Atlantida - Page 55/145

It was broad daylight when I opened my eyes. I thought at once of

Morhange. I could not see him, but I heard him, close by, giving

little grunts of surprise.

I called to him. He ran to me.

"Then they didn't tie you up?" I asked.

"I beg your pardon. They did. But they did it badly; I managed to get

free."

"You might have untied me, too," I remarked crossly.

"What good would it have done? I should only have waked you up. And I

thought that your first word would be to call me. There, that's done."

I reeled as I tried to stand on my feet.

Morhange smiled.

"We might have spent the whole night smoking and drinking and not been

in a worse state," he said. "Anyhow, that Eg-Anteouen with his

hasheesh is a fine rascal."

"Ceghéir-ben-Cheikh," I corrected.

I rubbed my hand over my forehead.

"Where are we?"

"My dear boy," Morhange replied, "since I awakened from the

extraordinary nightmare which is mixed up with the smoky cave and the

lamp-lit stairway of the Arabian Nights, I have been going from

surprise to surprise, from confusion to confusion. Just look around

you."

I rubbed my eyes and stared. Then I seized my friend's hand.

"Morhange," I begged, "tell me if we are still dreaming."

We were in a round room, perhaps fifty feet in diameter, and of about

the same height, lighted by a great window opening on a sky of intense

blue.

Swallows flew back and forth, outside, giving quick, joyous cries.

The floor, the incurving walls and the ceiling were of a kind of

veined marble like porphyry, panelled with a strange metal, paler than

gold, darker than silver, clouded just then by the early morning mist

that came in through the window in great puffs.

I staggered toward this window, drawn by the freshness of the breeze

and the sunlight which was chasing away my dreams, and I leaned my

elbows on the balustrade.

I could not restrain a cry of delight.

I was standing on a kind of balcony, cut into the flank of a mountain,

overhanging an abyss. Above me, blue sky; below appeared a veritable

earthly paradise hemmed in on all sides by mountains that formed a

continuous and impassable wall about it. A garden lay spread out down

there. The palm trees gently swayed their great fronds. At their feet

was a tangle of the smaller trees which grow in an oasis under their

protection: almonds, lemons, oranges, and many others which I could

not distinguish from that height. A broad blue stream, fed by a

waterfall, emptied into a charming lake, the waters of which had the

marvellous transparency which comes in high altitudes. Great birds

flew in circles over this green hollow; I could see in the lake the

red flash of a flamingo.