The Message

: The Doomsman

Three years had passed since that first memorable visit to Doom the

Forbidden--years of work and of growth. The simple out-door life and the

physical toil had been good discipline for Constans, and he was now a

well-built young fellow of two-and-twenty, nearly six feet tall and with

muscles like steel wire.



The nights, too, had afforded compensation for the labors of the day,

for then he could read and st
dy. The two big volumes of the scientific

cyclopaedia had been his school-masters, and he had striven faithfully to

learn of them. What a wonderful lesson it had been, for while there was

much in this teaching that he could not understand at all, there was

much again that, with the aid of the illustrations and diagrams, he

could make really his own. And so, little by little, he had been able to

reconstruct, in imagination, at least, the lost civilization of the

ancient world; how men had tamed the lightning and bade it speak their

will and work their pleasure; how the same vapor that issued from the

pot bubbling on Martina's fire could be harnessed and made to draw a

hundred wagons at once upon the old-time steel-railed highways; how a

child's hand on the crank of a machine-gun might hurl invisible death

among a regiment of men and put even an army to flight. Steam and

gunpowder and electricity, what wonderful ideas were connoted in the

words! The very names thrilled him with a sense of infinite power.



A wonderfully fascinating study, and yet at times it left him

unspeakably weary and depressed, for what did all this knowledge avail

without the practical means to apply it? The great machines that the

ancients had built, what were they now but masses of red rust, useless

alike to the fool who laughed at them and to the visionary who could

only dream of their magnificent potentialities.



A dream, for, in truth, a lion was in the way. So long as the Doomsmen

held sway in the land, so long must the wheels of progress stay locked.

Unable to use themselves the treasures of knowledge stored under their

hands, they were unwilling that another should even touch them. What

could he or any other one man do?



Once, indeed, during the three years, Constans had found brief

opportunity to revisit the scenes of his old home in the valley of the

Swiftwater. In this general district of the West Inch were to be found

nearly all of the larger estates, a fitting cradling-place, it would

seem, for the new liberty, the awakening era.



But time was not yet come, as Constans soon saw clearly. He had been

hospitably enough received, for the country-side had not forgotten the

story of the Greenwood Keep, and it was plain to see that this

clear-eyed, well-set-up lad was of the true Stockader breed. One of his

father's bond-friends, Piers Major, of the River Barony, had even

offered Constans a home under his roof-tree in exchange for

sword-service. But this he declined, with becoming gratitude indeed,

but none the less firmly. He had no fancy to spend the rest of his life

in a trooper's saddle riding down naked savages--an agreeable

occupation, whose only variation was an afternoon at pig-sticking or a

chance crack at some Doomsman's head. Better to endure the drudgery of

the tan-pits than to part with all purpose in life.



And so the crusade, which Constans had hoped to father, died at its

birth. The kinsmen and friends of his family were sincere enough in

their sympathy, but they could not be expected to risk their own skins

in the furtherance of his private quarrels, and, so far as it was a

question of political economy or of patriotism, these easy-going

gentlemen troubled themselves not one whit. For the most part the

Doomsmen kept their distance from a Stockader's threshold, and

laissez-faire was a good motto for both sides to adopt.



Constans returned to Croye and to Messer Hugolin's attic neither

overmuch surprised nor discouraged by the results of his mission. After

all, his ultimate object was a personal one--his revenge--and only his

own hand could discharge that debt in full. Did the time seem over-long,

the way unendurably lonely and toilsome? He had only to close his eyes

to remember--to remember. And so the years had passed.



* * * * *



It was the noon spell on a day in late October, and Constans sat on the

river end of the long wooden pier at the tanyard eating his luncheon of

bread and bacon scraps. The tide was running up slowly, as could be

noted from the bubbles and drift-wood that circled past the piling of

the wharf, and Constans, happening to glance down into the swirl, saw

something that brought him to his feet. Nothing more remarkable than a

bottle of thick, greenish glass, but bottles of any kind had become

valuable now that the art of glass blowing was so little practised, and

such flotsam was not to be despised.



Having strung a length of noosed cord to a light pole, Constans threw

himself flat along the string-piece of the pier and began angling for

the prize. A failure or two and then he had it snared securely; now it

was in his hand.



The bottle was foul with slime and fungous growth, showing that it had

been in the water for a long period. Possibly it had been out to sea and

back many times before this particular flood-tide had brought it to

Messer Hugolin's tannery and under the eyes of one who would have the

wit to distinguish it from a rotten stick. At all events it had found a

port at last.



The bottle had been corked and then sealed with pitch, and Constans had

to use some care in getting at its contents, a slender cylinder of

tightly rolled paper. Finally he succeeded in drawing it out uninjured,

and saw that it was superscribed to his uncle Hugolin.



