5073 lines
221 KiB
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5073 lines
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Project Gutenberg Etext, Lost Continent by Edgar Rice Burroughs
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The Lost Continent by Edgar Rice Burroughs
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July, 1994 [Etext #149]
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Project Gutenberg Etext, The Lost Continent by Edgar Rice Burroughs
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The Lost Continent was originally published under
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the title Beyond Thirty
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THE LOST CONTINENT
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Edgar Rice Burroughs
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1
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Since earliest childhood I have been strangely fascinated by
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the mystery surrounding the history of the last days of
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twentieth century Europe. My interest is keenest, perhaps,
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not so much in relation to known facts as to speculation
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upon the unknowable of the two centuries that have rolled by
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since human intercourse between the Western and Eastern
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Hemispheres ceased--the mystery of Europe's state following
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the termination of the Great War--provided, of course, that
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the war had been terminated.
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From out of the meagerness of our censored histories we
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learned that for fifteen years after the cessation of
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diplomatic relations between the United States of North
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America and the belligerent nations of the Old World, news
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of more or less doubtful authenticity filtered, from time to
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time, into the Western Hemisphere from the Eastern.
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Then came the fruition of that historic propaganda which is
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best described by its own slogan: "The East for the East--
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the West for the West," and all further intercourse was
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stopped by statute.
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Even prior to this, transoceanic commerce had practically
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ceased, owing to the perils and hazards of the mine-strewn
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waters of both the Atlantic and Pacific Oceans. Just when
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submarine activities ended we do not know but the last
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vessel of this type sighted by a Pan-American merchantman
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was the huge Q 138, which discharged twenty-nine torpedoes
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at a Brazilian tank steamer off the Bermudas in the fall of
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1972. A heavy sea and the excellent seamanship of the
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master of the Brazilian permitted the Pan-American to escape
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and report this last of a long series of outrages upon our
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commerce. God alone knows how many hundreds of our ancient
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ships fell prey to the roving steel sharks of blood-frenzied
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Europe. Countless were the vessels and men that passed over
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our eastern and western horizons never to return; but
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whether they met their fates before the belching tubes of
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submarines or among the aimlessly drifting mine fields, no
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man lived to tell.
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And then came the great Pan-American Federation which linked
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the Western Hemisphere from pole to pole under a single
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flag, which joined the navies of the New World into the
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mightiest fighting force that ever sailed the seven seas--
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the greatest argument for peace the world had ever known.
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Since that day peace had reigned from the western shores of
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the Azores to the western shores of the Hawaiian Islands,
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nor has any man of either hemisphere dared cross 30dW. or
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175dW. From 30d to 175d is ours--from 30d to 175d is
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peace, prosperity and happiness.
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Beyond was the great unknown. Even the geographies of my
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boyhood showed nothing beyond. We were taught of nothing
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beyond. Speculation was discouraged. For two hundred years
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the Eastern Hemisphere had been wiped from the maps and
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histories of Pan-America. Its mention in fiction, even, was
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forbidden.
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Our ships of peace patrol thirty and one hundred seventy-
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five. What ships from beyond they have warned only the
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secret archives of government show; but, a naval officer
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myself, I have gathered from the traditions of the service
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that it has been fully two hundred years since smoke or sail
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has been sighted east of 30d or west of 175d. The fate of
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the relinquished provinces which lay beyond the dead lines
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we could only speculate upon. That they were taken by the
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military power, which rose so suddenly in China after the
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fall of the republic, and which wrested Manchuria and Korea
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from Russia and Japan, and also absorbed the Philippines, is
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quite within the range of possibility.
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It was the commander of a Chinese man-of-war who received a
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copy of the edict of 1972 from the hand of my illustrious
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ancestor, Admiral Turck, on one hundred seventy-five, two
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hundred and six years ago, and from the yellowed pages of
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the admiral's diary I learned that the fate of the
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Philippines was even then presaged by these Chinese naval
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officers.
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Yes, for over two hundred years no man crossed 30d to 175d
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and lived to tell his story--not until chance drew me across
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and back again, and public opinion, revolting at last
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against the drastic regulations of our long-dead forbears,
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demanded that my story be given to the world, and that the
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narrow interdict which commanded peace, prosperity, and
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happiness to halt at 30d and 175d be removed forever.
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I am glad that it was given to me to be an instrument in the
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hands of Providence for the uplifting of benighted Europe,
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and the amelioration of the suffering, degradation, and
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abysmal ignorance in which I found her.
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I shall not live to see the complete regeneration of the
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savage hordes of the Eastern Hemisphere--that is a work
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which will require many generations, perhaps ages, so
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complete has been their reversion to savagery; but I know
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that the work has been started, and I am proud of the share
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in it which my generous countrymen have placed in my hands.
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The government already possesses a complete official report
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of my adventures beyond thirty. In the narrative I purpose
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telling my story in a less formal, and I hope, a more
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entertaining, style; though, being only a naval officer and
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without claim to the slightest literary ability, I shall
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most certainly fall far short of the possibilities which are
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inherent in my subject. That I have passed through the most
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wondrous adventures that have befallen a civilized man
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during the past two centuries encourages me in the belief
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that, however ill the telling, the facts themselves will
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command your interest to the final page.
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Beyond thirty! Romance, adventure, strange peoples,
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fearsome beasts--all the excitement and scurry of the lives
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of the twentieth century ancients that have been denied us
|
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in these dull days of peace and prosaic prosperity--all, all
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lay beyond thirty, the invisible barrier between the stupid,
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commercial present and the carefree, barbarous past.
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What boy has not sighed for the good old days of wars,
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|
revolutions, and riots; how I used to pore over the
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|
chronicles of those old days, those dear old days, when
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workmen went armed to their labors; when they fell upon one
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||
|
another with gun and bomb and dagger, and the streets ran
|
||
|
red with blood! Ah, but those were the times when life was
|
||
|
worth the living; when a man who went out by night knew not
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||
|
at which dark corner a "footpad" might leap upon and slay
|
||
|
him; when wild beasts roamed the forest and the jungles, and
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there were savage men, and countries yet unexplored.
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Now, in all the Western Hemisphere dwells no man who may not
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||
|
find a school house within walking distance of his home, or
|
||
|
at least within flying distance.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The wildest beast that roams our waste places lairs in the
|
||
|
frozen north or the frozen south within a government
|
||
|
reserve, where the curious may view him and feed him bread
|
||
|
crusts from the hand with perfect impunity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But beyond thirty! And I have gone there, and come back;
|
||
|
and now you may go there, for no longer is it high treason,
|
||
|
punishable by disgrace or death, to cross 30d or 175d.
|
||
|
|
||
|
My name is Jefferson Turck. I am a lieutenant in the navy--
|
||
|
in the great Pan-American navy, the only navy which now
|
||
|
exists in all the world.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I was born in Arizona, in the United States of North
|
||
|
America, in the year of our Lord 2116. Therefore, I am
|
||
|
twenty-one years old.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In early boyhood I tired of the teeming cities and
|
||
|
overcrowded rural districts of Arizona. Every generation of
|
||
|
Turcks for over two centuries has been represented in the
|
||
|
navy. The navy called to me, as did the free, wide,
|
||
|
unpeopled spaces of the mighty oceans. And so I joined the
|
||
|
navy, coming up from the ranks, as we all must, learning our
|
||
|
craft as we advance. My promotion was rapid, for my family
|
||
|
seems to inherit naval lore. We are born officers, and I
|
||
|
reserve to myself no special credit for an early advancement
|
||
|
in the service.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At twenty I found myself a lieutenant in command of the
|
||
|
aero-submarine Coldwater, of the SS-96 class. The Coldwater
|
||
|
was one of the first of the air and underwater craft which
|
||
|
have been so greatly improved since its launching, and was
|
||
|
possessed of innumerable weaknesses which, fortunately, have
|
||
|
been eliminated in more recent vessels of similar type.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Even when I took command, she was fit only for the junk
|
||
|
pile; but the world-old parsimony of government retained her
|
||
|
in active service, and sent two hundred men to sea in her,
|
||
|
with myself, a mere boy, in command of her, to patrol thirty
|
||
|
from Iceland to the Azores.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Much of my service had been spent aboard the great
|
||
|
merchantmen-of-war. These are the utility naval vessels
|
||
|
that have transformed the navies of old, which burdened the
|
||
|
peoples with taxes for their support, into the present day
|
||
|
fleets of self-supporting ships that find ample time for
|
||
|
target practice and gun drill while they bear freight and
|
||
|
the mails from the continents to the far-scattered island of
|
||
|
Pan-America.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This change in service was most welcome to me, especially as
|
||
|
it brought with it coveted responsibilities of sole command,
|
||
|
and I was prone to overlook the deficiencies of the
|
||
|
Coldwater in the natural pride I felt in my first ship.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Coldwater was fully equipped for two months' patrolling--
|
||
|
the ordinary length of assignment to this service--and a
|
||
|
month had already passed, its monotony entirely unrelieved
|
||
|
by sight of another craft, when the first of our misfortunes
|
||
|
befell.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We had been riding out a storm at an altitude of about three
|
||
|
thousand feet. All night we had hovered above the tossing
|
||
|
billows of the moonlight clouds. The detonation of the
|
||
|
thunder and the glare of lightning through an occasional
|
||
|
rift in the vaporous wall proclaimed the continued fury of
|
||
|
the tempest upon the surface of the sea; but we, far above
|
||
|
it all, rode in comparative ease upon the upper gale. With
|
||
|
the coming of dawn the clouds beneath us became a glorious
|
||
|
sea of gold and silver, soft and beautiful; but they could
|
||
|
not deceive us as to the blackness and the terrors of the
|
||
|
storm-lashed ocean which they hid.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I was at breakfast when my chief engineer entered and
|
||
|
saluted. His face was grave, and I thought he was even a
|
||
|
trifle paler than usual.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well?" I asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He drew the back of his forefinger nervously across his brow
|
||
|
in a gesture that was habitual with him in moments of mental
|
||
|
stress.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The gravitation-screen generators, sir," he said. "Number
|
||
|
one went to the bad about an hour and a half ago. We have
|
||
|
been working upon it steadily since; but I have to report,
|
||
|
sir, that it is beyond repair."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Number two will keep us supplied," I answered. "In the
|
||
|
meantime we will send a wireless for relief."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But that is the trouble, sir," he went on. "Number two has
|
||
|
stopped. I knew it would come, sir. I made a report on
|
||
|
these generators three years ago. I advised then that they
|
||
|
both be scrapped. Their principle is entirely wrong.
|
||
|
They're done for." And, with a grim smile, "I shall at
|
||
|
least have the satisfaction of knowing my report was
|
||
|
accurate."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Have we sufficient reserve screen to permit us to make
|
||
|
land, or, at least, meet our relief halfway?" I asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No, sir," he replied gravely; "we are sinking now."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Have you anything further to report?" I asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No, sir," he said.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Very good," I replied; and, as I dismissed him, I rang for
|
||
|
my wireless operator. When he appeared, I gave him a
|
||
|
message to the secretary of the navy, to whom all vessels in
|
||
|
service on thirty and one hundred seventy-five report
|
||
|
direct. I explained our predicament, and stated that with
|
||
|
what screening force remained I should continue in the air,
|
||
|
making as rapid headway toward St. Johns as possible, and
|
||
|
that when we were forced to take to the water I should
|
||
|
continue in the same direction.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The accident occurred directly over 30d and about 52d N.
|
||
|
The surface wind was blowing a tempest from the west. To
|
||
|
attempt to ride out such a storm upon the surface seemed
|
||
|
suicidal, for the Coldwater was not designed for surface
|
||
|
navigation except under fair weather conditions. Submerged,
|
||
|
or in the air, she was tractable enough in any sort of
|
||
|
weather when under control; but without her screen
|
||
|
generators she was almost helpless, since she could not fly,
|
||
|
and, if submerged, could not rise to the surface.
|
||
|
|
||
|
All these defects have been remedied in later models; but
|
||
|
the knowledge did not help us any that day aboard the slowly
|
||
|
settling Coldwater, with an angry sea roaring beneath, a
|
||
|
tempest raging out of the west, and 30d only a few knots
|
||
|
astern.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To cross thirty or one hundred seventy-five has been, as you
|
||
|
know, the direst calamity that could befall a naval
|
||
|
commander. Court-martial and degradation follow swiftly,
|
||
|
unless as is often the case, the unfortunate man takes his
|
||
|
own life before this unjust and heartless regulation can
|
||
|
hold him up to public scorn.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There has been in the past no excuse, no circumstance, that
|
||
|
could palliate the offense.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"He was in command, and he took his ship across thirty!"
|
||
|
That was sufficient. It might not have been in any way his
|
||
|
fault, as, in the case of the Coldwater, it could not
|
||
|
possibly have been justly charged to my account that the
|
||
|
gravitation-screen generators were worthless; but well I
|
||
|
knew that should chance have it that we were blown across
|
||
|
thirty today--as we might easily be before the terrific west
|
||
|
wind that we could hear howling below us, the responsibility
|
||
|
would fall upon my shoulders.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In a way, the regulation was a good one, for it certainly
|
||
|
accomplished that for which it was intended. We all fought
|
||
|
shy of 30d on the east and 175d on the west, and, though we
|
||
|
had to skirt them pretty close, nothing but an act of God
|
||
|
ever drew one of us across. You all are familiar with the
|
||
|
naval tradition that a good officer could sense proximity to
|
||
|
either line, and for my part, I am firmly convinced of the
|
||
|
truth of this as I am that the compass finds the north
|
||
|
without recourse to tedious processes of reasoning.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Old Admiral Sanchez was wont to maintain that he could smell
|
||
|
thirty, and the men of the first ship in which I sailed
|
||
|
claimed that Coburn, the navigating officer, knew by name
|
||
|
every wave along thirty from 60dN. to 60dS. However, I'd
|
||
|
hate to vouch for this.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Well, to get back to my narrative; we kept on dropping
|
||
|
slowly toward the surface the while we bucked the west wind,
|
||
|
clawing away from thirty as fast as we could. I was on the
|
||
|
bridge, and as we dropped from the brilliant sunlight into
|
||
|
the dense vapor of clouds and on down through them to the
|
||
|
wild, dark storm strata beneath, it seemed that my spirits
|
||
|
dropped with the falling ship, and the buoyancy of hope ran
|
||
|
low in sympathy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The waves were running to tremendous heights, and the
|
||
|
Coldwater was not designed to meet such waves head on. Her
|
||
|
elements were the blue ether, far above the raging storm, or
|
||
|
the greater depths of ocean, which no storm could ruffle.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As I stood speculating upon our chances once we settled into
|
||
|
the frightful Maelstrom beneath us and at the same time
|
||
|
mentally computing the hours which must elapse before aid
|
||
|
could reach us, the wireless operator clambered up the
|
||
|
ladder to the bridge, and, disheveled and breathless, stood
|
||
|
before me at salute. It needed but a glance at him to
|
||
|
assure me that something was amiss.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What now?" I asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The wireless, sir!" he cried. "My God, sir, I cannot
|
||
|
send."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But the emergency outfit?" I asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I have tried everything, sir. I have exhausted every
|
||
|
resource. We cannot send," and he drew himself up and
|
||
|
saluted again.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I dismissed him with a few kind words, for I knew that it
|
||
|
was through no fault of his that the mechanism was
|
||
|
antiquated and worthless, in common with the balance of the
|
||
|
Coldwater's equipment. There was no finer operator in Pan-
|
||
|
America than he.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The failure of the wireless did not appear as momentous to
|
||
|
me as to him, which is not unnatural, since it is but human
|
||
|
to feel that when our own little cog slips, the entire
|
||
|
universe must necessarily be put out of gear. I knew that
|
||
|
if this storm were destined to blow us across thirty, or
|
||
|
send us to the bottom of the ocean, no help could reach us
|
||
|
in time to prevent it. I had ordered the message sent
|
||
|
solely because regulations required it, and not with any
|
||
|
particular hope that we could benefit by it in our present
|
||
|
extremity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I had little time to dwell upon the coincidence of the
|
||
|
simultaneous failure of the wireless and the buoyancy
|
||
|
generators, since very shortly after the Coldwater had
|
||
|
dropped so low over the waters that all my attention was
|
||
|
necessarily centered upon the delicate business of settling
|
||
|
upon the waves without breaking my ship's back. With our
|
||
|
buoyancy generators in commission it would have been a
|
||
|
simple thing to enter the water, since then it would have
|
||
|
been but a trifling matter of a forty-five degree dive into
|
||
|
the base of a huge wave. We should have cut into the water
|
||
|
like a hot knife through butter, and have been totally
|
||
|
submerged with scarce a jar--I have done it a thousand
|
||
|
times--but I did not dare submerge the Coldwater for fear
|
||
|
that it would remain submerged to the end of time--a
|
||
|
condition far from conducive to the longevity of commander
|
||
|
or crew.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Most of my officers were older men than I. John Alvarez, my
|
||
|
first officer, is twenty years my senior. He stood at my
|
||
|
side on the bridge as the ship glided closer and closer to
|
||
|
those stupendous waves. He watched my every move, but he
|
||
|
was by far too fine an officer and gentleman to embarrass me
|
||
|
by either comment or suggestion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When I saw that we soon would touch, I ordered the ship
|
||
|
brought around broadside to the wind, and there we hovered a
|
||
|
moment until a huge wave reached up and seized us upon its
|
||
|
crest, and then I gave the order that suddenly reversed the
|
||
|
screening force, and let us into the ocean. Down into the
|
||
|
trough we went, wallowing like the carcass of a dead whale,
|
||
|
and then began the fight, with rudder and propellers, to
|
||
|
force the Coldwater back into the teeth of the gale and
|
||
|
drive her on and on, farther and farther from relentless
|
||
|
thirty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I think that we should have succeeded, even though the ship
|
||
|
was wracked from stem to stern by the terrific buffetings
|
||
|
she received, and though she were half submerged the greater
|
||
|
part of the time, had no further accident befallen us.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We were making headway, though slowly, and it began to look
|
||
|
as though we were going to pull through. Alvarez never left
|
||
|
my side, though I all but ordered him below for much-needed
|
||
|
rest. My second officer, Porfirio Johnson, was also often
|
||
|
on the bridge. He was a good officer, but a man for whom I
|
||
|
had conceived a rather unreasoning aversion almost at the
|
||
|
first moment of meeting him, an aversion which was not
|
||
|
lessened by the knowledge which I subsequently gained that
|
||
|
he looked upon my rapid promotion with jealousy. He was ten
|
||
|
years my senior both in years and service, and I rather
|
||
|
think he could never forget the fact that he had been an
|
||
|
officer when I was a green apprentice.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As it became more and more apparent that the Coldwater,
|
||
|
under my seamanship, was weathering the tempest and giving
|
||
|
promise of pulling through safely, I could have sworn that I
|
||
|
perceived a shade of annoyance and disappointment growing
|
||
|
upon his dark countenance. He left the bridge finally and
|
||
|
went below. I do not know that he is directly responsible
|
||
|
for what followed so shortly after; but I have always had my
|
||
|
suspicions, and Alvarez is even more prone to place the
|
||
|
blame upon him than I.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was about six bells of the forenoon watch that Johnson
|
||
|
returned to the bridge after an absence of some thirty
|
||
|
minutes. He seemed nervous and ill at ease--a fact which
|
||
|
made little impression on me at the time, but which both
|
||
|
Alvarez and I recalled subsequently.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Not three minutes after his reappearance at my side the
|
||
|
Coldwater suddenly commenced to lose headway. I seized the
|
||
|
telephone at my elbow, pressing upon the button which would
|
||
|
call the chief engineer to the instrument in the bowels of
|
||
|
the ship, only to find him already at the receiver
|
||
|
attempting to reach me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Numbers one, two, and five engines have broken down, sir,"
|
||
|
he called. "Shall we force the remaining three?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We can do nothing else," I bellowed into the transmitter.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"They won't stand the gaff, sir," he returned.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Can you suggest a better plan?" I asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No, sir," he replied.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Then give them the gaff, lieutenant," I shouted back, and
|
||
|
hung up the receiver.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For twenty minutes the Coldwater bucked the great seas with
|
||
|
her three engines. I doubt if she advanced a foot; but it
|
||
|
was enough to keep her nose in the wind, and, at least, we
|
||
|
were not drifting toward thirty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Johnson and Alvarez were at my side when, without warning,
|
||
|
the bow swung swiftly around and the ship fell into the
|
||
|
trough of the sea.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The other three have gone," I said, and I happened to be
|
||
|
looking at Johnson as I spoke. Was it the shadow of a
|
||
|
satisfied smile that crossed his thin lips? I do not know;
|
||
|
but at least he did not weep.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You always have been curious, sir, about the great unknown
|
||
|
beyond thirty," he said. "You are in a good way to have
|
||
|
your curiosity satisfied." And then I could not mistake the
|
||
|
slight sneer that curved his upper lip. There must have
|
||
|
been a trace of disrespect in his tone or manner which
|
||
|
escaped me, for Alvarez turned upon him like a flash.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"When Lieutenant Turck crosses thirty," he said, "we shall
|
||
|
all cross with him, and God help the officer or the man who
|
||
|
reproaches him!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I shall not be a party to high treason," snapped Johnson.
