She had reached St. Verena's on the 30th of June, 1914. Every day following her
return brought Europe and the assorted Europeans gathered in the hospital
closer to war. She noted carefully in her journal the affecting scenes in which
patients had to be removed from care and made ready for travel. The first
Russians fled before the Austrian ultimatum to Serbia and some were forced to
return. Travel through the Balkan states had become too disturbed; the way back
into the mother country led over Berlin.
Rosalind was filled with unrest: she had seldom felt a strong personal
preference about where she spent her life with the Ostrovs but now she wanted
very badly to remain at St. Verena's, to remain close to Lucas Tilmann. She
perceived a conflict approaching: between love, yes, love at last, and duty. It
was against this darkening background and in this state of internal tension
that she became one of the initiates. After the 5th of July she made no more
notes, no more entries at all in her journal — the equivalent of a stunned
silence and a ban of absolute secrecy.
It began with a long talk in their enchanted glade; Lucas was speaking of
natural history, cosmology, the place of the earth in the universe. Rosalind
believed that he was leading up to a confession of his religious belief, or
rather his lack of it, his rationalism. He was dismayed that she had not really
got on to an English writer, Wells, and she was not game enough to confide that
it was one of those ridiculous class things. He was surely an awfully common
little man, a counter jumper, as her mother would have said, and she did not
trust his fantastic stories.
They sat there talking until the stars came out and lamps were lit in the
hospital down below. The gypsies were at the cooking place outside their
caravan and the man's wife crossed the glade with two tiny cups of warm spirit,
which they obediently tossed off. Lucas began to question Rosalind about poor
Prince Azlov, spending his Siberian exile in the neighborhood of Irkutsk.
"Does he write of — cosmic events?" he asked. "Falling stars?"
"You mean meteorites?" said Rosalind. "Yes of course. And there was an
especially large one a few years ago, before I came to Russia. Kyril
Mihailovitch believed there should have been a scientific expedition — but there
it is. The district where it fell, the taiga, is unbearably remote. . . . "
"Six years ago," said Lucas. "Come, let us go up to the Annex. My patient will
be awake now."
He took her by the hand and they walked briskly up the path to the Annex. At
some point, more than halfway there, the extraordinary sensation began again;
she had not imagined it. Rosalind found that she experienced it a little
differently this second time because she knew that it was somehow outside
herself, streaming out of the chalet like golden mist.
"You feel the influence then," said Lucas.
He turned her toward him, unsmiling, and took her pulse. She might have burst
out again, questioning, but he put his finger to his lips. They went up the
steps and Lucas Tilmann said loudly in Russian: "I am here and I have
brought my sweetheart, the English girl."
From the largest bedroom, at the back of the house, there came a curious sound.
Rosalind trembled; only the grip Lucas had upon her arm and the reassuring
waves of serenity and well-being kept her from crying out. She thought of
Leonid's tale: "a starets, a holy man . . ."
The back bedroom was very dark and filled with a distinctive odor, the natural
smell of a warm body, as a stable smelled of horses or a railway carriage of
human sweat. She fixed her eyes upon the dark shape in the large carved
bedstead among the tumbled featherbeds. A voice, hoarse and resonant, dropping
words like stones into a mountain pool, said in Russian, "Do not be
afraid."
Her eyes were becoming accustomed to the gloom and she was accustomed,
certainly, to men who grew luxuriant hair and beards, but the large head
propped on the pillows was — unusual. Then Lucas Tilmann drew back a corner of
the window curtains, a ray of light penetrated the dark chamber, and Rosalind
found that she had been addressed by a bear.
"No," continued the voice, "everyone thinks that, chere Rosaline.
Come closer. Do not be afraid."
She could not speak but a profound curiosity, stronger than her fear, led her
closer to the bed. She was, after all, the child of a medical officer and the
grandchild of an explorer. Rosalind saw what could not be believed, she saw a
large furred head, bearlike indeed, but without a bear's snout. The fur — black,
brown, and gold — grew very flat and soft around the large yellow eyes, thicker
on the wide dewlaps; the small roundish ears twitched, all alert. She saw dark
lips working under a drooping fringe of hair. "Give me your hand. . . ."
She saw that the hand which took hers was four-fingered, covered with finest
tawny fur, the long digits closing in pairs like pincers. She heard her own
voice whispering urgently: "What? Where?"
"We have evolved a formula together, " said Lucas Tilmann, at her side. "Our
honored guest is the inhabitant of another world, one of the planets revolving
around a distant sun."
In fact the whole question of provenance had been reduced to a series of
simple formulae, which she heard in turn from Lucas and from the guest.
"A civilization which has progressed in mechanical sciences . . ."
"A cosmic vessel on a first circumnavigation of the Earth, experiencing
engine failure . . ."
"An escape mechanism meant to propel survivors to safety in small rescue craft . . ."
"I am alone," said the guest, filling Rosalind with an aching
loneliness. "My poor comrades have slid into the depths of Lake Baikal, in
our little nutshell."
At last the significance of the meteorites, of Lake Baikal, near Irkutsk, all
came to her — the traveler had come down in Siberia, whose cold wastes
were separated from this place, the Altalm, by thousands of miles.
"How did — our friend — get here?"
She asked this clutching Lucas's arm for support but never taking her eyes from
the stranger's face.
"The power of the mind," said Lucas Tilmann. "Isn't that so, Medvekhin?"
She was glad that the guest had been given a name, even an earthly one;
Medvekhin was one of the Russian surnames related to the word for bear. Yet she
could not make much sense of the answer Lucas had given to her question, and
Medvekhin understood this.
"I persuaded the inhabitants to understand my situation and to help me."
There was a trace of understatement in all of Medvekhin's explanations.