The old man looked up with a frown as Constans presented himself at the

door of the counting-room. The rest hour was over and Constans's place

was at the tan-pit. How was the work to get done if everybody shirked

their part of the common task? A message in a bottle. What foolery was

this? Nevertheless, Messer Hugolin extended his hand to receive the

roll, and, removing the waxed string that bound it, knit his brows over

the enclosure--half a dozen sheets of writing. Constans was about to

retire discreetly, but Messer Hugolin raised his hand.



"The writing is too fine for my eyes," he grumbled. "Read it for me,

nephew; but, harkee! you will keep your mouth shut whatever its import."

Then, in a sudden gust of passion: "A thousand plagues on that fool of

an up-river factor who broke for me my reading-glass! Not another one to

be had in Croye for good-will or gold, and I compelled to borrow

another's eyes, to live at the mercy of my meanest clerk. Come, boy, you

must have the sense of it by this time!"



"Shall I read it aloud?" asked Constans, and then, in compliance with

his uncle's nod, he began:



"'Dated at Doom, in the year 90 after the Great Change.



"'It is a score of years my brother, since that moonless August

night when the Doomsmen came to Croye and I went back with them,

tied to Mad Scarlett's saddle-bow. Twenty years of silence in the

City of Silence, and I but a slim, brown-faced maid who might be

found one day playing at polo and lamenting her lack of mustachios,

and on the very next, mooning over a love charm. It was only

through the look in my cousin Philip's eyes, as he died under the

weight of the Doomsmen battle-axes, that I knew myself a woman,

that I finally entered upon my sex's heritage of sorrow.



"'Does this seem an old and hardly remembered tale to you, Anthony

Hugolin, Councillor Primus of Croye, and a rich man, if one may

judge from the yearly tax rate that stands opposite your name in

Dom Gillian's head list? Withal, you are still my brother, and you

must listen to what I have now to say, the first and the last word

from me to you.



"'I must be just and acknowledge that he truly loved me, the man

who plucked me like an apple from the bough; later on he made what

amends he could by proclaiming me his wife under the Doomsman law.

Yet it was a tiger-cat rather than a woman whom he had taken to his

bosom, and I wonder now that I did not a thousand times overpass

the limits of his forbearance. Assuredly, in that first agony, I

tried my hardest to stretch his patience to the breaking-point, in

the hope that a knife-thrust might open for me the doors of the

prison-house. You see, I was very young, and I could not forget my

cousin Philip's eyes.



"'A woman's heart is like a cup; it holds but one fixed quantity of

life's essential liquor, be the latter sweet or bitter. An infinity

of little sips or one deep draught, what does it matter? The vessel

is empty in either case. Yet, as time went on, I grew to endure

existence; afterwards, when my Esmay was born, I valued it again

for her sake. Moreover, she was his daughter as well as mine, and

so I came finally to endure and even to welcome the touch of my

master's hand. In all these years it had never been aught but

gentle, for all that they called him Mad Scarlett, and the children

were taught to believe that he always wore gloves, because he had a

bloody palm whose stain no water would wash away. Yes, and I wept,

as any wife and mother might do, on that gray November day when I

knelt beside his bier.



"'But this concerns only myself, and it is of Esmay, my daughter,

that I would speak. In a year she will be seventeen, and before

that time, if at all, the way must be opened for her to go to her

mother's people. I am helpless, except for this one opportunity of

committing a message to the hands of Chance, one slender line

dropped into the ocean of uncertainty. Yet nothing remains to me

but to make the cast, for in six months' time I shall be dead; I

can count the downward steps of my disease as clearly as though

they formed part of the actual stairway under my feet.



"'And this also I know--that the message will reach you, my

brother; so far, at least, my eyes are permitted to explore the

advancing darkness. You will assuredly receive this letter, but

with what disposition of heart? That, alas! I may not know. Nor can

I give aught of service in either counsel or means; I must trust to

your love and good-will for everything. I can only say that the

girl is known to all in Doom as Mad Scarlett's daughter. She has

her father's tawny hair and red-brown eyes, and her name, as I have

already told you, is Esmay.



"'To-morrow night I shall make my opportunity to reach the river

edge unobserved. I shall then commit to the current the bottle

containing this message, a precious freight, for it is my darling's

life and happiness.



"'To you, my brother, the gift and the grace of God, according as

you deal with me and mine.

ELENA.



* * * * *



"'Watch him whom they call Quinton Edge.'"





"The date is a year ago, lacking a month," added Constans, as he handed

the roll to his uncle.



Messer Hugolin tied up the document with a piece of tape, labelled it

with the date of receipt, and laid it away in a pigeon-hole.



