the dead who dwell in Amenti. Softly she said it, for in a shout of
thunder it was caught up and echoed from her lips, and down the
eternal halls it seemed to rush on the feet of storm and the wings of
wind, so that the roof rocked and the deep foundations of the Temple
quivered like a wind-stirred tree.

"'Unveil, ye mortals!' cried a dreadful voice, 'and look upon the
sight of fear that ye have dared to summon.'

"And I rose and cast my cloak from about my face and gazed, then sank
down in terror. For round about the circle that I had drawn pressed
all the multitude of the dead; countless as the desert sands they
pressed, gazing with awful eyes upon us twain. And the fire that was
on the altar died away, but yet was there light, for it shone from
those dead eyes, and in the eyes of lost Hataska there was light.

"And ever the faces changed, never for one beat of time did they cease
to change. For as we gazed upon a face it would melt, even to the
eyes, and round these same eyes again would gather but no more the
same. And like the sloping sides of pyramids were the faces set about
us from the ground to the Temple roof--and on us were fixed their
glowing eyes.

"And I, Rei, being instructed, knew that to suffer myself to be
overcome with terror was death, as it was death to pass without the
circle. So in my heart I called upon Osiris, Lord of the Dead, to
protect us, and even as I named the ineffable name, lo! all the
thousand thousand faces bent themselves in adoration and then,
turning, looked each upon the other even as though each spake to each,
and changed, and swiftly changed.

"'Meriamun,' I said, gathering up my strength, 'fear not, but beware!'

"'Nay, wherefore should I fear,' she answered, 'because the veil of
sense is torn, and for an hour we see those who are ever about our
path and whose eyes watch our most secret thought continually? I fear
not.' And she stepped boldly, even to the edge of the circle, and
cried:

"'All hail, ye Sahus, spirits of the awful dead, among whom I also
shall be numbered.'

"And as she came the changing faces shrunk away, leaving a space
before her. And in the space there grew two arms, mighty and black,
that stretched themselves towards her, until there was not the length
of three grains of wheat betwixt the clutching fingers and her breast.

"But Meriamun only laughed and drew back a space.

"'Not so, thou Enemy,' she said, 'this circle thou may'st not break;
it is too strong for thee. But to the work. Hataska, once again by the
link of life and death I summon thee--and this time thou must come,
thou who wast a wanton and now art "greater than the Queen."'

"And as she spoke, from the dead form of the woman on Osiris' knee
there issued forth another form and stood before us, as a snake issues
from its slough. And as was the dead Hataska so was this form, feature
for feature, look for look, and limb for limb. But still the corpse
rested upon Osiris' knee, for this was but the /Ka/ that stood before
us.

"And thus spoke the voice of Hataska in the lips of the Ka:

"'What wouldest thou with me who am no more of thy company, O thou by
whose hand my body did perish? Why troublest thou me?'

"And Meriamun made answer: 'I would this of thee, that thou shouldest
declare unto me the future, even in the presence of this great
company. Speak, I command thee.'

"And the Ka said: 'Nay, Meriamun, that I cannot do, for I am but the
Ka--the Dweller in the Tomb, the guardian of what was Hataska whom
thou didst slay, whom I must watch through all the days of death till
resurrection is. Of the future I know naught; seek thou that which
knows.'

"'Stand thou on one side,' quoth the Queen, and the Dweller in the
Tomb obeyed.

"Then once more she called upon Hataska and there came a sound of
rushing wings. And behold, on the head of the statue of Osiris sat a
great bird, feathered as it were with gold. But the bird had the head
of a woman, and the face was fashioned as the face of Hataska. And
thus it spoke, that was the /Bai/:

"'What wouldest thou with me, Meriamun, who am no more of thy company?
Why dost thou draw me from the Under World, thou by whose hand my body
did perish?'

"And Meriamun said: 'This I would of thee, that thou shouldest declare
unto me the future. Speak, I command thee.'

"And the Bai said: 'Nay, Meriamun, that I cannot do. I am but the Bai
of her who was Hataska, and I fly from Death to Life and Life to
Death, till the hour of awakening is. Of the future I know naught;
seek thou that which knows.'

"'Rest thou where thou art,' quoth the Queen, and there it rested,
awful to see.

"Then once more Meriamun called upon Hataska, bidding her hear the
summons where she was.

"And behold the eyes of the Dead One that was upon the knee of Osiris
glowed, and glowed the eyes of the Dweller in the Tomb, and of the
winged Messenger who sat above. And then there was a sound as the
sound of wind, and from above, cleaving the darkness, descended a
Tongue of Flame and rested on the brow of the dead Hataska. And the
eyes of all the thousand thousand spirits turned and gazed upon the
Tongue of Flame. And then dead Hataska spoke--though her lips moved
not, yet she spoke. And this she said:

"'What wouldest thou with me, Meriamun, who am no more of thy company?
Why dost thou dare to trouble me, thou by whose hand my body did
perish, drawing me from the threshold of the Double Hall of Truth,
back to the Over World?'