|
||
|
"The regulations are explicit, and if the Coldwater crosses
|
||
|
thirty it devolves upon you to place Lieutenant Turck under
|
||
|
arrest and immediately exert every endeavor to bring the
|
||
|
ship back into Pan-American waters."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I shall not know," replied Alvarez, "that the Coldwater
|
||
|
passes thirty; nor shall any other man aboard know it," and,
|
||
|
with his words, he drew a revolver from his pocket, and
|
||
|
before either I or Johnson could prevent it had put a bullet
|
||
|
into every instrument upon the bridge, ruining them beyond
|
||
|
repair.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And then he saluted me, and strode from the bridge, a martyr
|
||
|
to loyalty and friendship, for, though no man might know
|
||
|
that Lieutenant Jefferson Turck had taken his ship across
|
||
|
thirty, every man aboard would know that the first officer
|
||
|
had committed a crime that was punishable by both
|
||
|
degradation and death. Johnson turned and eyed me narrowly.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Shall I place him under arrest?" he asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You shall not," I replied. "Nor shall anyone else."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You become a party to his crime!" he cried angrily.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You may go below, Mr. Johnson," I said, "and attend to the
|
||
|
work of unpacking the extra instruments and having them
|
||
|
properly set upon the bridge."
|
||
|
|
||
|
He saluted, and left me, and for some time I stood, gazing
|
||
|
out upon the angry waters, my mind filled with unhappy
|
||
|
reflections upon the unjust fate that had overtaken me, and
|
||
|
the sorrow and disgrace that I had unwittingly brought down
|
||
|
upon my house.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I rejoiced that I should leave neither wife nor child to
|
||
|
bear the burden of my shame throughout their lives.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As I thought upon my misfortune, I considered more clearly
|
||
|
than ever before the unrighteousness of the regulation which
|
||
|
was to prove my doom, and in the natural revolt against its
|
||
|
injustice my anger rose, and there mounted within me a
|
||
|
feeling which I imagine must have paralleled that spirit
|
||
|
that once was prevalent among the ancients called anarchy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For the first time in my life I found my sentiments arraying
|
||
|
themselves against custom, tradition, and even government.
|
||
|
The wave of rebellion swept over me in an instant, beginning
|
||
|
with an heretical doubt as to the sanctity of the
|
||
|
established order of things--that fetish which has ruled
|
||
|
Pan-Americans for two centuries, and which is based upon a
|
||
|
blind faith in the infallibility of the prescience of the
|
||
|
long-dead framers of the articles of Pan-American
|
||
|
federation--and ending in an adamantine determination to
|
||
|
defend my honor and my life to the last ditch against the
|
||
|
blind and senseless regulation which assumed the synonymity
|
||
|
of misfortune and treason.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I would replace the destroyed instruments upon the bridge;
|
||
|
every officer and man should know when we crossed thirty.
|
||
|
But then I should assert the spirit which dominated me, I
|
||
|
should resist arrest, and insist upon bringing my ship back
|
||
|
across the dead line, remaining at my post until we had
|
||
|
reached New York. Then I should make a full report, and
|
||
|
with it a demand upon public opinion that the dead lines be
|
||
|
wiped forever from the seas.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I knew that I was right. I knew that no more loyal officer
|
||
|
wore the uniform of the navy. I knew that I was a good
|
||
|
officer and sailor, and I didn't propose submitting to
|
||
|
degradation and discharge because a lot of old, preglacial
|
||
|
fossils had declared over two hundred years before that no
|
||
|
man should cross thirty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Even while these thoughts were passing through my mind I was
|
||
|
busy with the details of my duties. I had seen to it that a
|
||
|
sea anchor was rigged, and even now the men had completed
|
||
|
their task, and the Coldwater was swinging around rapidly,
|
||
|
her nose pointing once more into the wind, and the frightful
|
||
|
rolling consequent upon her wallowing in the trough was
|
||
|
happily diminishing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was then that Johnson came hurrying to the bridge. One
|
||
|
of his eyes was swollen and already darkening, and his lip
|
||
|
was cut and bleeding. Without even the formality of a
|
||
|
salute, he burst upon me, white with fury.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Lieutenant Alvarez attacked me!" he cried. "I demand that
|
||
|
he be placed under arrest. I found him in the act of
|
||
|
destroying the reserve instruments, and when I would have
|
||
|
interfered to protect them he fell upon me and beat me. I
|
||
|
demand that you arrest him!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You forget yourself, Mr. Johnson," I said. "You are not in
|
||
|
command of the ship. I deplore the action of Lieutenant
|
||
|
Alvarez, but I cannot expunge from my mind the loyalty and
|
||
|
self-sacrificing friendship which has prompted him to his
|
||
|
acts. Were I you, sir, I should profit by the example he
|
||
|
has set. Further, Mr. Johnson, I intend retaining command
|
||
|
of the ship, even though she crosses thirty, and I shall
|
||
|
demand implicit obedience from every officer and man aboard
|
||
|
until I am properly relieved from duty by a superior officer
|
||
|
in the port of New York."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You mean to say that you will cross thirty without
|
||
|
submitting to arrest?" he almost shouted.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I do, sir," I replied. "And now you may go below, and,
|
||
|
when again you find it necessary to address me, you will
|
||
|
please be so good as to bear in mind the fact that I am your
|
||
|
commanding officer, and as such entitled to a salute."
|
||
|
|
||
|
He flushed, hesitated a moment, and then, saluting, turned
|
||
|
upon his heel and left the bridge. Shortly after, Alvarez
|
||
|
appeared. He was pale, and seemed to have aged ten years in
|
||
|
the few brief minutes since I last had seen him. Saluting,
|
||
|
he told me very simply what he had done, and asked that I
|
||
|
place him under arrest.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I put my hand on his shoulder, and I guess that my voice
|
||
|
trembled a trifle as, while reproving him for his act, I
|
||
|
made it plain to him that my gratitude was no less potent a
|
||
|
force than his loyalty to me. Then it was that I outlined
|
||
|
to him my purpose to defy the regulation that had raised the
|
||
|
dead lines, and to take my ship back to New York myself.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I did not ask him to share the responsibility with me. I
|
||
|
merely stated that I should refuse to submit to arrest, and
|
||
|
that I should demand of him and every other officer and man
|
||
|
implicit obedience to my every command until we docked at
|
||
|
home.
|
||
|
|
||
|
His face brightened at my words, and he assured me that I
|
||
|
would find him as ready to acknowledge my command upon the
|
||
|
wrong side of thirty as upon the right, an assurance which I
|
||
|
hastened to tell him I did not need.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The storm continued to rage for three days, and as far as
|
||
|
the wind scarce varied a point during all that time, I knew
|
||
|
that we must be far beyond thirty, drifting rapidly east by
|
||
|
south. All this time it had been impossible to work upon
|
||
|
the damaged engines or the gravity-screen generators; but we
|
||
|
had a full set of instruments upon the bridge, for Alvarez,
|
||
|
after discovering my intentions, had fetched the reserve
|
||
|
instruments from his own cabin, where he had hidden them.
|
||
|
Those which Johnson had seen him destroy had been a third
|
||
|
set which only Alvarez had known was aboard the Coldwater.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We waited impatiently for the sun, that we might determine
|
||
|
our exact location, and upon the fourth day our vigil was
|
||
|
rewarded a few minutes before noon.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Every officer and man aboard was tense with nervous
|
||
|
excitement as we awaited the result of the reading. The
|
||
|
crew had known almost as soon as I that we were doomed to
|
||
|
cross thirty, and I am inclined to believe that every man
|
||
|
jack of them was tickled to death, for the spirits of
|
||
|
adventure and romance still live in the hearts of men of the
|
||
|
twenty-second century, even though there be little for them
|
||
|
to feed upon between thirty and one hundred seventy-five.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The men carried none of the burdens of responsibility. They
|
||
|
might cross thirty with impunity, and doubtless they would
|
||
|
return to be heroes at home; but how different the home-
|
||
|
coming of their commanding officer!
|
||
|
|
||
|
The wind had dropped to a steady blow, still from west by
|
||
|
north, and the sea had gone down correspondingly. The crew,
|
||
|
with the exception of those whose duties kept them below,
|
||
|
were ranged on deck below the bridge. When our position was
|
||
|
definitely fixed I personally announced it to the eager,
|
||
|
waiting men.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Men," I said, stepping forward to the handrail and looking
|
||
|
down into their upturned, bronzed faces, "you are anxiously
|
||
|
awaiting information as to the ship's position. It has been
|
||
|
determined at latitude fifty degrees seven minutes north,
|
||
|
longitude twenty degrees sixteen minutes west."
|
||
|
|
||
|
I paused and a buzz of animated comment ran through the
|
||
|
massed men beneath me. "Beyond thirty. But there will be
|
||
|
no change in commanding officers, in routine or in
|
||
|
discipline, until after we have docked again in New York."
|
||
|
|
||
|
As I ceased speaking and stepped back from the rail there
|
||
|
was a roar of applause from the deck such as I never before
|
||
|
had heard aboard a ship of peace. It recalled to my mind
|
||
|
tales that I had read of the good old days when naval
|
||
|
vessels were built to fight, when ships of peace had been
|
||
|
man-of-war, and guns had flashed in other than futile target
|
||
|
practice, and decks had run red with blood.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With the subsistence of the sea, we were able to go to work
|
||
|
upon the damaged engines to some effect, and I also set men
|
||
|
to examining the gravitation-screen generators with a view
|
||
|
to putting them in working order should it prove not beyond
|
||
|
our resources.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For two weeks we labored at the engines, which indisputably
|
||
|
showed evidence of having been tampered with. I appointed a
|
||
|
board to investigate and report upon the disaster. But it
|
||
|
accomplished nothing other than to convince me that there
|
||
|
were several officers upon it who were in full sympathy with
|
||
|
Johnson, for, though no charges had been preferred against
|
||
|
him, the board went out of its way specifically to exonerate
|
||
|
him in its findings.
|
||
|
|
||
|
All this time we were drifting almost due east. The work
|
||
|
upon the engines had progressed to such an extent that
|
||
|
within a few hours we might expect to be able to proceed
|
||
|
under our own power westward in the direction of Pan-
|
||
|
American waters.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To relieve the monotony I had taken to fishing, and early
|
||
|
that morning I had departed from the Coldwater in one of the
|
||
|
boats on such an excursion. A gentle west wind was blowing.
|
||
|
The sea shimmered in the sunlight. A cloudless sky canopied
|
||
|
the west for our sport, as I had made it a point never
|
||
|
voluntarily to make an inch toward the east that I could
|
||
|
avoid. At least, they should not be able to charge me with
|
||
|
a willful violation of the dead lines regulation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I had with me only the boat's ordinary complement of men--
|
||
|
three in all, and more than enough to handle any small power
|
||
|
boat. I had not asked any of my officers to accompany me,
|
||
|
as I wished to be alone, and very glad am I now that I had
|
||
|
not. My only regret is that, in view of what befell us, it
|
||
|
had been necessary to bring the three brave fellows who
|
||
|
manned the boat.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Our fishing, which proved excellent, carried us so far to
|
||
|
the west that we no longer could see the Coldwater. The day
|
||
|
wore on, until at last, about mid-afternoon, I gave the
|
||
|
order to return to the ship.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We had proceeded but a short distance toward the east when
|
||
|
one of the men gave an exclamation of excitement, at the
|
||
|
same time pointing eastward. We all looked on in the
|
||
|
direction he had indicated, and there, a short distance
|
||
|
above the horizon, we saw the outlines of the Coldwater
|
||
|
silhouetted against the sky.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"They've repaired the engines and the generators both,"
|
||
|
exclaimed one of the men.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It seemed impossible, but yet it had evidently been done.
|
||
|
Only that morning, Lieutenant Johnson had told me that he
|
||
|
feared that it would be impossible to repair the generators.
|
||
|
I had put him in charge of this work, since he always had
|
||
|
been accounted one of the best gravitation-screen men in
|
||
|
the navy. He had invented several of the improvements that
|
||
|
are incorporated in the later models of these generators,
|
||
|
and I am convinced that he knows more concerning both the
|
||
|
theory and the practice of screening gravitation than any
|
||
|
living Pan-American.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At the sight of the Coldwater once more under control, the
|
||
|
three men burst into a glad cheer. But, for some reason
|
||
|
which I could not then account, I was strangely overcome by
|
||
|
a premonition of personal misfortune. It was not that I now
|
||
|
anticipated an early return to Pan-America and a board of
|
||
|
inquiry, for I had rather looked forward to the fight that
|
||
|
must follow my return. No, there was something else,
|
||
|
something indefinable and vague that cast a strange gloom
|
||
|
upon me as I saw my ship rising farther above the water and
|
||
|
making straight in our direction.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I was not long in ascertaining a possible explanation of my
|
||
|
depression, for, though we were plainly visible from the
|
||
|
bridge of the aero-submarine and to the hundreds of men who
|
||
|
swarmed her deck, the ship passed directly above us, not
|
||
|
five hundred feet from the water, and sped directly
|
||
|
westward.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We all shouted, and I fired my pistol to attract their
|
||
|
attention, though I knew full well that all who cared to had
|
||
|
observed us, but the ship moved steadily away, growing
|
||
|
smaller and smaller to our view until at last she passed
|
||
|
completely out of sight.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
2
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
What could it mean? I had left Alvarez in command. He was
|
||
|
my most loyal subordinate. It was absolutely beyond the
|
||
|
pale of possibility that Alvarez should desert me. No,
|
||
|
there was some other explanation. Something occurred to
|
||
|
place my second officer, Porfirio Johnson, in command. I
|
||
|
was sure of it but why speculate? The futility of
|
||
|
conjecture was only too palpable. The Coldwater had
|
||
|
abandoned us in midocean. Doubtless none of us would
|
||
|
survive to know why.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The young man at the wheel of the power boat had turned her
|
||
|
nose about as it became evident that the ship intended
|
||
|
passing over us, and now he still held her in futile pursuit
|
||
|
of the Coldwater.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Bring her about, Snider," I directed, "and hold her due
|
||
|
east. We can't catch the Coldwater, and we can't cross the
|
||
|
Atlantic in this. Our only hope lies in making the nearest
|
||
|
land, which, unless I am mistaken, is the Scilly Islands,
|
||
|
off the southwest coast of England. Ever heard of England,
|
||
|
Snider?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"There's a part of the United States of North America that
|
||
|
used to be known to the ancients as New England," he
|
||
|
replied. "Is that where you mean, sir?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No, Snider," I replied. "The England I refer to was an
|
||
|
island off the continent of Europe. It was the seat of a
|
||
|
very powerful kingdom that flourished over two hundred years
|
||
|
ago. A part of the United States of North America and all
|
||
|
of the Federated States of Canada once belonged to this
|
||
|
ancient England."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Europe," breathed one of the men, his voice tense with
|
||
|
excitement. "My grandfather used to tell me stories of the
|
||
|
world beyond thirty. He had been a great student, and he
|
||
|
had read much from forbidden books."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"In which I resemble your grandfather," I said, "for I, too,
|
||
|
have read more even than naval officers are supposed to
|
||
|
read, and, as you men know, we are permitted a greater
|
||
|
latitude in the study of geography and history than men of
|
||
|
other professions.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Among the books and papers of Admiral Porter Turck, who
|
||
|
lived two hundred years ago, and from whom I am descended,
|
||
|
many volumes still exist, and are in my possession, which
|
||
|
deal with the history and geography of ancient Europe.