Rosalind was able to picture the scenes of the journey afterward, when she was
no longer in the presence of the guest. But she understood at once that the
"persuasion" was inescapable: the lake fisherman and his family, the
peddler-woman, the bee-keeper, the exiled students, the telegraph
operator — they had no choice. The sweet influence, the power of this mind, was
compelling: Rosalind experienced a moral revulsion and this aroused a protest.
"I chose self-preservation," said Medvekhin humbly. "No other way but this
"persuasion" was open to me. None of these chosen helpers came to the least
harm, only brought this Lost One a certain distance upon its way. "
"Right here! To your haven!" said Lucas heartily.
"What sort of place or person were you looking for?" asked Rosalind.
"A healer. A doctor who might understand my plight, " replied Medvekhin. "A
mountain, where the air is not so rich . . ."
The odyssey had included a few minor officials, many humble folk; after three
years in Siberia and almost three more in the Urals, near a telegraph station,
Medvekhin came upon Kaspar, the gypsy, and his wife Marja. At one time they had
traveled with a real bear, whom they loved and mourned when it died, long after
its dancing days were over. More than once Medvekhin had worn poor Prince's
muzzle and cowered in the shadows of the wagon while some official glanced at
him. Kaspar taught his new companion to make bearlike noises.
Already they knew their goal: the estate personnel of a rich mill-owner in the
region of Tyumen brought forth the name of the Doctors Tilmann, senior and
junior, and the alpine clinic of St. Verena. It seemed the ideal place for
Medvekhin who had by now a good command of Russian and a smattering of German
and English.
As the story was told Rosalind found another most important question and asked
it at once rather than have the stranger pluck it from her mind. Lucas chuckled
when she was so direct.
"We are accustomed to distinguish between the two sexes," she said. "The males
and the females. How is this arranged among your race?"
"A little differently," came the reply. "It is not an out and out dichotomy.
More choice is involved."
"And you, yourself?" she pursued.
"I could be described as a neuter-worker, like a honeybee," replied Medvekhin,
"adapted for travel among the star systems. I have accepted the use of the
masculine or the neuter pronoun. I have done this because of certain problems
of status and dominance which I discovered adhering to the feminine pronoun."
Rosalind tried to keep separate in her mind all that she learned directly from
this being, from Medvekhin, and things that were reported by Lucas, by Sister
Luise, and by Kaspar. What remained wonderfully clear was the buoyant
atmosphere of those numbered days and nights. When Lucas described the chance
encounter with Maud Courtney, the marvelous consequences, she had questions:
Was the effect intentional? Had Medvekhin meant to heal the young woman?
"From a certain point in our encounter yes, of course," replied M.
"There are close analogies between certain aspects of the human brain and the
brain of the Akuine."
Words, concepts, pictures from the other world were not very numerous and
mostly dealt with things that were like, not unlike. There was, for example, a
relationship between Lucas Tilmann's profession and the work of Medvekhin
aboard the large vessel that had been lost. The Akuine race, endowed
with such intense, richly orchestrated mind-powers, became untuned under the
stress of star voyaging. M. could have been described, like Lucas
Tilmann, as an alienist.
Rosalind was disturbed by the way the patients were made to forget their
healing encounter. But this was no more than a demonstration of the way in
which Medvekhin had survived — leaving behind a swathe of forgetfulness from
Lake Baikal to the Alps. Now Lucas had been brought into cahoots with his
guest, when he put forward the story of "a new treatment involving hypnosis."
"I had to try it," said Lucas. "When I saw the improvement in Maud Courtney . . .
She had been slipping away, approaching catatonia. Now she became well
before my eyes and she remembered nothing."
He had brought only six patients into the presence of Medvekhin; all had been
diagnosed as suffering from the constellation of disorders that was beginning
to be called schizophrenie. All were healed after application of
Akuine "mind power"; a couple of the patients retained some memory of
the treatment. A German woman believed that in her hypnotic trance she walked
through the woods and talked to the animals. Leonid Ivanovitch Ostrov had a
dream encounter with a starets, a holy man, who came to him in the guise
of a bear. Rosalind never knew the name of the German woman or of the other
patients besides Miss Courtney and Count Ostrov who had received this unique
treatment.
Medvekhin had no impulse to write down or dictate notes; he enquired for methods of
recording information that existed, perhaps, in the distant
laboratories of the Edison Company but were by no means in common use. Lucas
recorded dialogues with their guest and his own conclusions in a thick black
notebook, illustrated with his own sketches, which he wrote up privately, out
of Medvekhin's presence.
He understood Rosalind's reservations about the treatment and the silence that
hedged it. But the mere existence of this being could overwhelm all human
judgment. What was to be done? Men of science, civil authorities . . . surely
they must be informed?
They sat whispering madly in the room of the chalet furthest from the large
bedroom where M. was sleeping.
"Whatever our friend believes," she said, reassuring Lucas, "traces of the
large vessel must be found, eventually, even in the remote forests of
the taiga. The matter will be out of our hands. . . ."
The survivor had been scarcely able to find words to describe the nature of the
explosion that marked the disintegration of his "Life Ship." Now Lucas took
Rosalind's cold hands and confided the saddest fact of all. Medvekhin, who had
been in his care for six months, might not live long. Internal injury was
suspected; even mountain air did not suit the patient in the long run.
Dr. Tilmann could not neglect his duties, these consisting more and more of
seeing patients off, closing down the facilities of St. Verena's Hospital, on
the eve of what came to be called The Great War. Rosalind was busy packing for
the Ostrov family. Yet every day they snatched certain hours in the Annex, high
up among the pines. In these evening hours M. preferred to sleep. Lucas
and Rosalind moved to that distant room, intended as a servant's bedroom, and
there made love. This was that last golden summer of which poets were to speak.
These were the last days, a time of wonders. . . .
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