"And Meriamun the Queen said, 'Oh, thou /Khou/, for this purpose have
I called thee. I am aweary of my days and I fain would learn the
future. The future fain would I learn, but the forked tongue of That
which sleeps tells me no word, and the lips of That which is a-cold
are dumb! Tell me, then, thou, I charge thee by the word that has
power to open the lips of the dead, thou who in all things art
instructed, what shall be the burden of my days?'

"And the dread Khou made answer: 'Love shall be the burden of thy
days, and Death shall be the burden of thy love. Behold one draws near
from out the North whom thou hast loved, whom thou shalt love from
life to life, till all things are accomplished. Bethink thee of a
dream that thou dreamedst as thou didst lie on Pharaoh's bed, and read
its riddle. Meriamun, thou art great and thy name is known upon the
earth, and in Amenti is thy name known. High is thy fate, and through
blood and sorrow shalt thou find it. I have spoken, let me hence.'

"'It is well,' the Queen made answer: 'But not yet mayest thou go
hence. First I command thee, by the word of dread and by the link of
life and death, declare unto me if here upon the earth and in this
life I shall possess him whom I shall love?'

"'In sin and craft and sorrow, Meriamun, thou shalt possess him; in
shame and jealous agony he shall be taken from thee by one who is
stronger than thou, though thou art strong; by one more beautiful than
thou, though thou art beautiful; and ruin thou shalt give him for his
guerdon, and ruin of the heart shalt thou harvest for thy portion. But
for this time she shall escape thee, whose footsteps march with thine,
and with his who shall be thine and hers. Nevertheless, in a day to
come thou shalt pay her back measure for measure, and evil for evil. I
have spoken. Let me hence.'

"'Not yet, O Khou--not yet. I have still to learn. Show me the face of
her who is mine enemy, and the face of him who is my love.'

"'Thrice mayest thou speak to me, O thou greatly daring,' answered the
dread Khou, 'and thrice I may make reply, and then farewell till I
meet thee on the threshold of the hall whence thou hast drawn me. Look
now on the face of that Hataska whom thou slewest.'

"And we looked, and behold the face of dead Hataska changed, and
changed the face of the Double, the /Ka/ that stood on one side, and
the face of the great bird, the /Bai/, that spread his wings about the
head of Osiris. And they grew beautiful, yes, most exceeding beautiful
so that it cannot be told, and the beauty was that of a woman asleep.
Then lo, there hung above Hataska, as it were, the shadow of one who
was watching her sleeping. And his face we saw not, O thou Wanderer,
it was hidden by the visor of a golden two-horned helm, and in that
helm stood fast /the bronze point of a broken spear/! But he was clad
in the armour of the people of the Northern Sea, the Aquaiusha, and
his hair fell dark about his shoulders like the petals of the hyacinth
flower.

"'Behold thine enemy and behold thy love! Farewell,' said the dread
Khou, speaking through dead Hataska's lips, and as the words died the
beauty faded and the Tongue of Flame shot upwards and was lost, and
once more the eyes of the thousand thousand dead turned and looked
upon each other, even as though their lips whispered each to each.

"But for a while Meriamun stood silent, as one amazed. Then, awaking,
she waved her hand and cried, 'Begone, thou /Bai/! Begone, thou /Ka/!'

"And the great bird whereof the face was as the face of Hataska spread
his golden wings and passed away to his own place, and the Ka that was
in the semblance of Hataska drew near to the dead one's knees, and
passed back into her from whom she came. And all the thousand thousand
faces melted though the fiery eyes still gazed upon us.

"Then Meriamun covered her head and once more spoke the awful Word,
and I also covered up my head. But, as must be done, this second time
she called the Word aloud, and yet though she called it loud, it came
but as a tiny whisper from her lips. Nevertheless, at the sound of it,
once more was the Temple shaken as by a storm.

"Then Meriamun unveiled, and behold, again the fire burned upon the
altar, and on the knees of the Osiris sat Hataska, cold and still in
death, and round them was emptiness and silence.

"'Now that all is done, I greatly fear for that which has been, and
that which shall be. Lead me hence, O Rei, son of Pames, for I can no
more.'

"And so with a heavy heart I led her forth, who of all sorceresses is
the very greatest. Behold, thou Wanderer, wherefore the Queen was
troubled at the coming of the man in the armour of the North, in whose
two-horned golden helm stands fast the point of a broken spear."