|
||
|
Usually I bring several of these books with me upon a
|
||
|
cruise, and this time, among others, I have maps of Europe
|
||
|
and her surrounding waters. I was studying them as we came
|
||
|
away from the Coldwater this morning, and luckily I have
|
||
|
them with me."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You are going to try to make Europe, sir?" asked Taylor,
|
||
|
the young man who had last spoken.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It is the nearest land," I replied. "I have always wanted
|
||
|
to explore the forgotten lands of the Eastern Hemisphere.
|
||
|
Here's our chance. To remain at sea is to perish. None of
|
||
|
us ever will see home again. Let us make the best of it,
|
||
|
and enjoy while we do live that which is forbidden the
|
||
|
balance of our race--the adventure and the mystery which lie
|
||
|
beyond thirty."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taylor and Delcarte seized the spirit of my mood but Snider,
|
||
|
I think, was a trifle sceptical.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It is treason, sir," I replied, "but there is no law which
|
||
|
compels us to visit punishment upon ourselves. Could we
|
||
|
return to Pan-America, I should be the first to insist that
|
||
|
we face it. But we know that's not possible. Even if this
|
||
|
craft would carry us so far, we haven't enough water or food
|
||
|
for more than three days.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We are doomed, Snider, to die far from home and without
|
||
|
ever again looking upon the face of another fellow
|
||
|
countryman than those who sit here now in this boat. Isn't
|
||
|
that punishment sufficient for even the most exacting
|
||
|
judge?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Even Snider had to admit that it was.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Very well, then, let us live while we live, and enjoy to
|
||
|
the fullest whatever of adventure or pleasure each new day
|
||
|
brings, since any day may be our last, and we shall be dead
|
||
|
for a considerable while."
|
||
|
|
||
|
I could see that Snider was still fearful, but Taylor and
|
||
|
Delcarte responded with a hearty, "Aye, aye, sir!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
They were of different mold. Both were sons of naval
|
||
|
officers. They represented the aristocracy of birth, and
|
||
|
they dared to think for themselves.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Snider was in the minority, and so we continued toward the
|
||
|
east. Beyond thirty, and separated from my ship, my
|
||
|
authority ceased. I held leadership, if I was to hold it at
|
||
|
all, by virtue of personal qualifications only, but I did
|
||
|
not doubt my ability to remain the director of our destinies
|
||
|
in so far as they were amenable to human agencies. I have
|
||
|
always led. While my brain and brawn remain unimpaired I
|
||
|
shall continue always to lead. Following is an art which
|
||
|
Turcks do not easily learn.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was not until the third day that we raised land, dead
|
||
|
ahead, which I took, from my map, to be the isles of Scilly.
|
||
|
But such a gale was blowing that I did not dare attempt to
|
||
|
land, and so we passed to the north of them, skirted Land's
|
||
|
End, and entered the English Channel.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I think that up to that moment I had never experienced such
|
||
|
a thrill as passed through me when I realized that I was
|
||
|
navigating these historic waters. The lifelong dreams that
|
||
|
I never had dared hope to see fulfilled were at last a
|
||
|
reality--but under what forlorn circumstances!
|
||
|
|
||
|
Never could I return to my native land. To the end of my
|
||
|
days I must remain in exile. Yet even these thoughts failed
|
||
|
to dampen my ardor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
My eyes scanned the waters. To the north I could see the
|
||
|
rockbound coast of Cornwall. Mine were the first American
|
||
|
eyes to rest upon it for more than two hundred years. In
|
||
|
vain, I searched for some sign of ancient commerce that, if
|
||
|
history is to be believed, must have dotted the bosom of the
|
||
|
Channel with white sails and blackened the heavens with the
|
||
|
smoke of countless funnels, but as far as eye could reach
|
||
|
the tossing waters of the Channel were empty and deserted.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Toward midnight the wind and sea abated, so that shortly
|
||
|
after dawn I determined to make inshore in an attempt to
|
||
|
effect a landing, for we were sadly in need of fresh water
|
||
|
and food.
|
||
|
|
||
|
According to my observations, we were just off Ram Head, and
|
||
|
it was my intention to enter Plymouth Bay and visit
|
||
|
Plymouth. From my map it appeared that this city lay back
|
||
|
from the coast a short distance, and there was another city
|
||
|
given as Devonport, which appeared to lie at the mouth of
|
||
|
the river Tamar.
|
||
|
|
||
|
However, I knew that it would make little difference which
|
||
|
city we entered, as the English people were famed of old for
|
||
|
their hospitality toward visiting mariners. As we
|
||
|
approached the mouth of the bay I looked for the fishing
|
||
|
craft which I expected to see emerging thus early in the day
|
||
|
for their labors. But even after we rounded Ram Head and
|
||
|
were well within the waters of the bay I saw no vessel.
|
||
|
Neither was there buoy nor light nor any other mark to show
|
||
|
larger ships the channel, and I wondered much at this.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The coast was densely overgrown, nor was any building or
|
||
|
sign of man apparent from the water. Up the bay and into
|
||
|
the River Tamar we motored through a solitude as unbroken as
|
||
|
that which rested upon the waters of the Channel. For all
|
||
|
we could see, there was no indication that man had ever set
|
||
|
his foot upon this silent coast.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I was nonplused, and then, for the first time, there crept
|
||
|
over me an intuition of the truth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Here was no sign of war. As far as this portion of the
|
||
|
Devon coast was concerned, that seemed to have been over for
|
||
|
many years, but neither were there any people. Yet I could
|
||
|
not find it within myself to believe that I should find no
|
||
|
inhabitants in England. Reasoning thus, I discovered that
|
||
|
it was improbable that a state of war still existed, and
|
||
|
that the people all had been drawn from this portion of
|
||
|
England to some other, where they might better defend
|
||
|
themselves against an invader.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But what of their ancient coast defenses? What was there
|
||
|
here in Plymouth Bay to prevent an enemy landing in force
|
||
|
and marching where they wished? Nothing. I could not
|
||
|
believe that any enlightened military nation, such as the
|
||
|
ancient English are reputed to have been, would have
|
||
|
voluntarily so deserted an exposed coast and an excellent
|
||
|
harbor to the mercies of an enemy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I found myself becoming more and more deeply involved in
|
||
|
quandary. The puzzle which confronted me I could not
|
||
|
unravel. We had landed, and I now stood upon the spot
|
||
|
where, according to my map, a large city should rear its
|
||
|
spires and chimneys. There was nothing but rough, broken
|
||
|
ground covered densely with weeds and brambles, and tall,
|
||
|
rank, grass.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Had a city ever stood there, no sign of it remained. The
|
||
|
roughness and unevenness of the ground suggested something
|
||
|
of a great mass of debris hidden by the accumulation of
|
||
|
centuries of undergrowth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I drew the short cutlass with which both officers and men of
|
||
|
the navy are, as you know, armed out of courtesy to the
|
||
|
traditions and memories of the past, and with its point dug
|
||
|
into the loam about the roots of the vegetation growing at
|
||
|
my feet.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The blade entered the soil for a matter of seven inches,
|
||
|
when it struck upon something stonelike. Digging about the
|
||
|
obstacle, I presently loosened it, and when I had withdrawn
|
||
|
it from its sepulcher I found the thing to be an ancient
|
||
|
brick of clay, baked in an oven.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Delcarte we had left in charge of the boat; but Snider and
|
||
|
Taylor were with me, and following my example, each engaged
|
||
|
in the fascinating sport of prospecting for antiques. Each
|
||
|
of us uncovered a great number of these bricks, until we
|
||
|
commenced to weary of the monotony of it, when Snider
|
||
|
suddenly gave an exclamation of excitement, and, as I turned
|
||
|
to look, he held up a human skull for my inspection.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I took it from him and examined it. Directly in the center
|
||
|
of the forehead was a small round hole. The gentleman had
|
||
|
evidently come to his end defending his country from an
|
||
|
invader.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Snider again held aloft another trophy of the search--a
|
||
|
metal spike and some tarnished and corroded metal ornaments.
|
||
|
They had lain close beside the skull.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With the point of his cutlass Snider scraped the dirt and
|
||
|
verdigris from the face of the larger ornament.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"An inscription," he said, and handed the thing to me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They were the spike and ornaments of an ancient German
|
||
|
helmet. Before long we had uncovered many other indications
|
||
|
that a great battle had been fought upon the ground where we
|
||
|
stood. But I was then, and still am, at loss to account for
|
||
|
the presence of German soldiers upon the English coast so
|
||
|
far from London, which history suggests would have been the
|
||
|
natural goal of an invader.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I can only account for it by assuming that either England
|
||
|
was temporarily conquered by the Teutons, or that an
|
||
|
invasion of so vast proportions was undertaken that German
|
||
|
troops were hurled upon the England coast in huge numbers
|
||
|
and that landings were necessarily effected at many places
|
||
|
simultaneously. Subsequent discoveries tend to strengthen
|
||
|
this view.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We dug about for a short time with our cutlasses until I
|
||
|
became convinced that a city had stood upon the spot at some
|
||
|
time in the past, and that beneath our feet, crumbled and
|
||
|
dead, lay ancient Devonport.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I could not repress a sigh at the thought of the havoc war
|
||
|
had wrought in this part of England, at least. Farther
|
||
|
east, nearer London, we should find things very different.
|
||
|
There would be the civilization that two centuries must have
|
||
|
wrought upon our English cousins as they had upon us. There
|
||
|
would be mighty cities, cultivated fields, happy people.
|
||
|
There we would be welcomed as long-lost brothers. There
|
||
|
would we find a great nation anxious to learn of the world
|
||
|
beyond their side of thirty, as I had been anxious to learn
|
||
|
of that which lay beyond our side of the dead line.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I turned back toward the boat.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Come, men!" I said. "We will go up the river and fill our
|
||
|
casks with fresh water, search for food and fuel, and then
|
||
|
tomorrow be in readiness to push on toward the east. I am
|
||
|
going to London."
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
3
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
The report of a gun blasted the silence of a dead Devonport
|
||
|
with startling abruptness.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It came from the direction of the launch, and in an instant
|
||
|
we three were running for the boat as fast as our legs would
|
||
|
carry us. As we came in sight of it we saw Delcarte a
|
||
|
hundred yards inland from the launch, leaning over something
|
||
|
which lay upon the ground. As we called to him he waved his
|
||
|
cap, and stooping, lifted a small deer for our inspection.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I was about to congratulate him on his trophy when we were
|
||
|
startled by a horrid, half-human, half-bestial scream a
|
||
|
little ahead and to the right of us. It seemed to come from
|
||
|
a clump of rank and tangled bush not far from where Delcarte
|
||
|
stood. It was a horrid, fearsome sound, the like of which
|
||
|
never had fallen upon my ears before.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We looked in the direction from which it came. The smile
|
||
|
had died from Delcarte's lips. Even at the distance we were
|
||
|
from him I saw his face go suddenly white, and he quickly
|
||
|
threw his rifle to his shoulder. At the same moment the
|
||
|
thing that had given tongue to the cry moved from the
|
||
|
concealing brushwood far enough for us, too, to see it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Both Taylor and Snider gave little gasps of astonishment and
|
||
|
dismay.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What is it, sir?" asked the latter.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The creature stood about the height of a tall man's waist,
|
||
|
and was long and gaunt and sinuous, with a tawny coat
|
||
|
striped with black, and with white throat and belly. In
|
||
|
conformation it was similar to a cat--a huge cat,
|
||
|
exaggerated colossal cat, with fiendish eyes and the most
|
||
|
devilish cast of countenance, as it wrinkled its bristling
|
||
|
snout and bared its great yellow fangs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was pacing, or rather, slinking, straight for Delcarte,
|
||
|
who had now leveled his rifle upon it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What is it, sir?" mumbled Snider again, and then a half-
|
||
|
forgotten picture from an old natural history sprang to my
|
||
|
mind, and I recognized in the frightful beast the Felis
|
||
|
tigris of ancient Asia, specimens of which had, in former
|
||
|
centuries, been exhibited in the Western Hemisphere.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Snider and Taylor were armed with rifles and revolvers,
|
||
|
while I carried only a revolver. Seizing Snider's rifle
|
||
|
from his trembling hands, I called to Taylor to follow me,
|
||
|
and together we ran forward, shouting, to attract the
|
||
|
beast's attention from Delcarte until we should all be quite
|
||
|
close enough to attack with the greatest assurance of
|
||
|
success.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I cried to Delcarte not to fire until we reached his side,
|
||
|
for I was fearful lest our small caliber, steel-jacketed
|
||
|
bullets should, far from killing the beast, tend merely to
|
||
|
enrage it still further. But he misunderstood me, thinking
|
||
|
that I had ordered him to fire.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With the report of his rifle the tiger stopped short in
|
||
|
apparent surprise, then turned and bit savagely at its
|
||
|
shoulder for an instant, after which it wheeled again toward
|
||
|
Delcarte, issuing the most terrific roars and screams, and
|
||
|
launched itself, with incredible speed, toward the brave
|
||
|
fellow, who now stood his ground pumping bullets from his
|
||
|
automatic rifle as rapidly as the weapon would fire.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taylor and I also opened up on the creature, and as it was
|
||
|
broadside to us it offered a splendid target, though for all
|
||
|
the impression we appeared to make upon the great cat we
|
||
|
might as well have been launching soap bubbles at it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Straight as a torpedo it rushed for Delcarte, and, as Taylor
|
||
|
and I stumbled on through the tall grass toward our
|
||
|
unfortunate comrade, we saw the tiger rear upon him and
|
||
|
crush him to the earth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Not a backward step had the noble Delcarte taken. Two
|
||
|
hundred years of peace had not sapped the red blood from his
|
||
|
courageous line. He went down beneath that avalanche of
|
||
|
bestial savagery still working his gun and with his face
|
||
|
toward his antagonist. Even in the instant that I thought
|
||
|
him dead I could not help but feel a thrill of pride that he
|
||
|
was one of my men, one of my class, a Pan-American gentleman
|
||
|
of birth. And that he had demonstrated one of the principal
|
||
|
contentions of the army-and-navy adherents--that military
|
||
|
training was necessary for the salvation of personal courage
|
||
|
in the Pan-American race which for generations had had to
|
||
|
face no dangers more grave than those incident to ordinary
|
||
|
life in a highly civilized community, safeguarded by every
|
||
|
means at the disposal of a perfectly organized and all-
|
||
|
powerful government utilizing the best that advanced science
|
||
|
could suggest.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As we ran toward Delcarte, both Taylor and I were struck by
|
||
|
the fact that the beast upon him appeared not to be mauling
|
||
|
him, but lay quiet and motionless upon its prey, and when we
|
||
|
were quite close, and the muzzles of our guns were at the
|
||
|
animal's head, I saw the explanation of this sudden
|
||
|
cessation of hostilities--Felis tigris was dead.
|
||
|
|
||
|
One of our bullets, or one of the last that Delcarte fired,
|
||
|
had penetrated the heart, and the beast had died even as it
|
||
|
sprawled forward crushing Delcarte to the ground.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A moment later, with our assistance, the man had scrambled
|
||
|
from beneath the carcass of his would-be slayer, without a
|
||
|
scratch to indicate how close to death he had been.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Delcarte's buoyance was entirely unruffled. He came from
|
||
|
under the tiger with a broad grin on his handsome face, nor
|
||
|
could I perceive that a muscle trembled or that his voice
|
||
|
showed the least indication of nervousness or excitement.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With the termination of the adventure, we began to speculate
|
||
|
upon the explanation of the presence of this savage brute at
|
||
|
large so great a distance from its native habitat. My
|
||
|
readings had taught me that it was practically unknown
|
||
|
outside of Asia, and that, so late as the twentieth century,
|
||
|
at least, there had been no savage beasts outside captivity
|
||
|
in England.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As we talked, Snider joined us, and I returned his rifle to
|
||
|
him. Taylor and Delcarte picked up the slain deer, and we
|
||
|
all started down toward the launch, walking slowly.