"Well?" said Constans, interrogatively.



"Do you want me to put myself within reach of the Gray Wolf's paws?"

retorted Messer Hugolin, shrewdly. "I was flayed badly enough the last

time the Black Swan cast anchor before Croye, and I am not paying

between rent-days."



"The year is almost up," urged Constans, insistently.



"I have lived my life," returned the old man, with sombre fixity of

resolve, "and these things do not interest me. I have other use for my

hands than to keep them stretched out idly in the dark."



"But that letter--a mother pleading for her child. You have but to give

the word--there are men who will go, and gladly."



"I doubt it not, for there are always drones a-plenty around a beehive.

But why should I spend my good, red gold to make a beggar's holiday?"



Constans felt his cheeks burn. "Their blood is redder than your gold,"

he said. "And if they are not afraid to risk----"



"What has cost them nothing and for whose loss there is quick repair in

a few square inches of sticking-plaster. Tush! boy, you speak of these

things as one who dreams visions at noonday. While I--what I know, I

know. There is but one thing precious in the world, and that is what a

man holds safely in his strong-box. Why should I spend myself for

naught?"



"The girl is your niece--your flesh and blood."



"No more so than yourself, nephew. And tell me, have I ever been

over-tender with you on that account? Can you call to mind when and

where I have spared you because you were of my kin? At least, I make a

virtue of my honesty."



Messer Hugolin smiled. He saw from Constans's face that he need not plot

out the thought in plainer words, and so they parted without further

speaking, although the blood throbbed in Constans's temples as he made

obeisance and walked away. He was conscious that he must keep himself in

hand; the stocks and the whipping-post were ever ready for the

rebellious apprentice, and a single hasty act might imperil his whole

future. But as he lay awake that night in his attic bedchamber he

resolved that this should be his last week's work in Messer Hugolin's

tan-pits. The time had come for him to make a second visit to Doom the

Forbidden, and to remain there for an indefinite period--until his work

had been accomplished.



It would have been impossible for Constans to have embarked upon this

new adventure were it not for the two small gold coins that he had found

and carried away from Doom on the occasion of his former visit. It was

against the common law of the land for a bound apprentice to possess any

money, even a handful of copper pence. He had to be careful,

therefore, with whom he dealt, and he expected to be cheated in making

his bargain for a boat and a supply of provisions. As it was, he was

skilfully skinned by the rascal with whom he finally ventured to open

negotiations, and Constans thought himself lucky to exchange it for a

leaky, flat-bottomed tub and fifty pounds weight of absolute

necessaries, chiefly sun-dried strips of beef and parched grain.






His personal belongings were not burdensome to transfer--the books, half

a dozen in all, his revolver and field-glass, and a good ash bow with

twelve dozen arrows, each bearing his private mark of a scarlet feather.

These last he had been at work upon through many a long evening in the

last two months, and he was sure that they would serve him well should

need arise. Clothing and blankets he did not trouble about, even with

the cold weather close at hand, for he could reckon certainly on finding

abundant supplies of this nature in the city itself.



On the fourth night after the finding of the bottle Constans swung

lightly out of his garret window. He cast one farewell glance at the

shuttered windows of Messer Hugolin's office. Through a chink struggled

a feeble beam of pale, yellow light, but his uncle was poring,

doubtless, over his ledgers and had heard no sound. The wolf-hound Grip

wagged his tail as Constans passed, and he patted his head, the one

single creature in his uncle's household who might regret his absence on

the morrow. Now the way was clear; he stole off into the darkness,

finding no difficulty in scaling the wall, and so was free.



The night was misty and starless and the tide on a strong ebb. The

voyage down-stream was without incident, and by midnight he had landed

within the city lines, but much farther up-town than upon the occasion

of his first adventure. His plan was to seek some uninhabited house

within convenient distance of the library building and make that his

temporary headquarters. He found what he wanted in the block immediately

to the westward of the library, and in three or four trips he had

transported thither his stock of food and other impedimenta. The boat

had leaked badly on the way down the river, and was plainly unseaworthy.

There was no place in which to hide the craft, and to allow her to

remain moored at the pier would be tantamount to announcing his arrival

to the first sharp-eyed Doomsman who might chance to pass that way. So,

pushing her out into the current with a vigorous shove from his foot,

Constans watched the little hull disappear in the darkness. Henceforth

he must depend entirely upon his own resources, inadequate as they were

for the task before him. But upon this phase of the situation he would

not allow himself to dwell. Such unprofitable meditation could breed

naught but irresolution and be unnerving to both body and mind; if he

were to play the coward now he but invited the fate he feared. Courage,

then, and forward!



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