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The Garden of God

Chapter 33: CHAPTER XXIII
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About This Book

A drifting schooner discovers a young family of castaways and a lone child, prompting the patriarch's long search to resume; subsequent chapters follow the rescued children's reintegration and the broader island community as youthful survivors confront local tribes, mysterious rituals, and a malevolent presence. The narrative alternates quiet scenes of lagoon life and parenthood with escalating dangers: rivalries, supernatural intimations, fierce storms, and pitched fights that reshape leadership and fate. Recurrent motifs include survival, the pull of kinship, cultural collision, and nature's power, with episodic structure moving from discovery and domestic calm to confrontation, loss, and eventual renewal.

CHAPTER XXIII

THE PRISON OF THE TREES

Just as a person in some phases of the state we call the dream condition has to run or finds himself rooted to the spot, Katafa bent aside with no more volition than a reed possesses when moved by the wind.

The very intensity of her longing and her passion cast her more completely into the grasp of the subconscious power that had her in its charge.

Dick, with a sharp cry as if someone had struck him, sprang across the mat, grasped at her again, and missed. She had bent and, springing erect again, all her soul craving for the embrace, with arms outspread like a drowning person, she in turn tried to grasp. Then, turning, she ran, as the dreamer runs followed by the viewless, across the sward. Pursued, yet untouched, she passed with the speed of Atalanta. The leaves divided before her, yet still she ran, unharmed by bramble, unhurt by tree, seeing nothing, protected by instinct.

Then, far in the woods, where the tall matamatas tossed their broad green leaves to the wind, she crouched amidst the ferns like a hare in its form.

The great crisis had come and passed and taminan had triumphed.