|
||
|
Delcarte wanted to fetch the tiger's skin, but I had to deny
|
||
|
him permission, since we had no means to properly cure it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Upon the beach, we skinned the deer and cut away as much
|
||
|
meat as we thought we could dispose of, and as we were again
|
||
|
embarking to continue up the river for fresh water and fuel,
|
||
|
we were startled by a series of screams from the bushes a
|
||
|
short distance away.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Another Felis tigris," said Taylor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Or a dozen of them," supplemented Delcarte, and, even as he
|
||
|
spoke, there leaped into sight, one after another, eight of
|
||
|
the beasts, full grown--magnificent specimens.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At the sight of us, they came charging down like infuriated
|
||
|
demons. I saw that three rifles would be no match for them,
|
||
|
and so I gave the word to put out from shore, hoping that
|
||
|
the "tiger," as the ancients called him, could not swim.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sure enough, they all halted at the beach, pacing back and
|
||
|
forth, uttering fiendish cries, and glaring at us in the
|
||
|
most malevolent manner.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As we motored away, we presently heard the calls of similar
|
||
|
animals far inland. They seemed to be answering the cries
|
||
|
of their fellows at the water's edge, and from the wide
|
||
|
distribution and great volume of the sound we came to the
|
||
|
conclusion that enormous numbers of these beasts must roam
|
||
|
the adjacent country.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"They have eaten up the inhabitants," murmured Snider,
|
||
|
shuddering.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I imagine you are right," I agreed, "for their extreme
|
||
|
boldness and fearlessness in the presence of man would
|
||
|
suggest either that man is entirely unknown to them, or that
|
||
|
they are extremely familiar with him as their natural and
|
||
|
most easily procured prey."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But where did they come from?" asked Delcarte. "Could they
|
||
|
have traveled here from Asia?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
I shook my head. The thing was a puzzle to me. I knew that
|
||
|
it was practically beyond reason to imagine that tigers had
|
||
|
crossed the mountain ranges and rivers and all the great
|
||
|
continent of Europe to travel this far from their native
|
||
|
lairs, and entirely impossible that they should have crossed
|
||
|
the English Channel at all. Yet here they were, and in
|
||
|
great numbers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We continued up the Tamar several miles, filled our casks,
|
||
|
and then landed to cook some of our deer steak, and have the
|
||
|
first square meal that had fallen to our lot since the
|
||
|
Coldwater deserted us. But scarce had we built our fire and
|
||
|
prepared the meat for cooking than Snider, whose eyes had
|
||
|
been constantly roving about the landscape from the moment
|
||
|
that we left the launch, touched me on the arm and pointed
|
||
|
to a clump of bushes which grew a couple of hundred yards
|
||
|
away.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Half concealed behind their screening foliage I saw the
|
||
|
yellow and black of a big tiger, and, as I looked, the beast
|
||
|
stalked majestically toward us. A moment later, he was
|
||
|
followed by another and another, and it is needless to state
|
||
|
that we beat a hasty retreat to the launch.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The country was apparently infested by these huge Carnivora,
|
||
|
for after three other attempts to land and cook our food we
|
||
|
were forced to abandon the idea entirely, as each time we
|
||
|
were driven off by hunting tigers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was also equally impossible to obtain the necessary
|
||
|
ingredients for our chemical fuel, and, as we had very
|
||
|
little left aboard, we determined to step our folding mast
|
||
|
and proceed under sail, hoarding our fuel supply for use in
|
||
|
emergencies.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I may say that it was with no regret that we bid adieu to
|
||
|
Tigerland, as we rechristened the ancient Devon, and,
|
||
|
beating out into the Channel, turned the launch's nose
|
||
|
southeast, to round Bolt Head and continue up the coast
|
||
|
toward the Strait of Dover and the North Sea.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I was determined to reach London as soon as possible, that
|
||
|
we might obtain fresh clothing, meet with cultured people,
|
||
|
and learn from the lips of Englishmen the secrets of the two
|
||
|
centuries since the East had been divorced from the West.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Our first stopping place was the Isle of Wight. We entered
|
||
|
the Solent about ten o'clock one morning, and I must confess
|
||
|
that my heart sank as we came close to shore. No lighthouse
|
||
|
was visible, though one was plainly indicated upon my map.
|
||
|
Upon neither shore was sign of human habitation. We skirted
|
||
|
the northern shore of the island in fruitless search for
|
||
|
man, and then at last landed upon an eastern point, where
|
||
|
Newport should have stood, but where only weeds and great
|
||
|
trees and tangled wild wood rioted, and not a single manmade
|
||
|
thing was visible to the eye.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Before landing, I had the men substitute soft bullets for
|
||
|
the steel-jacketed projectiles with which their belts and
|
||
|
magazines were filled. Thus equipped, we felt upon more
|
||
|
even terms with the tigers, but there was no sign of the
|
||
|
tigers, and I decided that they must be confined to the
|
||
|
mainland.
|
||
|
|
||
|
After eating, we set out in search of fuel, leaving Taylor
|
||
|
to guard the launch. For some reason I could not trust
|
||
|
Snider alone. I knew that he looked with disapproval upon
|
||
|
my plan to visit England, and I did not know but what at his
|
||
|
first opportunity, he might desert us, taking the launch
|
||
|
with him, and attempt to return to Pan-America.
|
||
|
|
||
|
That he would be fool enough to venture it, I did not doubt.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We had gone inland for a mile or more, and were passing
|
||
|
through a park-like wood, when we came suddenly upon the
|
||
|
first human beings we had seen since we sighted the English
|
||
|
coast.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There were a score of men in the party. Hairy, half-naked
|
||
|
men they were, resting in the shade of a great tree. At the
|
||
|
first sight of us they sprang to their feet with wild yells,
|
||
|
seizing long spears that had lain beside them as they
|
||
|
rested.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For a matter of fifty yards they ran from us as rapidly as
|
||
|
they could, and then they turned and surveyed us for a
|
||
|
moment. Evidently emboldened by the scarcity of our
|
||
|
numbers, they commenced to advance upon us, brandishing
|
||
|
their spears and shouting horribly.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They were short and muscular of build, with long hair and
|
||
|
beards tangled and matted with filth. Their heads, however,
|
||
|
were shapely, and their eyes, though fierce and warlike,
|
||
|
were intelligent.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Appreciation of these physical attributes came later, of
|
||
|
course, when I had better opportunity to study the men at
|
||
|
close range and under circumstances less fraught with danger
|
||
|
and excitement. At the moment I saw, and with unmixed
|
||
|
wonder, only a score of wild savages charging down upon us,
|
||
|
where I had expected to find a community of civilized and
|
||
|
enlightened people.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Each of us was armed with rifle, revolver, and cutlass, but
|
||
|
as we stood shoulder to shoulder facing the wild men I was
|
||
|
loath to give the command to fire upon them, inflicting
|
||
|
death or suffering upon strangers with whom we had no
|
||
|
quarrel, and so I attempted to restrain them for the moment
|
||
|
that we might parley with them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To this end I raised my left hand above my head with the
|
||
|
palm toward them as the most natural gesture indicative of
|
||
|
peaceful intentions which occurred to me. At the same time
|
||
|
I called aloud to them that we were friends, though, from
|
||
|
their appearance, there was nothing to indicate that they
|
||
|
might understand Pan-American, or ancient English, which are
|
||
|
of course practically identical.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At my gesture and words they ceased their shouting and came
|
||
|
to a halt a few paces from us. Then, in deep tones, one who
|
||
|
was in advance of the others and whom I took to be the chief
|
||
|
or leader of the party replied in a tongue which while
|
||
|
intelligible to us, was so distorted from the English
|
||
|
language from which it evidently had sprung, that it was
|
||
|
with difficulty that we interpreted it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Who are you," he asked, "and from what country?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
I told him that we were from Pan-America, but he only shook
|
||
|
his head and asked where that was. He had never heard of
|
||
|
it, or of the Atlantic Ocean which I told him separated his
|
||
|
country from mine.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It has been two hundred years," I told him, "since a Pan-
|
||
|
American visited England."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"England?" he asked. "What is England?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Why this is a part of England!" I exclaimed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"This is Grubitten," he assured me. "I know nothing about
|
||
|
England, and I have lived here all my life."
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was not until long after that the derivation of Grubitten
|
||
|
occurred to me. Unquestionably it is a corruption of Great
|
||
|
Britain, a name formerly given to the large island
|
||
|
comprising England, Scotland and Wales. Subsequently we
|
||
|
heard it pronounced Grabrittin and Grubritten.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I then asked the fellow if he could direct us to Ryde or
|
||
|
Newport; but again he shook his head, and said that he never
|
||
|
had heard of such countries. And when I asked him if there
|
||
|
were any cities in this country he did not know what I
|
||
|
meant, never having heard the word cities.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I explained my meaning as best I could by stating that by
|
||
|
city I referred to a place where many people lived together
|
||
|
in houses.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh," he exclaimed, "you mean a camp! Yes, there are two
|
||
|
great camps here, East Camp and West Camp. We are from East
|
||
|
Camp."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The use of the word camp to describe a collection of
|
||
|
habitations naturally suggested war to me, and my next
|
||
|
question was as to whether the war was over, and who had
|
||
|
been victorious.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No," he replied to this question. "The war is not yet
|
||
|
over. But it soon will be, and it will end, as it always
|
||
|
does, with the Westenders running away. We, the Eastenders,
|
||
|
are always victorious."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No," I said, seeing that he referred to the petty tribal
|
||
|
wars of his little island, "I mean the Great War, the war
|
||
|
with Germany. Is it ended--and who was victorious?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
He shook his head impatiently.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I never heard," he said, "of any of these strange countries
|
||
|
of which you speak."
|
||
|
|
||
|
It seemed incredible, and yet it was true. These people
|
||
|
living at the very seat of the Great War knew nothing of it,
|
||
|
though but two centuries had passed since, to our knowledge,
|
||
|
it had been running in the height of its titanic
|
||
|
frightfulness all about them, and to us upon the far side of
|
||
|
the Atlantic still was a subject of keen interest.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Here was a lifelong inhabitant of the Isle of Wight who
|
||
|
never had heard of either Germany or England! I turned to
|
||
|
him quite suddenly with a new question.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What people live upon the mainland?" I asked, and pointed
|
||
|
in the direction of the Hants coast.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No one lives there," he replied.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Long ago, it is said, my people dwelt across the waters
|
||
|
upon that other land; but the wild beasts devoured them in
|
||
|
such numbers that finally they were driven here, paddling
|
||
|
across upon logs and driftwood, nor has any dared return
|
||
|
since, because of the frightful creatures which dwell in
|
||
|
that horrid country."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Do no other peoples ever come to your country in ships?" I
|
||
|
asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He never heard the word ship before, and did not know its
|
||
|
meaning. But he assured me that until we came he had
|
||
|
thought that there were no other peoples in the world other
|
||
|
than the Grubittens, who consist of the Eastenders and the
|
||
|
Westenders of the ancient Isle of Wight.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Assured that we were inclined to friendliness, our new
|
||
|
acquaintances led us to their village, or, as they call it,
|
||
|
camp. There we found a thousand people, perhaps, dwelling
|
||
|
in rude shelters, and living upon the fruits of the chase
|
||
|
and such sea food as is obtainable close to shore, for they
|
||
|
had no boats, nor any knowledge of such things.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Their weapons were most primitive, consisting of rude spears
|
||
|
tipped with pieces of metal pounded roughly into shape.
|
||
|
They had no literature, no religion, and recognized no law
|
||
|
other than the law of might. They produced fire by striking
|
||
|
a bit of flint and steel together, but for the most part
|
||
|
they ate their food raw. Marriage is unknown among them,
|
||
|
and while they have the word, mother, they did not know what
|
||
|
I meant by "father." The males fight for the favor of the
|
||
|
females. They practice infanticide, and kill the aged and
|
||
|
physically unfit.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The family consists of the mother and the children, the men
|
||
|
dwelling sometimes in one hut and sometimes in another.
|
||
|
Owing to their bloody duels, they are always numerically
|
||
|
inferior to the women, so there is shelter for them all.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We spent several hours in the village, where we were objects
|
||
|
of the greatest curiosity. The inhabitants examined our
|
||
|
clothing and all our belongings, and asked innumerable
|
||
|
questions concerning the strange country from which we had
|
||
|
come and the manner of our coming.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I questioned many of them concerning past historical events,
|
||
|
but they knew nothing beyond the narrow limits of their
|
||
|
island and the savage, primitive life they led there.
|
||
|
London they had never heard of, and they assured me that I
|
||
|
would find no human beings upon the mainland.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Much saddened by what I had seen, I took my departure from
|
||
|
them, and the three of us made our way back to the launch,
|
||
|
accompanied by about five hundred men, women, girls, and
|
||
|
boys.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As we sailed away, after procuring the necessary ingredients
|
||
|
of our chemical fuel, the Grubittens lined the shore in
|
||
|
silent wonder at the strange sight of our dainty craft
|
||
|
dancing over the sparkling waters, and watched us until we
|
||
|
were lost to their sight.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
4
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was during the morning of July 6, 2137, that we entered
|
||
|
the mouth of the Thames--to the best of my knowledge the
|
||
|
first Western keel to cut those historic waters for two
|
||
|
hundred and twenty-one years!
|
||
|
|
||
|
But where were the tugs and the lighters and the barges, the
|
||
|
lightships and the buoys, and all those countless attributes
|
||
|
which went to make up the myriad life of the ancient Thames?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Gone! All gone! Only silence and desolation reigned where
|
||
|
once the commerce of the world had centered.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I could not help but compare this once great water-way with
|
||
|
the waters about our New York, or Rio, or San Diego, or
|
||
|
Valparaiso. They had become what they are today during the
|
||
|
two centuries of the profound peace which we of the navy
|
||
|
have been prone to deplore. And what, during this same
|
||
|
period, had shorn the waters of the Thames of their pristine
|
||
|
grandeur?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Militarist that I am, I could find but a single word of
|
||
|
explanation--war!
|
||
|
|
||
|
I bowed my head and turned my eyes downward from the lonely
|
||
|
and depressing sight, and in a silence which none of us
|
||
|
seemed willing to break, we proceeded up the deserted river.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We had reached a point which, from my map, I imagined must
|
||
|
have been about the former site of Erith, when I discovered
|
||
|
a small band of antelope a short distance inland. As we
|
||
|
were now entirely out of meat once more, and as I had given
|
||
|
up all expectations of finding a city upon the site of
|
||
|
ancient London, I determined to land and bag a couple of the
|
||
|
animals.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Assured that they would be timid and easily frightened, I
|
||
|
decided to stalk them alone, telling the men to wait at the
|
||
|
boat until I called to them to come and carry the carcasses
|
||
|
back to the shore.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Crawling carefully through the vegetation, making use of
|
||
|
such trees and bushes as afforded shelter, I came at last
|
||
|
almost within easy range of my quarry, when the antlered
|
||
|
head of the buck went suddenly into the air, and then, as
|
||
|
though in accordance with a prearranged signal, the whole
|
||
|
band moved slowly off, farther inland.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As their pace was leisurely, I determined to follow them
|
||
|
until I came again within range, as I was sure that they
|
||
|
would stop and feed in a short time.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They must have led me a mile or more at least before they
|
||
|
again halted and commenced to browse upon the rank,
|
||
|
luxuriant grasses. All the time that I had followed them I
|
||
|
had kept both eyes and ears alert for sign or sound that
|
||
|
would indicate the presence of Felis tigris; but so far not
|
||
|
the slightest indication of the beast had been apparent.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As I crept closer to the antelope, sure this time of a good
|
||
|
shot at a large buck, I suddenly saw something that caused
|
||
|
me to forget all about my prey in wonderment.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was the figure of an immense grey-black creature, rearing
|
||
|
its colossal shoulders twelve or fourteen feet above the
|
||
|
ground. Never in my life had I seen such a beast, nor did I
|
||
|
at first recognize it, so different in appearance is the
|
||
|
live reality from the stuffed, unnatural specimens preserved
|
||
|
to us in our museums.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But presently I guessed the identity of the mighty creature
|
||
|
as Elephas africanus, or, as the ancients commonly described
|
||
|
it, African elephant.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The antelope, although in plain view of the huge beast, paid
|
||
|
not the slightest attention to it, and I was so wrapped up
|
||
|
in watching the mighty pachyderm that I quite forgot to
|
||
|
shoot at the buck and presently, and in quite a startling
|
||
|
manner, it became impossible to do so.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The elephant was browsing upon the young and tender shoots
|
||
|
of some low bushes, waving his great ears and switching his
|
||
|
short tail. The antelope, scarce twenty paces from him,
|
||
|
continued their feeding, when suddenly, from close beside
|
||
|
the latter, there came a most terrifying roar, and I saw a
|
||
|
great, tawny body shoot, from the concealing verdure beyond
|
||
|
the antelope, full upon the back of a small buck.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Instantly the scene changed from one of quiet and peace to
|
||
|
indescribable chaos. The startled and terrified buck
|
||
|
uttered cries of agony. His fellows broke and leaped off in
|
||
|
all directions. The elephant raised his trunk, and,
|
||
|
trumpeting loudly, lumbered off through the wood, crushing
|
||
|
down small trees and trampling bushes in his mad flight.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Growling horribly, a huge lion stood across the body of his
|
||
|
prey--such a creature as no Pan-American of the twenty-
|
||
|
second century had ever beheld until my eyes rested upon
|
||
|
this lordly specimen of "the king of beasts." But what a
|
||
|
different creature was this fierce-eyed demon, palpitating
|
||
|
with life and vigor, glossy of coat, alert, growling,
|
||
|
magnificent, from the dingy, moth-eaten replicas beneath
|
||
|
their glass cases in the stuffy halls of our public museums.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I had never hoped or expected to see a living lion, tiger,
|
||
|
or elephant--using the common terms that were familiar to
|
||
|
the ancients, since they seem to me less unwieldy than those
|
||
|
now in general use among us--and so it was with sentiments
|
||
|
not unmixed with awe that I stood gazing at this regal beast
|
||
|
as, above the carcass of his kill, he roared out his
|
||
|
challenge to the world.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So enthralled was I by the spectacle that I quite forgot
|
||
|
myself, and the better to view him, the great lion, I had
|
||
|
risen to my feet and stood, not fifty paces from him, in
|
||
|
full view.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For a moment he did not see me, his attention being directed
|
||
|
toward the retreating elephant, and I had ample time to
|
||
|
feast my eyes upon his splendid proportions, his great head,
|
||
|
and his thick black mane.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ah, what thoughts passed through my mind in those brief
|
||
|
moments as I stood there in rapt fascination! I had come to
|
||
|
find a wondrous civilization, and instead I found a wild-
|
||
|
beast monarch of the realm where English kings had ruled. A
|
||
|
lion reigned, undisturbed, within a few miles of the seat of
|
||
|
one of the greatest governments the world has ever known,
|
||
|
his domain a howling wilderness, where yesterday fell the
|
||
|
shadows of the largest city in the world.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was appalling; but my reflections upon this depressing
|
||
|
subject were doomed to sudden extinction. The lion had
|
||
|
discovered me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For an instant he stood silent and motionless as one of the
|
||
|
mangy effigies at home, but only for an instant. Then, with
|
||
|
a most ferocious roar, and without the slightest hesitancy
|
||
|
or warning, he charged upon me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He forsook the prey already dead beneath him for the
|
||
|
pleasures of the delectable tidbit, man. From the
|
||
|
remorselessness with which the great Carnivora of modern
|
||
|
England hunted man, I am constrained to believe that,
|
||
|
whatever their appetites in times past, they have cultivated
|
||
|
a gruesome taste for human flesh.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As I threw my rifle to my shoulder, I thanked God, the
|
||
|
ancient God of my ancestors, that I had replaced the hard-
|
||
|
jacketed bullets in my weapon with soft-nosed projectiles,
|
||
|
for though this was my first experience with Felis leo, I
|
||
|
knew the moment that I faced that charge that even my
|
||
|
wonderfully perfected firearm would be as futile as a
|
||
|
peashooter unless I chanced to place my first bullet in a
|
||
|
vital spot.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Unless you had seen it you could not believe credible the
|
||
|
speed of a charging lion. Apparently the animal is not
|
||
|
built for speed, nor can he maintain it for long. But for a
|
||
|
matter of forty or fifty yards there is, I believe, no
|
||
|
animal on earth that can overtake him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Like a bolt he bore down upon me, but, fortunately for me, I
|
||
|
did not lose my head. I guessed that no bullet would kill
|
||
|
him instantly. I doubted that I could pierce his skull.
