[The Great Taboo by Grant Allen]@TWC D-Link bookThe Great Taboo CHAPTER XVIII 18/21
If even the Cannibal God himself wrought it harm, who could tell what judgment might fall upon him forthwith, what terrible vengeance the dead Tu-Kila-Kila might wreak upon him in his ghostly anger? And that dead Tu-Kila-Kila was his own Soul! His own Soul might flare up within him in some mystic way and burn him to ashes. And yet--suppose this hateful new-comer, the King of the Rain, whom he had himself made Korong on purpose to get rid of him the more easily, and so had elevated into his own worst potential enemy--suppose this new-comer, the King of the Rain, were by chance to speak that other dialect of the bird-language, which the King of the Birds himself knew not, but which the parrot had learned from his old master, the ancient Tu-Kila-Kila of other days, and in which the bird still recited the secret of the sacred tree and the Death of the Great God--ah, then he might still have to fight hard for his divinity.
He gazed angrily at the bird.
Methuselah blinked, and put his head on one side, and looked craftily askance at him.
Tu-Kila-Kila hated it, that insolent creature. Was he not a god, and should he be thus bearded in his own island by a mere Soul of dead birds, a poor, wretched parrot? But the curse! What might not that portend? Ah, well, he would risk it.
Glancing around him once more to the right and left, to make sure that nobody was looking, the cunning savage put forth his hand stealthily, and tried with a friendly caress to seize the parrot. In a moment, before he had time to know what was happening, Methuselah--sleepy old dotard as he seemed--had woke up at once to a sense of danger.
<<Back Index Next>> D-Link book Top TWC mobile books
|