|
||
|
There was hope, though, in finding his heart through his
|
||
|
exposed chest, or, better yet, of breaking his shoulder or
|
||
|
foreleg, and bringing him up long enough to pump more
|
||
|
bullets into him and finish him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I covered his left shoulder and pulled the trigger as he was
|
||
|
almost upon me. It stopped him. With a terrific howl of
|
||
|
pain and rage, the brute rolled over and over upon the
|
||
|
ground almost to my feet. As he came I pumped two more
|
||
|
bullets into him, and as he struggled to rise, clawing
|
||
|
viciously at me, I put a bullet in his spine.
|
||
|
|
||
|
That finished him, and I am free to admit that I was mighty
|
||
|
glad of it. There was a great tree close behind me, and,
|
||
|
stepping within its shade, I leaned against it, wiping the
|
||
|
perspiration from my face, for the day was hot, and the
|
||
|
exertion and excitement left me exhausted.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I stood there, resting, for a moment, preparatory to turning
|
||
|
and retracing my steps to the launch, when, without warning,
|
||
|
something whizzed through space straight toward me. There
|
||
|
was a dull thud of impact as it struck the tree, and as I
|
||
|
dodged to one side and turned to look at the thing I saw a
|
||
|
heavy spear imbedded in the wood not three inches from where
|
||
|
my head had been.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The thing had come from a little to one side of me, and,
|
||
|
without waiting to investigate at the instant, I leaped
|
||
|
behind the tree, and, circling it, peered around the other
|
||
|
side to get a sight of my would-be murderer.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This time I was pitted against men--the spear told me that
|
||
|
all too plainly--but so long as they didn't take me unawares
|
||
|
or from behind I had little fear of them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Cautiously I edged about the far side of the trees until I
|
||
|
could obtain a view of the spot from which the spear must
|
||
|
have come, and when I did I saw the head of a man just
|
||
|
emerging from behind a bush.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The fellow was quite similar in type to those I had seen
|
||
|
upon the Isle of Wight. He was hairy and unkempt, and as he
|
||
|
finally stepped into view I saw that he was garbed in the
|
||
|
same primitive fashion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He stood for a moment gazing about in search of me, and then
|
||
|
he advanced. As he did so a number of others, precisely
|
||
|
like him, stepped from the concealing verdure of nearby
|
||
|
bushes and followed in his wake. Keeping the trees between
|
||
|
them and me, I ran back a short distance until I found a
|
||
|
clump of underbrush that would effectually conceal me, for I
|
||
|
wished to discover the strength of the party and its
|
||
|
armament before attempting to parley with it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The useless destruction of any of these poor creatures was
|
||
|
the farthest idea from my mind. I should have liked to have
|
||
|
spoken with them, but I did not care to risk having to use
|
||
|
my high-powered rifle upon them other than in the last
|
||
|
extremity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Once in my new place of concealment, I watched them as they
|
||
|
approached the tree. There were about thirty men in the
|
||
|
party and one woman--a girl whose hands seemed to be bound
|
||
|
behind her and who was being pulled along by two of the men.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They came forward warily, peering cautiously into every bush
|
||
|
and halting often. At the body of the lion, they paused,
|
||
|
and I could see from their gesticulations and the higher
|
||
|
pitch of their voices that they were much excited over my
|
||
|
kill.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But presently they resumed their search for me, and as they
|
||
|
advanced I became suddenly aware of the unnecessary
|
||
|
brutality with which the girl's guards were treating her.
|
||
|
She stumbled once, not far from my place of concealment, and
|
||
|
after the balance of the party had passed me. As she did so
|
||
|
one of the men at her side jerked her roughly to her feet
|
||
|
and struck her across the mouth with his fist.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Instantly my blood boiled, and forgetting every
|
||
|
consideration of caution, I leaped from my concealment, and,
|
||
|
springing to the man's side, felled him with a blow.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So unexpected had been my act that it found him and his
|
||
|
fellow unprepared; but instantly the latter drew the knife
|
||
|
that protruded from his belt and lunged viciously at me, at
|
||
|
the same time giving voice to a wild cry of alarm.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The girl shrank back at sight of me, her eyes wide in
|
||
|
astonishment, and then my antagonist was upon me. I parried
|
||
|
his first blow with my forearm, at the same time delivering
|
||
|
a powerful blow to his jaw that sent him reeling back; but
|
||
|
he was at me again in an instant, though in the brief
|
||
|
interim I had time to draw my revolver.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I saw his companion crawling slowly to his feet, and the
|
||
|
others of the party racing down upon me. There was no time
|
||
|
to argue now, other than with the weapons we wore, and so,
|
||
|
as the fellow lunged at me again with the wicked-looking
|
||
|
knife, I covered his heart and pulled the trigger.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Without a sound, he slipped to the earth, and then I turned
|
||
|
the weapon upon the other guard, who was now about to attack
|
||
|
me. He, too, collapsed, and I was alone with the astonished
|
||
|
girl.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The balance of the party was some twenty paces from us, but
|
||
|
coming rapidly. I seized her arm and drew her after me
|
||
|
behind a nearby tree, for I had seen that with both their
|
||
|
comrades down the others were preparing to launch their
|
||
|
spears.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With the girl safe behind the tree, I stepped out in sight
|
||
|
of the advancing foe, shouting to them that I was no enemy,
|
||
|
and that they should halt and listen to me. But for answer
|
||
|
they only yelled in derision and launched a couple of spears
|
||
|
at me, both of which missed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I saw then that I must fight, yet still I hated to slay
|
||
|
them, and it was only as a final resort that I dropped two
|
||
|
of them with my rifle, bringing the others to a temporary
|
||
|
halt. Again, I appealed to them to desist. But they only
|
||
|
mistook my solicitude for them for fear, and, with shouts of
|
||
|
rage and derision, leaped forward once again to overwhelm
|
||
|
me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was now quite evident that I must punish them severely,
|
||
|
or--myself--die and relinquish the girl once more to her
|
||
|
captors. Neither of these things had I the slightest notion
|
||
|
of doing, and so I again stepped from behind the tree, and,
|
||
|
with all the care and deliberation of target practice, I
|
||
|
commenced picking off the foremost of my assailants.
|
||
|
|
||
|
One by one the wild men dropped, yet on came the others,
|
||
|
fierce and vengeful, until, only a few remaining, these
|
||
|
seemed to realize the futility of combating my modern weapon
|
||
|
with their primitive spears, and, still howling wrathfully,
|
||
|
withdrew toward the west.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now, for the first time, I had an opportunity to turn my
|
||
|
attention toward the girl, who had stood, silent and
|
||
|
motionless, behind me as I pumped death into my enemies and
|
||
|
hers from my automatic rifle.
|
||
|
|
||
|
She was of medium height, well formed, and with fine, clear-
|
||
|
cut features. Her forehead was high, and her eyes both
|
||
|
intelligent and beautiful. Exposure to the sun had browned
|
||
|
a smooth and velvety skin to a shade which seemed to enhance
|
||
|
rather than mar an altogether lovely picture of youthful
|
||
|
femininity.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A trace of apprehension marked her expression--I cannot call
|
||
|
it fear since I have learned to know her--and astonishment
|
||
|
was still apparent in her eyes. She stood quite erect, her
|
||
|
hands still bound behind her, and met my gaze with level,
|
||
|
proud return.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What language do you speak?" I asked. "Do you understand
|
||
|
mine?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Yes," she replied. "It is similar to my own. I am
|
||
|
Grabritin. What are you?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I am a Pan-American," I answered. She shook her head.
|
||
|
"What is that?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
I pointed toward the west. "Far away, across the ocean."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Her expression altered a trifle. A slight frown contracted
|
||
|
her brow. The expression of apprehension deepened.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Take off your cap," she said, and when, to humor her
|
||
|
strange request, I did as she bid, she appeared relieved.
|
||
|
Then she edged to one side and leaned over seemingly to peer
|
||
|
behind me. I turned quickly to see what she discovered, but
|
||
|
finding nothing, wheeled about to see that her expression
|
||
|
was once more altered.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You are not from there?" and she pointed toward the east.
|
||
|
It was a half question. "You are not from across the water
|
||
|
there?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No," I assured her. "I am from Pan-America, far away to
|
||
|
the west. Have you ever heard of Pan-America?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
She shook her head in negation. "I do not care where you
|
||
|
are from," she explained, "if you are not from there, and I
|
||
|
am sure you are not, for the men from there have horns and
|
||
|
tails."
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was with difficulty that I restrained a smile.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Who are the men from there?" I asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"They are bad men," she replied. "Some of my people do not
|
||
|
believe that there are such creatures. But we have a
|
||
|
legend--a very old, old legend, that once the men from there
|
||
|
came across to Grabritin. They came upon the water, and
|
||
|
under the water, and even in the air. They came in great
|
||
|
numbers, so that they rolled across the land like a great
|
||
|
gray fog. They brought with them thunder and lightning and
|
||
|
smoke that killed, and they fell upon us and slew our people
|
||
|
by the thousands and the hundreds of thousands. But at last
|
||
|
we drove them back to the water's edge, back into the sea,
|
||
|
where many were drowned. Some escaped, and these our people
|
||
|
followed--men, women, and even children, we followed them
|
||
|
back. That is all. The legend says our people never
|
||
|
returned. Maybe they were all killed. Maybe they are still
|
||
|
there. But this, also, is in the legend, that as we drove
|
||
|
the men back across the water they swore that they would
|
||
|
return, and that when they left our shores they would leave
|
||
|
no human being alive behind them. I was afraid that you
|
||
|
were from there."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"By what name were these men called?" I asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We call them only the 'men from there,'" she replied,
|
||
|
pointing toward the east. "I have never heard that they had
|
||
|
another name."
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the light of what I knew of ancient history, it was not
|
||
|
difficult for me to guess the nationality of those she
|
||
|
described simply as "the men from over there." But what
|
||
|
utter and appalling devastation the Great War must have
|
||
|
wrought to have erased not only every sign of civilization
|
||
|
from the face of this great land, but even the name of the
|
||
|
enemy from the knowledge and language of the people.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I could only account for it on the hypothesis that the
|
||
|
country had been entirely depopulated except for a few
|
||
|
scattered and forgotten children, who, in some marvelous
|
||
|
manner, had been preserved by Providence to re-populate the
|
||
|
land. These children had, doubtless, been too young to
|
||
|
retain in their memories to transmit to their children any
|
||
|
but the vaguest suggestion of the cataclysm which had
|
||
|
overwhelmed their parents.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Professor Cortoran, since my return to Pan-America, has
|
||
|
suggested another theory which is not entirely without claim
|
||
|
to serious consideration. He points out that it is quite
|
||
|
beyond the pale of human instinct to desert little children
|
||
|
as my theory suggests the ancient English must have done.
|
||
|
He is more inclined to believe that the expulsion of the foe
|
||
|
from England was synchronous with widespread victories by
|
||
|
the allies upon the continent, and that the people of
|
||
|
England merely emigrated from their ruined cities and their
|
||
|
devastated, blood-drenched fields to the mainland, in the
|
||
|
hope of finding, in the domain of the conquered enemy,
|
||
|
cities and farms which would replace those they had lost.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The learned professor assumes that while a long-continued
|
||
|
war had strengthened rather than weakened the instinct of
|
||
|
paternal devotion, it had also dulled other humanitarian
|
||
|
instincts, and raised to the first magnitude the law of the
|
||
|
survival of the fittest, with the result that when the
|
||
|
exodus took place the strong, the intelligent, and the
|
||
|
cunning, together with their offspring, crossed the waters
|
||
|
of the Channel or the North Sea to the continent, leaving in
|
||
|
unhappy England only the helpless inmates of asylums for the
|
||
|
feebleminded and insane.
|
||
|
|
||
|
My objections to this, that the present inhabitants of
|
||
|
England are mentally fit, and could therefore not have
|
||
|
descended from an ancestry of undiluted lunacy he brushes
|
||
|
aside with the assertion that insanity is not necessarily
|
||
|
hereditary; and that even though it was, in many cases a
|
||
|
return to natural conditions from the state of high
|
||
|
civilization, which is thought to have induced mental
|
||
|
disease in the ancient world, would, after several
|
||
|
generations, have thoroughly expunged every trace of the
|
||
|
affliction from the brains and nerves of the descendants of
|
||
|
the original maniacs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Personally, I do not place much stock in Professor
|
||
|
Cortoran's theory, though I admit that I am prejudiced.
|
||
|
Naturally one does not care to believe that the object of
|
||
|
his greatest affection is descended from a gibbering idiot
|
||
|
and a raving maniac.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But I am forgetting the continuity of my narrative--a
|
||
|
continuity which I desire to maintain, though I fear that I
|
||
|
shall often be led astray, so numerous and varied are the
|
||
|
bypaths of speculation which lead from the present day story
|
||
|
of the Grabritins into the mysterious past of their
|
||
|
forbears.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As I stood talking with the girl I presently recollected
|
||
|
that she still was bound, and with a word of apology, I drew
|
||
|
my knife and cut the rawhide thongs which confined her
|
||
|
wrists at her back.
|
||
|
|
||
|
She thanked me, and with such a sweet smile that I should
|
||
|
have been amply repaid by it for a much more arduous
|
||
|
service.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And now," I said, "let me accompany you to your home and
|
||
|
see you safely again under the protection of your friends."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No," she said, with a hint of alarm in her voice; "you must
|
||
|
not come with me--Buckingham will kill you."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Buckingham. The name was famous in ancient English history.
|
||
|
Its survival, with many other illustrious names, is one of
|
||
|
the strongest arguments in refutal of Professor Cortoran's
|
||
|
theory; yet it opens no new doors to the past, and, on the
|
||
|
whole, rather adds to than dissipates the mystery.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And who is Buckingham," I asked, "and why should he wish to
|
||
|
kill me?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"He would think that you had stolen me," she replied, "and
|
||
|
as he wishes me for himself, he will kill any other whom he
|
||
|
thinks desires me. He killed Wettin a few days ago. My
|
||
|
mother told me once that Wettin was my father. He was king.
|
||
|
Now Buckingham is king."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Here, evidently, were a people slightly superior to those of
|
||
|
the Isle of Wight. These must have at least the rudiments
|
||
|
of civilized government since they recognized one among them
|
||
|
as ruler, with the title, king. Also, they retained the
|
||
|
word father. The girl's pronunciation, while far from
|
||
|
identical with ours, was much closer than the tortured
|
||
|
dialect of the Eastenders of the Isle of Wight. The longer
|
||
|
I talked with her the more hopeful I became of finding here,
|
||
|
among her people, some records, or traditions, which might
|
||
|
assist in clearing up the historic enigma of the past two
|
||
|
centuries. I asked her if we were far from the city of
|
||
|
London, but she did not know what I meant. When I tried to
|
||
|
explain, describing mighty buildings of stone and brick,
|
||
|
broad avenues, parks, palaces, and countless people, she but
|
||
|
shook her head sadly.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"There is no such place near by," she said. "Only the Camp
|
||
|
of the Lions has places of stone where the beasts lair, but
|
||
|
there are no people in the Camp of the Lions. Who would
|
||
|
dare go there!" And she shuddered.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The Camp of the Lions," I repeated. "And where is that,
|
||
|
and what?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It is there," she said, pointing up the river toward the
|
||
|
west. "I have seen it from a great distance, but I have
|
||
|
never been there. We are much afraid of the lions, for this
|
||
|
is their country, and they are angry that man has come to
|
||
|
live here.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Far away there," and she pointed toward the south-west, "is
|
||
|
the land of tigers, which is even worse than this, the land
|
||
|
of the lions, for the tigers are more numerous than the
|
||
|
lions and hungrier for human flesh. There were tigers here
|
||
|
long ago, but both the lions and the men set upon them and
|
||
|
drove them off."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Where did these savage beasts come from?" I asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh," she replied, "they have been here always. It is their
|
||
|
country."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Do they not kill and eat your people?" I asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Often, when we meet them by accident, and we are too few to
|
||
|
slay them, or when one goes too close to their camp. But
|
||
|
seldom do they hunt us, for they find what food they need
|
||
|
among the deer and wild cattle, and, too, we make them
|
||
|
gifts, for are we not intruders in their country? Really we
|
||
|
live upon good terms with them, though I should not care to
|
||
|
meet one were there not many spears in my party."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I should like to visit this Camp of the Lions," I said.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, no, you must not!" cried the girl. "That would be
|
||
|
terrible. They would eat you." For a moment, then, she
|
||
|
seemed lost in thought, but presently she turned upon me
|
||
|
with: "You must go now, for any minute Buckingham may come
|
||
|
in search of me. Long since should they have learned that I
|
||
|
am gone from the camp--they watch over me very closely--and
|
||
|
they will set out after me. Go! I shall wait here until
|
||
|
they come in search of me."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No," I told her. "I'll not leave you alone in a land
|
||
|
infested by lions and other wild beasts. If you won't let
|
||
|
me go as far as your camp with you, then I'll wait here
|
||
|
until they come in search of you."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Please go!" she begged. "You have saved me, and I would
|
||
|
save you, but nothing will save you if Buckingham gets his
|
||
|
hands on you. He is a bad man. He wishes to have me for
|
||
|
his woman so that he may be king. He would kill anyone who
|
||
|
befriended me, for fear that I might become another's."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Didn't you say that Buckingham is already the king?" I
|
||
|
asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"He is. He took my mother for his woman after he had killed
|
||
|
Wettin. But my mother will die soon--she is very old--and
|
||
|
then the man to whom I belong will become king."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Finally, after much questioning, I got the thing through my
|
||
|
head. It appears that the line of descent is through the
|
||
|
women. A man is merely head of his wife's family--that is
|
||
|
all. If she chances to be the oldest female member of the
|
||
|
"royal" house, he is king. Very naively the girl explained
|
||
|
that there was seldom any doubt as to whom a child's mother
|
||
|
was.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This accounted for the girl's importance in the community
|
||
|
and for Buckingham's anxiety to claim her, though she told
|
||
|
me that she did not wish to become his woman, for he was a
|
||
|
bad man and would make a bad king. But he was powerful, and
|
||
|
there was no other man who dared dispute his wishes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Why not come with me," I suggested, "if you do not wish to
|
||
|
become Buckingham's?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Where would you take me?" she asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Where, indeed! I had not thought of that. But before I
|
||
|
could reply to her question she shook her head and said,
|
||
|
"No, I cannot leave my people. I must stay and do my best,
|
||
|
even if Buckingham gets me, but you must go at once. Do not
|
||
|
wait until it is too late. The lions have had no offering
|
||
|
for a long time, and Buckingham would seize upon the first
|
||
|
stranger as a gift to them."
|
||
|
|
||
|
I did not perfectly understand what she meant, and was about
|
||
|
to ask her when a heavy body leaped upon me from behind, and
|
||
|
great arms encircled my neck. I struggled to free myself
|
||
|
and turn upon my antagonist, but in another instant I was
|
||
|
overwhelmed by a half dozen powerful, half-naked men, while
|
||
|
a score of others surrounded me, a couple of whom seized the
|
||
|
girl.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I fought as best I could for my liberty and for hers, but
|
||
|
the weight of numbers was too great, though I had the
|
||
|
satisfaction at least of giving them a good fight.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When they had overpowered me, and I stood, my hands bound
|
||
|
behind me, at the girl's side, she gazed commiseratingly at
|
||
|
me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It is too bad that you did not do as I bid you," she said,
|
||
|
"for now it has happened just as I feared--Buckingham has
|
||
|
you."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Which is Buckingham?" I asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I am Buckingham," growled a burly, unwashed brute,
|
||
|
swaggering truculently before me. "And who are you who
|
||
|
would have stolen my woman?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
The girl spoke up then and tried to explain that I had not
|
||
|
stolen her; but on the contrary I had saved her from the men
|
||
|
from the "Elephant Country" who were carrying her away.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Buckingham only sneered at her explanation, and a moment
|
||
|
later gave the command that started us all off toward the
|
||
|
west. We marched for a matter of an hour or so, coming at
|
||
|
last to a collection of rude huts, fashioned from branches
|
||
|
of trees covered with skins and grasses and sometimes
|
||
|
plastered with mud. All about the camp they had erected a
|
||
|
wall of saplings pointed at the tops and fire hardened.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This palisade was a protection against both man and beasts,
|
||
|
and within it dwelt upward of two thousand persons, the
|
||
|
shelters being built very close together, and sometimes
|
||
|
partially underground, like deep trenches, with the poles
|
||
|
and hides above merely as protection from the sun and rain.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The older part of the camp consisted almost wholly of
|
||
|
trenches, as though this had been the original form of
|
||
|
dwellings which was slowly giving way to the drier and
|
||
|
airier surface domiciles. In these trench habitations I saw
|
||
|
a survival of the military trenches which formed so famous a
|
||
|
part of the operation of the warring nations during the
|
||
|
twentieth century.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The women wore a single light deerskin about their hips, for
|
||
|
it was summer, and quite warm. The men, too, were clothed
|
||
|
in a single garment, usually the pelt of some beast of prey.
|
||
|
The hair of both men and women was confined by a rawhide
|
||
|
thong passing about the forehead and tied behind. In this
|
||
|
leathern band were stuck feathers, flowers, or the tails of
|
||
|
small mammals. All wore necklaces of the teeth or claws of
|
||
|
wild beasts, and there were numerous metal wristlets and
|
||
|
anklets among them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They wore, in fact, every indication of a most primitive
|
||
|
people--a race which had not yet risen to the heights of
|
||
|
agriculture or even the possession of domestic animals.
|
||
|
They were hunters--the lowest plane in the evolution of the
|
||
|
human race of which science takes cognizance.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And yet as I looked at their well shaped heads, their
|
||
|
handsome features, and their intelligent eyes, it was
|
||
|
difficult to believe that I was not among my own. It was
|
||
|
only when I took into consideration their mode of living,
|
||
|
their scant apparel, the lack of every least luxury among
|
||
|
them, that I was forced to admit that they were, in truth,
|
||
|
but ignorant savages.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Buckingham had relieved me of my weapons, though he had not
|
||
|
the slightest idea of their purpose or uses, and when we
|
||
|
reached the camp he exhibited both me and my arms with every
|
||
|
indication of pride in this great capture.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The inhabitants flocked around me, examining my clothing,
|
||
|
and exclaiming in wonderment at each new discovery of
|
||
|
button, buckle, pocket, and flap. It seemed incredible that
|
||
|
such a thing could be, almost within a stone's throw of the
|
||
|
spot where but a brief two centuries before had stood the
|
||
|
greatest city of the world.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They bound me to a small tree that grew in the middle of one
|
||
|
of their crooked streets, but the girl they released as soon
|
||
|
as we had entered the enclosure. The people greeted her
|
||
|
with every mark of respect as she hastened to a large hut
|
||
|
near the center of the camp.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Presently she returned with a fine looking, white-haired
|
||
|
woman, who proved to be her mother. The older woman carried
|
||
|
herself with a regal dignity that seemed quite remarkable in
|
||
|
a place of such primitive squalor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The people fell aside as she approached, making a wide way
|
||
|
for her and her daughter. When they had come near and
|
||
|
stopped before me the older woman addressed me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"My daughter has told me," she said, "of the manner in which
|
||
|
you rescued her from the men of the elephant country. If
|
||
|
Wettin lived you would be well treated, but Buckingham has
|
||
|
taken me now, and is king. You can hope for nothing from
|
||
|
such a beast as Buckingham."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The fact that Buckingham stood within a pace of us and was
|
||
|
an interested listener appeared not to temper her
|
||
|
expressions in the slightest.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Buckingham is a pig," she continued. "He is a coward. He
|
||
|
came upon Wettin from behind and ran his spear through him.
|
||
|
He will not be king for long. Some one will make a face at
|
||
|
him, and he will run away and jump into the river."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The people began to titter and clap their hands. Buckingham
|
||
|
became red in the face. It was evident that he was far from
|
||
|
popular.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"If he dared," went on the old lady, "he would kill me now,
|
||
|
but he does not dare. He is too great a coward. If I could
|
||
|
help you I should gladly do so. But I am only queen--the
|
||
|
vehicle that has helped carry down, unsullied, the royal
|
||
|
blood from the days when Grabritin was a mighty country."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The old queen's words had a noticeable effect upon the mob
|
||
|
of curious savages which surrounded me. The moment they
|
||
|
discovered that the old queen was friendly to me and that I
|
||
|
had rescued her daughter they commenced to accord me a more
|
||
|
friendly interest, and I heard many words spoken in my
|
||
|
behalf, and demands were made that I not be harmed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But now Buckingham interfered. He had no intention of being
|
||
|
robbed of his prey. Blustering and storming, he ordered the
|
||
|
people back to their huts, at the same time directing two of
|
||
|
his warriors to confine me in a dugout in one of the
|
||
|
trenches close to his own shelter.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Here they threw me upon the ground, binding my ankles
|
||
|
together and trussing them up to my wrists behind. There
|
||
|
they left me, lying upon my stomach--a most uncomfortable
|
||
|
and strained position, to which was added the pain where the
|
||
|
cords cut into my flesh.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Just a few days ago my mind had been filled with the
|
||
|
anticipation of the friendly welcome I should find among the
|
||
|
cultured Englishmen of London. Today I should be sitting in
|
||
|
the place of honor at the banquet board of one of London's
|
||
|
most exclusive clubs, feted and lionized.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The actuality! Here I lay, bound hand and foot, doubtless
|
||
|
almost upon the very site of a part of ancient London, yet
|
||
|
all about me was a primeval wilderness, and I was a captive
|
||
|
of half-naked wild men.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I wondered what had become of Delcarte and Taylor and
|
||
|
Snider. Would they search for me? They could never find
|
||
|
me, I feared, yet if they did, what could they accomplish
|
||
|
against this horde of savage warriors?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Would that I could warn them. I thought of the girl--
|
||
|
doubtless she could get word to them, but how was I to
|
||
|
communicate with her? Would she come to see me before I was
|
||
|
killed? It seemed incredible that she should not make some
|
||
|
slight attempt to befriend me; yet, as I recalled, she had
|
||
|
made no effort to speak with me after we had reached the
|
||
|
village. She had hastened to her mother the moment she had
|
||
|
been liberated. Though she had returned with the old queen,
|
||
|
she had not spoken to me, even then. I began to have my
|
||
|
doubts.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Finally, I came to the conclusion that I was absolutely
|
||
|
friendless except for the old queen. For some unaccountable
|
||
|
reason my rage against the girl for her ingratitude rose to
|
||
|
colossal proportions.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For a long time I waited for some one to come to my prison
|
||
|
whom I might ask to bear word to the queen, but I seemed to
|
||
|
have been forgotten. The strained position in which I lay
|
||
|
became unbearable. I wriggled and twisted until I managed
|
||
|
to turn myself partially upon my side, where I lay half
|
||
|
facing the entrance to the dugout.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Presently my attention was attracted by the shadow of
|
||
|
something moving in the trench without, and a moment later
|
||
|
the figure of a child appeared, creeping upon all fours, as,
|
||
|
wide-eyed, and prompted by childish curiosity, a little girl
|
||
|
crawled to the entrance of my hut and peered cautiously and
|
||
|
fearfully in.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I did not speak at first for fear of frightening the little
|
||
|
one away. But when I was satisfied that her eyes had become
|
||
|
sufficiently accustomed to the subdued light of the
|
||
|
interior, I smiled.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Instantly the expression of fear faded from her eyes to be
|
||
|
replaced with an answering smile.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Who are you, little girl?" I asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"My name is Mary," she replied. "I am Victory's sister."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And who is Victory?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You do not know who Victory is?" she asked, in
|
||
|
astonishment.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I shook my head in negation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You saved her from the elephant country people, and yet you
|
||
|
say you do not know her!" she exclaimed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh, so she is Victory, and you are her sister! I have not
|
||
|
heard her name before. That is why I did not know whom you
|
||
|
meant," I explained. Here was just the messenger for me.
|
||
|
Fate was becoming more kind.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Will you do something for me, Mary?" I asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"If I can."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Go to your mother, the queen, and ask her to come to me," I
|
||
|
said. "I have a favor to ask."
|
||
|
|
||
|
She said that she would, and with a parting smile she left
|
||
|
me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For what seemed many hours I awaited her return, chafing
|
||
|
with impatience. The afternoon wore on and night came, and
|
||
|
yet no one came near me. My captors brought me neither food
|
||
|
nor water. I was suffering considerable pain where the
|
||
|
rawhide thongs cut into my swollen flesh. I thought that
|
||
|
they had either forgotten me, or that it was their intention
|
||
|
to leave me here to die of starvation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Once I heard a great uproar in the village. Men were
|
||
|
shouting--women were screaming and moaning. After a time
|
||
|
this subsided, and again there was a long interval of
|
||
|
silence.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Half the night must have been spent when I heard a sound in
|
||
|
the trench near the hut. It resembled muffled sobs.
|
||
|
Presently a figure appeared, silhouetted against the lesser
|
||
|
darkness beyond the doorway. It crept inside the hut.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Are you here?" whispered a childlike voice.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was Mary! She had returned. The thongs no longer hurt
|
||
|
me. The pangs of hunger and thirst disappeared. I realized
|
||
|
that it had been loneliness from which I suffered most.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Mary!" I exclaimed. "You are a good girl. You have come
|
||
|
back, after all. I had commenced to think that you would
|
||
|
not. Did you give my message to the queen? Will she come?
|
||
|
Where is she?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
The child's sobs increased, and she flung herself upon the
|
||
|
dirt floor of the hut, apparently overcome by grief.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What is it?" I asked. "Why do you cry?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The queen, my mother, will not come to you," she said,
|
||
|
between sobs. "She is dead. Buckingham has killed her.
|
||
|
Now he will take Victory, for Victory is queen. He kept us
|
||
|
fastened up in our shelter, for fear that Victory would
|
||
|
escape him, but I dug a hole beneath the back wall and got
|
||
|
out. I came to you, because you saved Victory once before,
|
||
|
and I thought that you might save her again, and me, also.
|
||
|
Tell me that you will."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I am bound and helpless, Mary," I replied. "Otherwise I
|
||
|
would do what I could to save you and your sister."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I will set you free!" cried the girl, creeping up to my
|
||
|
side. "I will set you free, and then you may come and slay
|
||
|
Buckingham."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Gladly!" I assented.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We must hurry," she went on, as she fumbled with the hard
|
||
|
knots in the stiffened rawhide, "for Buckingham will be
|
||
|
after you soon. He must make an offering to the lions at
|
||
|
dawn before he can take Victory. The taking of a queen
|
||
|
requires a human offering!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And I am to be the offering?" I asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Yes," she said, tugging at a knot. "Buckingham has been
|
||
|
wanting a sacrifice ever since he killed Wettin, that he
|
||
|
might slay my mother and take Victory."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The thought was horrible, not solely because of the hideous
|
||
|
fate to which I was condemned, but from the contemplation it
|
||
|
engendered of the sad decadence of a once enlightened race.
|
||
|
To these depths of ignorance, brutality, and superstition
|
||
|
had the vaunted civilization of twentieth century England
|
||
|
been plunged, and by what? War! I felt the structure of
|
||
|
our time-honored militaristic arguments crumbling about me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Mary labored with the thongs that confined me. They proved
|
||
|
refractory--defying her tender, childish fingers. She
|
||
|
assured me, however, that she would release me, if "they"
|
||
|
did not come too soon.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But, alas, they came. We heard them coming down the trench,
|
||
|
and I bade Mary hide in a corner, lest she be discovered and
|
||
|
punished. There was naught else she could do, and so she
|
||
|
crawled away into the Stygian blackness behind me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Presently two warriors entered. The leader exhibited a
|
||
|
unique method of discovering my whereabouts in the darkness.
|
||
|
He advanced slowly, kicking out viciously before him.
|
||
|
Finally he kicked me in the face. Then he knew where I was.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A moment later I had been jerked roughly to my feet. One of
|
||
|
the fellows stopped and severed the bonds that held my
|
||
|
ankles. I could scarcely stand alone. The two pulled and
|
||
|
hauled me through the low doorway and along the trench. A
|
||
|
party of forty or fifty warriors were awaiting us at the
|
||
|
brink of the excavation some hundred yards from the hut.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Hands were lowered to us, and we were dragged to the
|
||
|
surface. Then commenced a long march. We stumbled through
|
||
|
the underbrush wet with dew, our way lighted by a score of
|
||
|
torchbearers who surrounded us. But the torches were not to
|
||
|
light the way--that was but incidental. They were carried
|
||
|
to keep off the huge Carnivora that moaned and coughed and
|
||
|
roared about us.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The noises were hideous. The whole country seemed alive
|
||
|
with lions. Yellow-green eyes blazed wickedly at us from
|
||
|
out the surrounding darkness. My escort carried long, heavy
|
||
|
spears. These they kept ever pointed toward the beast of
|
||
|
prey, and I learned from snatches of the conversation I
|
||
|
overheard that occasionally there might be a lion who would
|
||
|
brave even the terrors of fire to leap in upon human prey.
|
||
|
It was for such that the spears were always couched.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But nothing of the sort occurred during this hideous death
|
||
|
march, and with the first pale heralding of dawn we reached
|
||
|
our goal--an open place in the midst of a tangled wildwood.
|
||
|
Here rose in crumbling grandeur the first evidences I had
|
||
|
seen of the ancient civilization which once had graced fair
|
||
|
Albion--a single, time-worn arch of masonry.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The entrance to the Camp of the Lions!" murmured one of the
|
||
|
party in a voice husky with awe.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Here the party knelt, while Buckingham recited a weird,
|
||
|
prayer-like chant. It was rather long, and I recall only a
|
||
|
portion of it, which ran, if my memory serves me, somewhat
|
||
|
as follows:
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lord of Grabritin, we Fall on our knees to
|
||
|
thee, This gift to bring. Greatest of kings
|
||
|
are thou! To thee we humbly bow! Peace to
|
||
|
our camp allow. God save thee, king!
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Then the party rose, and dragging me to the crumbling arch,
|
||
|
made me fast to a huge, corroded, copper ring which was
|
||
|
dangling from an eyebolt imbedded in the masonry.
|
||
|
|
||
|
None of them, not even Buckingham, seemed to feel any
|
||
|
personal animosity toward me. They were naturally rough and
|
||
|
brutal, as primitive men are supposed to have been since the
|
||
|
dawn of humanity, but they did not go out of their way to
|
||
|
maltreat me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With the coming of dawn the number of lions about us seemed
|
||
|
to have greatly diminished--at least they made less noise--
|
||
|
and as Buckingham and his party disappeared into the woods,
|
||
|
leaving me alone to my terrible fate, I could hear the
|
||
|
grumblings and growlings of the beasts diminishing with the
|
||
|
sound of the chant, which the party still continued. It
|
||
|
appeared that the lions had failed to note that I had been
|
||
|
left for their breakfast, and had followed off after their
|
||
|
worshippers instead.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But I knew the reprieve would be but for a short time, and
|
||
|
though I had no wish to die, I must confess that I rather
|
||
|
wished the ordeal over and the peace of oblivion upon me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The voices of the men and the lions receded in the distance,
|
||
|
until finally quiet reigned about me, broken only by the
|
||
|
sweet voices of birds and the sighing of the summer wind in
|
||
|
the trees.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It seemed impossible to believe that in this peaceful
|
||
|
woodland setting the frightful thing was to occur which must
|
||
|
come with the passing of the next lion who chanced within
|
||
|
sight or smell of the crumbling arch.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I strove to tear myself loose from my bonds, but succeeded
|
||
|
only in tightening them about my arms. Then I remained
|
||
|
passive for a long time, letting the scenes of my lifetime
|
||
|
pass in review before my mind's eye.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I tried to imagine the astonishment, incredulity, and horror
|
||
|
with which my family and friends would be overwhelmed if,
|
||
|
for an instant, space could be annihilated and they could
|
||
|
see me at the gates of London.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The gates of London! Where was the multitude hurrying to
|
||
|
the marts of trade after a night of pleasure or rest? Where
|
||
|
was the clang of tramcar gongs, the screech of motor horns,
|
||
|
the vast murmur of a dense throng?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Where were they? And as I asked the question a lone, gaunt
|
||
|
lion strode from the tangled jungle upon the far side of the
|
||
|
clearing. Majestically and noiselessly upon his padded feet
|
||
|
the king of beasts moved slowly toward the gates of London
|
||
|
and toward me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Was I afraid? I fear that I was almost afraid. I know that
|
||
|
I thought that fear was coming to me, and so I straightened
|
||
|
up and squared my shoulders and looked the lion straight in
|
||
|
the eyes--and waited.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is not a nice way to die--alone, with one's hands fast
|
||
|
bound, beneath the fangs and talons of a beast of prey. No,
|
||
|
it is not a nice way to die, not a pretty way.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The lion was halfway across the clearing when I heard a
|
||
|
slight sound behind me. The great cat stopped in his
|
||
|
tracks. He lashed his tail against his sides now, instead
|
||
|
of simply twitching its tip, and his low moan became a
|
||
|
thunderous roar.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As I craned my neck to catch a glimpse of the thing that had
|
||
|
aroused the fury of the beast before me, it sprang through
|
||
|
the arched gateway and was at my side--with parted lips and
|
||
|
heaving bosom and disheveled hair--a bronzed and lovely
|
||
|
vision to eyes that had never harbored hope of rescue.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was Victory, and in her arms she clutched my rifle and
|
||
|
revolver. A long knife was in the doeskin belt that
|
||
|
supported the doeskin skirt tightly about her lithe limbs.
|
||
|
She dropped my weapons at my feet, and, snatching the knife
|
||
|
from its resting place, severed the bonds that held me. I
|
||
|
was free, and the lion was preparing to charge.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Run!" I cried to the girl, as I bent and seized my rifle.
|
||
|
But she only stood there at my side, her bared blade ready
|
||
|
in her hand.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The lion was bounding toward us now in prodigious leaps. I
|
||
|
raised the rifle and fired. It was a lucky shot, for I had
|
||
|
no time to aim carefully, and when the beast crumpled and
|
||
|
rolled, lifeless, to the ground, I went upon my knees and
|
||
|
gave thanks to the God of my ancestors.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And, still upon my knees, I turned, and taking the girl's
|
||
|
hand in mine, I kissed it. She smiled at that, and laid her
|
||
|
other hand upon my head.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You have strange customs in your country," she said.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I could not but smile at that when I thought how strange it
|
||
|
would seem to my countrymen could they but see me kneeling
|
||
|
there on the site of London, kissing the hand of England's
|
||
|
queen.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And now," I said, as I rose, "you must return to the safety
|
||
|
of your camp. I will go with you until you are near enough
|
||
|
to continue alone in safety. Then I shall try to return to
|
||
|
my comrades."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I will not return to the camp," she replied.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But what shall you do?" I asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I do not know. Only I shall never go back while Buckingham
|
||
|
lives. I should rather die than go back to him. Mary came
|
||
|
to me, after they had taken you from the camp, and told me.
|
||
|
I found your strange weapons and followed with them. It
|
||
|
took me a little longer, for often I had to hide in the
|
||
|
trees that the lions might not get me, but I came in time,
|
||
|
and now you are free to go back to your friends."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And leave you here?" I exclaimed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
She nodded, but I could see through all her brave front that
|
||
|
she was frightened at the thought. I could not leave her,
|
||
|
of course, but what in the world I was to do, cumbered with
|
||
|
the care of a young woman, and a queen at that, I was at a
|
||
|
loss to know. I pointed out that phase of it to her, but
|
||
|
she only shrugged her shapely shoulders and pointed to her
|
||
|
knife.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was evident that she felt entirely competent to protect
|
||
|
herself.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As we stood there we heard the sound of voices. They were
|
||
|
coming from the forest through which we had passed when we
|
||
|
had come from camp.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"They are searching for me," said the girl. "Where shall we
|
||
|
hide?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
I didn't relish hiding. But when I thought of the
|
||
|
innumerable dangers which surrounded us and the
|
||
|
comparatively small amount of ammunition that I had with me,
|
||
|
I hesitated to provoke a battle with Buckingham and his
|
||
|
warriors when, by flight, I could avoid them and preserve my
|
||
|
cartridges against emergencies which could not be escaped.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Would they follow us there?" I asked, pointing through the
|
||
|
archway into the Camp of the Lions.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Never," she replied, "for, in the first place, they would
|
||
|
know that we would not dare go there, and in the second they
|
||
|
themselves would not dare."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Then we shall take refuge in the Camp of the Lions," I
|
||
|
said.
|
||
|
|
||
|
She shuddered and drew closer to me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You dare?" she asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Why not?" I returned. "We shall be safe from Buckingham,
|
||
|
and you have seen, for the second time in two days, that
|
||
|
lions are harmless before my weapons. Then, too, I can find
|
||
|
my friends easiest in this direction, for the River Thames
|
||
|
runs through this place you call the Camp of the Lions, and
|
||
|
it is farther down the Thames that my friends are awaiting
|
||
|
me. Do you not dare come with me?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I dare follow wherever you lead," she answered simply.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And so I turned and passed beneath the great arch into the
|
||
|
city of London.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
5
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
As we entered deeper into what had once been the city, the
|
||
|
evidences of man's past occupancy became more frequent. For
|
||
|
a mile from the arch there was only a riot of weeds and
|
||
|
undergrowth and trees covering small mounds and little
|
||
|
hillocks that, I was sure, were formed of the ruins of
|
||
|
stately buildings of the dead past.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But presently we came upon a district where shattered walls
|
||
|
still raised their crumbling tops in sad silence above the
|
||
|
grass-grown sepulchers of their fallen fellows. Softened
|
||
|
and mellowed by ancient ivy stood these sentinels of sorrow,
|
||
|
their scarred faces still revealing the rents and gashes of
|
||
|
shrapnel and of bomb.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Contrary to our expectations, we found little indication
|
||
|
that lions in any great numbers laired in this part of
|
||
|
ancient London. Well-worn pathways, molded by padded paws,
|
||
|
led through the cavernous windows or doorways of a few of
|
||
|
the ruins we passed, and once we saw the savage face of a
|
||
|
great, black-maned lion scowling down upon us from a
|
||
|
shattered stone balcony.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We followed down the bank of the Thames after we came upon
|
||
|
it. I was anxious to look with my own eyes upon the famous
|
||
|
bridge, and I guessed, too, that the river would lead me
|
||
|
into the part of London where stood Westminster Abbey and
|
||
|
the Tower.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Realizing that the section through which we had been passing
|
||
|
was doubtless outlying, and therefore not so built up with
|
||
|
large structures as the more centrally located part of the
|
||
|
old town, I felt sure that farther down the river I should
|
||
|
find the ruins larger. The bridge would be there in part,
|
||
|
at least, and so would remain the walls of many of the great
|
||
|
edifices of the past. There would be no such complete ruin
|
||
|
of large structures as I had seen among the smaller
|
||
|
buildings.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But when I had come to that part of the city which I judged
|
||
|
to have contained the relics I sought I found havoc that had
|
||
|
been wrought there even greater than elsewhere.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At one point upon the bosom of the Thames there rises a few
|
||
|
feet above the water a single, disintegrating mound of
|
||
|
masonry. Opposite it, upon either bank of the river, are
|
||
|
tumbled piles of ruins overgrown with vegetation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
These, I am forced to believe, are all that remain of London
|
||
|
Bridge, for nowhere else along the river is there any other
|
||
|
slightest sign of pier or abutment.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Rounding the base of a large pile of grass-covered debris,
|
||
|
we came suddenly upon the best preserved ruin we had yet
|
||
|
discovered. The entire lower story and part of the second
|
||
|
story of what must once have been a splendid public building
|
||
|
rose from a great knoll of shrubbery and trees, while ivy,
|
||
|
thick and luxuriant, clambered upward to the summit of the
|
||
|
broken walls.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In many places the gray stone was still exposed, its
|
||
|
smoothly chiseled face pitted with the scars of battle. The
|
||
|
massive portal yawned, somber and sorrowful, before us,
|
||
|
giving a glimpse of marble halls within.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The temptation to enter was too great. I wished to explore
|
||
|
the interior of this one remaining monument of civilization
|
||
|
now dead beyond recall. Through this same portal, within
|
||
|
these very marble halls, had Gray and Chamberlin and
|
||
|
Kitchener and Shaw, perhaps, come and gone with the other
|
||
|
great ones of the past.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I took Victory's hand in mine.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Come!" I said. "I do not know the name by which this great
|
||
|
pile was known, nor the purposes it fulfilled. It may have
|
||
|
been the palace of your sires, Victory. From some great
|
||
|
throne within, your forebears may have directed the
|
||
|
destinies of half the world. Come!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
I must confess to a feeling of awe as we entered the rotunda
|
||
|
of the great building. Pieces of massive furniture of
|
||
|
another day still stood where man had placed them centuries
|
||
|
ago. They were littered with dust and broken stone and
|
||
|
plaster, but, otherwise, so perfect was their preservation I
|
||
|
could hardly believe that two centuries had rolled by since
|
||
|
human eyes were last set upon them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Through one great room after another we wandered, hand in
|
||
|
hand, while Victory asked many questions and for the first
|
||
|
time I began to realize something of the magnificence and
|
||
|
power of the race from whose loins she had sprung.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Splendid tapestries, now mildewed and rotting, hung upon the
|
||
|
walls. There were mural paintings, too, depicting great
|
||
|
historic events of the past. For the first time Victory saw
|
||
|
the likeness of a horse, and she was much affected by a huge
|
||
|
oil which depicted some ancient cavalry charge against a
|
||
|
battery of field guns.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In other pictures there were steamships, battleships,
|
||
|
submarines, and quaint looking railway trains--all small and
|
||
|
antiquated in appearance to me, but wonderful to Victory.
|
||
|
She told me that she would like to remain for the rest of
|
||
|
her life where she could look at those pictures daily.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From room to room we passed until presently we emerged into
|
||
|
a mighty chamber, dark and gloomy, for its high and narrow
|
||
|
windows were choked and clogged by ivy. Along one paneled
|
||
|
wall we groped, our eyes slowly becoming accustomed to the
|
||
|
darkness. A rank and pungent odor pervaded the atmosphere.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We had made our way about half the distance across one end
|
||
|
of the great apartment when a low growl from the far end
|
||
|
brought us to a startled halt.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Straining my eyes through the gloom, I made out a raised
|
||
|
dais at the extreme opposite end of the hall. Upon the dais
|
||
|
stood two great chairs, highbacked and with great arms.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The throne of England! But what were those strange forms
|
||
|
about it?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Victory gave my hand a quick, excited little squeeze.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The lions!" she whispered.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yes, lions indeed! Sprawled about the dais were a dozen
|
||
|
huge forms, while upon the seat of one of the thrones a
|
||
|
small cub lay curled in slumber.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As we stood there for a moment, spellbound by the sight of
|
||
|
those fearsome creatures occupying the very thrones of the
|
||
|
sovereigns of England, the low growl was repeated, and a
|
||
|
great male rose slowly to his feet.
|
||
|
|
||
|
His devilish eyes bored straight through the semi-darkness
|
||
|
toward us. He had discovered the interloper. What right
|
||
|
had man within this palace of the beasts? Again he opened
|
||
|
his giant jaws, and this time there rumbled forth a warning
|
||
|
roar.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Instantly eight or ten of the other beasts leaped to their
|
||
|
feet. Already the great fellow who had spied us was
|
||
|
advancing slowly in our direction. I held my rifle ready,
|
||
|
but how futile it appeared in the face of this savage horde.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The foremost beast broke into a slow trot, and at his heels
|
||
|
came the others. All were roaring now, and the din of their
|
||
|
great voices reverberating through the halls and corridors
|
||
|
of the palace formed the most frightful chorus of thunderous
|
||
|
savagery imaginable to the mind of man.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And then the leader charged, and upon the hideous
|
||
|
pandemonium broke the sharp crack of my rifle, once, twice,
|
||
|
thrice. Three lions rolled, struggling and biting, to the
|
||
|
floor. Victory seized my arm, with a quick, "This way!
|
||
|
Here is a door," and a moment later we were in a tiny
|
||
|
antechamber at the foot of a narrow stone staircase.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Up this we backed, Victory just behind me, as the first of
|
||
|
the remaining lions leaped from the throne room and sprang
|
||
|
for the stairs. Again I fired, but others of the ferocious
|
||
|
beasts leaped over their fallen fellows and pursued us.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The stairs were very narrow--that was all that saved us--for
|
||
|
as I backed slowly upward, but a single lion could attack me
|
||
|
at a time, and the carcasses of those I slew impeded the
|
||
|
rushes of the others.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At last we reached the top. There was a long corridor from
|
||
|
which opened many doorways. One, directly behind us, was
|
||
|
tight closed. If we could open it and pass into the chamber
|
||
|
behind we might find a respite from attack.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The remaining lions were roaring horribly. I saw one
|
||
|
sneaking very slowly up the stairs toward us.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Try that door," I called to Victory. "See if it will
|
||
|
open."
|
||
|
|
||
|
She ran up to it and pushed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Turn the knob!" I cried, seeing that she did not know how
|
||
|
to open a door, but neither did she know what I meant by
|
||
|
knob.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I put a bullet in the spine of the approaching lion and
|
||
|
leaped to Victory's side. The door resisted my first
|
||
|
efforts to swing it inward. Rusted hinges and swollen wood
|
||
|
held it tightly closed. But at last it gave, and just as
|
||
|
another lion mounted to the top of the stairway it swung in,
|
||
|
and I pushed Victory across the threshold.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Then I turned to meet the renewed attack of the savage foe.
|
||
|
One lion fell in his tracks, another stumbled to my very
|
||
|
feet, and then I leaped within and slammed the portal to.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A quick glance showed me that this was the only door to the
|
||
|
small apartment in which we had found sanctuary, and, with a
|
||
|
sigh of relief, I leaned for a moment against the panels of
|
||
|
the stout barrier that separated us from the ramping demons
|
||
|
without.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Across the room, between two windows, stood a flat-topped
|
||
|
desk. A little pile of white and brown lay upon it close to
|
||
|
the opposite edge. After a moment of rest I crossed the
|
||
|
room to investigate. The white was the bleached human
|
||
|
bones--the skull, collar bones, arms, and a few of the upper
|
||
|
ribs of a man. The brown was the dust of a decayed military
|
||
|
cap and blouse. In a chair before the desk were other
|
||
|
bones, while more still strewed the floor beneath the desk
|
||
|
and about the chair. A man had died sitting there with his
|
||
|
face buried in his arms--two hundred years ago.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Beneath the desk were a pair of spurred military boots,
|
||
|
green and rotten with decay. In them were the leg bones of
|
||
|
a man. Among the tiny bones of the hands was an ancient
|
||
|
fountain pen, as good, apparently, as the day it was made,
|
||
|
and a metal covered memoranda book, closed over the bones of
|
||
|
an index finger.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was a gruesome sight--a pitiful sight--this lone
|
||
|
inhabitant of mighty London.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I picked up the metal covered memoranda book. Its pages
|
||
|
were rotten and stuck together. Only here and there was a
|
||
|
sentence or a part of a sentence legible. The first that I
|
||
|
could read was near the middle of the little volume:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"His majesty left for Tunbridge Wells today, he . . . jesty
|
||
|
was stricken . . . terday. God give she does not die . . .
|
||
|
am military governor of Lon . . ."
|
||
|
|
||
|
And farther on:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It is awful . . . hundred deaths today . . . worse than the
|
||
|
bombardm . . ."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Nearer the end I picked out the following:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I promised his maj . . . e will find me here when he ret .
|
||
|
. . alone."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The most legible passage was on the next page:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Thank God we drove them out. There is not a single . . .
|
||
|
man on British soil today; but at what awful cost. I tried
|
||
|
to persuade Sir Phillip to urge the people to remain. But
|
||
|
they are mad with fear of the Death, and rage at our
|
||
|
enemies. He tells me that the coast cities are packed . . .
|
||
|
waiting to be taken across. What will become of England,
|
||
|
with none left to rebuild her shattered cities!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
And the last entry:
|
||
|
|
||
|
". . . alone. Only the wild beasts . . . A lion is roaring
|
||
|
now beneath the palace windows. I think the people feared
|
||
|
the beasts even more than they did the Death. But they are
|
||
|
gone, all gone, and to what? How much better conditions
|
||
|
will they find on the continent? All gone--only I remain. I
|
||
|
promised his majesty, and when he returns he will find that
|
||
|
I was true to my trust, for I shall be awaiting him. God
|
||
|
save the King!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
That was all. This brave and forever nameless officer died
|
||
|
nobly at his post--true to his country and his king. It was
|
||
|
the Death, no doubt, that took him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Some of the entries had been dated. From the few legible
|
||
|
letters and figures which remained I judge the end came some
|
||
|
time in August, 1937, but of that I am not at all certain.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The diary has cleared up at least one mystery that had
|
||
|
puzzled me not a little, and now I am surprised that I had
|
||
|
not guessed its solution myself--the presence of African and
|
||
|
Asiatic beasts in England.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Acclimated by years of confinement in the zoological
|
||
|
gardens, they were fitted to resume in England the wild
|
||
|
existence for which nature had intended them, and once free,
|
||
|
had evidently bred prolifically, in marked contrast to the
|
||
|
captive exotics of twentieth century Pan-America, which had
|
||
|
gradually become fewer until extinction occurred some time
|
||
|
during the twenty-first century.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The palace, if such it was, lay not far from the banks of
|
||
|
the Thames. The room in which we were imprisoned overlooked
|
||
|
the river, and I determined to attempt to escape in this
|
||
|
direction.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To descend through the palace was out of the question, but
|
||
|
outside we could discover no lions. The stems of the ivy
|
||
|
which clambered upward past the window of the room were as
|
||
|
large around as my arm. I knew that they would support our
|
||
|
weight, and as we could gain nothing by remaining longer in
|
||
|
the palace, I decided to descend by way of the ivy and
|
||
|
follow along down the river in the direction of the launch.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Naturally I was much handicapped by the presence of the
|
||
|
girl. But I could not abandon her, though I had no idea
|
||
|
what I should do with her after rejoining my companions.
|
||
|
That she would prove a burden and an embarrassment I was
|
||
|
certain, but she had made it equally plain to me that she
|
||
|
would never return to her people to mate with Buckingham.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I owed my life to her, and, all other considerations aside,
|
||
|
that was sufficient demand upon my gratitude and my honor to
|
||
|
necessitate my suffering every inconvenience in her service.
|
||
|
Too, she was queen of England. But, by far the most potent
|
||
|
argument in her favor, she was a woman in distress--and a
|
||
|
young and very beautiful one.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And so, though I wished a thousand times that she was back
|
||
|
in her camp, I never let her guess it, but did all that lay
|
||
|
within my power to serve and protect her. I thank God now
|
||
|
that I did so.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With the lions still padding back and forth beyond the
|
||
|
closed door, Victory and I crossed the room to one of the
|
||
|
windows. I had outlined my plan to her, and she had assured
|
||
|
me that she could descend the ivy without assistance. In
|
||
|
fact, she smiled a trifle at my question.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Swinging myself outward, I began the descent, and had come
|
||
|
to within a few feet of the ground, being just opposite a
|
||
|
narrow window, when I was startled by a savage growl almost
|
||
|
in my ear, and then a great taloned paw darted from the
|
||
|
aperture to seize me, and I saw the snarling face of a lion
|
||
|
within the embrasure.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Releasing my hold upon the ivy, I dropped the re-maining
|
||
|
distance to the ground, saved from laceration only because
|
||
|
the lion's paw struck the thick stem of ivy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The creature was making a frightful racket now, leaping back
|
||
|
and forth from the floor at the broad window ledge, tearing
|
||
|
at the masonry with his claws in vain attempts to reach me.
|
||
|
But the opening was too narrow, and the masonry too solid.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Victory had commenced the descent, but I called to her to
|
||
|
stop just above the window, and, as the lion reappeared,
|
||
|
growling and snarling, I put a .33 bullet in his face, and
|
||
|
at the same moment Victory slipped quickly past him,
|
||
|
dropping into my upraised arms that were awaiting her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The roaring of the beasts that had discovered us, together
|
||
|
with the report of my rifle, had set the balance of the
|
||
|
fierce inmates of the palace into the most frightful uproar
|
||
|
I have ever heard.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I feared that it would not be long before intelligence or
|
||
|
instinct would draw them from the interiors and set them
|
||
|
upon our trail, the river. Nor had we much more than
|
||
|
reached it when a lion bounded around the corner of the
|
||
|
edifice we had just quitted and stood looking about as
|
||
|
though in search of us.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Following, came others, while Victory and I crouched in
|
||
|
hiding behind a clump of bushes close to the bank of the
|
||
|
river. The beasts sniffed about the ground for a while, but
|
||
|
they did not chance to go near the spot where we had stood
|
||
|
beneath the window that had given us escape.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Presently a black-maned male raised his head, and, with
|
||
|
cocked ears and glaring eyes, gazed straight at the bush
|
||
|
behind which we lay. I could have sworn that he had
|
||
|
discovered us, and when he took a few short and stately
|
||
|
steps in our direction I raised my rifle and covered him.
|
||
|
But, after a long, tense moment he looked away, and turned
|
||
|
to glare in another direction.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I breathed a sigh of relief, and so did Victory. I could
|
||
|
feel her body quiver as she lay pressed close to me, our
|
||
|
cheeks almost touching as we both peered through the same
|
||
|
small opening in the foliage.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I turned to give her a reassuring smile as the lion
|
||
|
indicated that he had not seen us, and as I did so she, too,
|
||
|
turned her face toward mine, for the same purpose,
|
||
|
doubtless. Anyway, as our heads turned simultaneously, our
|
||
|
lips brushed together. A startled expression came into
|
||
|
Victory's eyes as she drew back in evident confusion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As for me, the strangest sensation that I have ever
|
||
|
experienced claimed me for an instant. A peculiar, tingling
|
||
|
thrill ran through my veins, and my head swam. I could not
|
||
|
account for it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Naturally, being a naval officer and consequently in the
|
||
|
best society of the federation, I have seen much of women.
|
||
|
With others, I have laughed at the assertions of the savants
|
||
|
that modern man is a cold and passionless creation in
|
||
|
comparison with the males of former ages--in a word, that
|
||
|
love, as the one grand passion, had ceased to exist.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I do not know, now, but that they were more nearly right
|
||
|
than we have guessed, at least in so far as modern civilized
|
||
|
woman is concerned. I have kissed many women--young and
|
||
|
beautiful and middle aged and old, and many that I had no
|
||
|
business kissing--but never before had I experienced that
|
||
|
remarkable and altogether delightful thrill that followed
|
||
|
the accidental brushing of my lips against the lips of
|
||
|
Victory.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The occurrence interested me, and I was tempted to
|
||
|
experiment further. But when I would have essayed it
|
||
|
another new and entirely unaccountable force restrained me.
|
||
|
For the first time in my life I felt embarrassment in the
|
||
|
presence of a woman.
|
||
|
|
||
|
What further might have developed I cannot say, for at that
|
||
|
moment a perfect she-devil of a lioness, with keener eyes
|
||
|
than her lord and master, discovered us. She came trotting
|
||
|
toward our place of concealment, growling and baring her
|
||
|
yellow fangs.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I waited for an instant, hoping that I might be mistaken,
|
||
|
and that she would turn off in some other direction. But
|
||
|
no--she increased her trot to a gallop, and then I fired at
|
||
|
her, but the bullet, though it struck her full in the
|
||
|
breast, didn't stop her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Screaming with pain and rage, the creature fairly flew
|
||
|
toward us. Behind her came other lions. Our case looked
|
||
|
hopeless. We were upon the brink of the river. There
|
||
|
seemed no avenue of escape, and I knew that even my modern
|
||
|
automatic rifle was inadequate in the face of so many of
|
||
|
these fierce beasts.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To remain where we were would have been suicidal. We were
|
||
|
both standing now, Victory keeping her place bravely at my
|
||
|
side, when I reached the only decision open to me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Seizing the girl's hand, I turned, just as the lioness
|
||
|
crashed into the opposite side of the bushes, and, dragging
|
||
|
Victory after me, leaped over the edge of the bank into the
|
||
|
river.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I did not know that lions are not fond of water, nor did I
|
||
|
know if Victory could swim, but death, immediate and
|
||
|
terrible, stared us in the face if we remained, and so I
|
||
|
took the chance.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At this point the current ran close to the shore, so that we
|
||
|
were immediately in deep water, and, to my intense
|
||
|
satisfaction, Victory struck out with a strong, overhand
|
||
|
stroke and set all my fears on her account at rest.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But my relief was short-lived. That lioness, as I have said
|
||
|
before, was a veritable devil. She stood for a moment
|
||
|
glaring at us, then like a shot she sprang into the river
|
||
|
and swam swiftly after us.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Victory was a length ahead of me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Swim for the other shore!" I called to her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I was much impeded by my rifle, having to swim with one hand
|
||
|
while I clung to my precious weapon with the other. The
|
||
|
girl had seen the lioness take to the water, and she had
|
||
|
also seen that I was swimming much more slowly than she, and
|
||
|
what did she do? She started to drop back to my side.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Go on!" I cried. "Make for the other shore, and then
|
||
|
follow down until you find my friends. Tell them that I
|
||
|
sent you, and with orders that they are to protect you. Go
|
||
|
on! Go on!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
But she only waited until we were again swimming side by
|
||
|
side, and I saw that she had drawn her long knife, and was
|
||
|
holding it between her teeth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Do as I tell you!" I said to her sharply, but she shook her
|
||
|
head.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The lioness was overhauling us rapidly. She was swimming
|
||
|
silently, her chin just touching the water, but blood was
|
||
|
streaming from between her lips. It was evident that her
|
||
|
lungs were pierced.
|
||
|
|
||
|
She was almost upon me. I saw that in a moment she would
|
||
|
take me under her forepaws, or seize me in those great jaws.
|
||
|
I felt that my time had come, but I meant to die fighting.
|
||
|
And so I turned, and, treading water, raised my rifle above
|
||
|
my head and awaited her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Victory, animated by a bravery no less ferocious than that
|
||
|
of the dumb beast assailing us, swam straight for me. It
|
||
|
all happened so swiftly that I cannot recall the details of
|
||
|
the kaleidoscopic action which ensued. I knew that I rose
|
||
|
high out of the water, and, with clubbed rifle, dealt the
|
||
|
animal a terrific blow upon the skull, that I saw Victory,
|
||
|
her long blade flashing in her hand, close, striking, upon
|
||
|
the beast, that a great paw fell upon her shoulder, and that
|
||
|
I was swept beneath the surface of the water like a straw
|
||
|
before the prow of a freighter.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Still clinging to my rifle, I rose again, to see the lioness
|
||
|
struggling in her death throes but an arm's length from me.
|
||
|
Scarcely had I risen than the beast turned upon her side,
|
||
|
struggled frantically for an instant, and then sank.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
6
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Victory was nowhere in sight. Alone, I floated upon the
|
||
|
bosom of the Thames. In that brief instant I believe that I
|
||
|
suffered more mental anguish than I have crowded into all
|
||
|
the balance of my life before or since. A few hours before,
|
||
|
I had been wishing that I might be rid of her, and now that
|
||
|
she was gone I would have given my life to have her back
|
||
|
again.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Wearily I turned to swim about the spot where she had
|
||
|
disappeared, hoping that she might rise once at least, and I
|
||
|
would be given the opportunity to save her, and, as I
|
||
|
turned, the water boiled before my face and her head shot up
|
||
|
before me. I was on the point of striking out to seize her,
|
||
|
when a happy smile illumined her features.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You are not dead!" she cried. "I have been searching the
|
||
|
bottom for you. I was sure that the blow she gave you must
|
||
|
have disabled you," and she glanced about for the lioness.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"She has gone?" she asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Dead," I replied.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The blow you struck her with the thing you call rifle
|
||
|
stunned her," she explained, "and then I swam in close
|
||
|
enough to get my knife into her heart."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ah, such a girl! I could not but wonder what one of our own
|
||
|
Pan-American women would have done under like circumstances.
|
||
|
But then, of course, they have not been trained by stern
|
||
|
necessity to cope with the emergencies and dangers of savage
|
||
|
primeval life.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Along the bank we had just quitted, a score of lions paced
|
||
|
to and fro, growling menacingly. We could not return, and
|
||
|
we struck out for the opposite shore. I am a strong
|
||
|
swimmer, and had no doubt as to my ability to cross the
|
||
|
river, but I was not so sure about Victory, so I swam close
|
||
|
behind her, to be ready to give her assistance should she
|
||
|
need it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
She did not, however, reaching the opposite bank as fresh,
|
||
|
apparently, as when she entered the water. Victory is a
|
||
|
wonder. Each day that we were together brought new proofs
|
||
|
of it. Nor was it her courage or vitality only which amazed
|
||
|
me. She had a head on those shapely shoulders of hers, and
|
||
|
dignity! My, but she could be regal when she chose!
|
||
|
|
||
|
She told me that the lions were fewer upon this side of the
|
||
|
river, but that there were many wolves, running in great
|
||
|
packs later in the year. Now they were north somewhere, and
|
||
|
we should have little to fear from them, though we might
|
||
|
meet with a few.
|
||
|
|
||
|
My first concern was to take my weapons apart and dry them,
|
||
|
which was rather difficult in the face of the fact that
|
||
|
every rag about me was drenched. But finally, thanks to the
|
||
|
sun and much rubbing, I succeeded, though I had no oil to
|
||
|
lubricate them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We ate some wild berries and roots that Victory found, and
|
||
|
then we set off again down the river, keeping an eye open
|
||
|
for game on one side and the launch on the other, for I
|
||
|
thought that Delcarte, who would be the natural leader
|
||
|
during my absence, might run up the Thames in search of me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The balance of that day we sought in vain for game or for
|
||
|
the launch, and when night came we lay down, our stomachs
|
||
|
empty, to sleep beneath the stars. We were entirely
|
||
|
unprotected from attack from wild beasts, and for this
|
||
|
reason I remained awake most of the night, on guard. But
|
||
|
nothing approached us, though I could hear the lions roaring
|
||
|
across the river, and once I thought I heard the howl of a
|
||
|
beast north of us--it might have been a wolf.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Altogether, it was a most unpleasant night, and I determined
|
||
|
then that if we were forced to sleep out again that I should
|
||
|
provide some sort of shelter which would protect us from
|
||
|
attack while we slept.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Toward morning I dozed, and the sun was well up when Victory
|
||
|
aroused me by gently shaking my shoulder.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Antelope!" she whispered in my ear, and, as I raised my
|
||
|
head, she pointed up-river. Crawling to my knees, I looked
|
||
|
in the direction she indicated, to see a buck standing upon
|
||
|
a little knoll some two hundred yards from us. There was
|
||
|
good cover between the animal and me, and so, though I might
|
||
|
have hit him at two hundred yards, I preferred to crawl
|
||
|
closer to him and make sure of the meat we both so craved.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I had covered about fifty yards of the distance, and the
|
||
|
beast was still feeding peacefully, so I thought that I
|
||
|
would make even surer of a hit by going ahead another fifty
|
||
|
yards, when the animal suddenly raised his head and looked
|
||
|
away, up-river. His whole attitude proclaimed that he was
|
||
|
startled by something beyond him that I could not see.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Realizing that he might break and run and that I should then
|
||
|
probably miss him entirely, I raised my rifle to my
|
||
|
shoulder. But even as I did so the animal leaped into the
|
||
|
air, and simultaneously there was a sound of a shot from
|
||
|
beyond the knoll.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For an instant I was dumbfounded. Had the report come from
|
||
|
down-river, I should have instantly thought that one of my
|
||
|
own men had fired. But coming from up-river it puzzled me
|
||
|
considerably. Who could there be with firearms in primitive
|
||
|
England other than we of the Coldwater?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Victory was directly behind me, and I motioned for her to
|
||
|
lie down, as I did, behind the bush from which I had been
|
||
|
upon the point of firing at the antelope. We could see that
|
||
|
the buck was quite dead, and from our hiding place we waited
|
||
|
to discover the identity of his slayer when the latter
|
||
|
should approach and claim his kill.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We had not long to wait, and when I saw the head and
|
||
|
shoulders of a man appear above the crest of the knoll, I
|
||
|
sprang to my feet, with a heartfelt cry of joy, for it was
|
||
|
Delcarte.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At the sound of my voice, Delcarte half raised his rifle in
|
||
|
readiness for the attack of an enemy, but a moment later he
|
||
|
recognized me, and was coming rapidly to meet us. Behind
|
||
|
him was Snider. They both were astounded to see me upon the
|
||
|
north bank of the river, and much more so at the sight of my
|
||
|
companion.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Then I introduced them to Victory, and told them that she
|
||
|
was queen of England. They thought, at first, that I was
|
||
|
joking. But when I had recounted my adventures and they
|
||
|
realized that I was in earnest, they believed me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They told me that they had followed me inshore when I had
|
||
|
not returned from the hunt, that they had met the men of the
|
||
|
elephant country, and had had a short and one-sided battle
|
||
|
with the fellows. And that afterward they had returned to
|
||
|
the launch with a prisoner, from whom they had learned that
|
||
|
I had probably been captured by the men of the lion country.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With the prisoner as a guide they had set off up-river in
|
||
|
search of me, but had been much delayed by motor trouble,
|
||
|
and had finally camped after dark a half mile above the spot
|
||
|
where Victory and I had spent the night. They must have
|
||
|
passed us in the dark, and why I did not hear the sound of
|
||
|
the propeller I do not know, unless it passed me at a time
|
||
|
when the lions were making an unusually earsplitting din
|
||
|
upon the opposite side.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taking the antelope with us, we all returned to the launch,
|
||
|
where we found Taylor as delighted to see me alive again as
|
||
|
Delcarte had been. I cannot say truthfully that Snider
|
||
|
evinced much enthusiasm at my rescue.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Taylor had found the ingredients for chemical fuel, and the
|
||
|
distilling of them had, with the motor trouble, accounted
|
||
|
for their delay in setting out after me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The prisoner that Delcarte and Snider had taken was a
|
||
|
powerful young fellow from the elephant country.
|
||
|
Notwithstanding the fact that they had all assured him to
|
||
|
the contrary, he still could not believe that we would not
|
||
|
kill him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He assured us that his name was Thirty-six, and, as he could
|
||
|
not count above ten, I am sure that he had no conception of
|
||
|
the correct meaning of the word, and that it may have been
|
||
|
handed down to him either from the military number of an
|
||
|
ancestor who had served in the English ranks during the
|
||
|
Great War, or that originally it was the number of some
|
||
|
famous regiment with which a forbear fought.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now that we were reunited, we held a council to determine
|
||
|
what course we should pursue in the immediate future.
|
||
|
Snider was still for setting out to sea and returning to
|
||
|
Pan-America, but the better judgment of Delcarte and Taylor
|
||
|
ridiculed the suggestion--we should not have lived a
|
||
|
fortnight.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To remain in England, constantly menaced by wild beasts and
|
||
|
men equally as wild, seemed about as bad. I suggested that
|
||
|
we cross the Channel and ascertain if we could not discover
|
||
|
a more enlightened and civilized people upon the continent.
|
||
|
I was sure that some trace of the ancient culture and
|
||
|
greatness of Europe must remain. Germany, probably, would
|
||
|
be much as it was during the twentieth century, for, in
|
||
|
common with most Pan-Americans, I was positive that Germany
|
||
|
had been victorious in the Great War.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Snider demurred at the suggestion. He said that it was bad
|
||
|
enough to have come this far. He did not want to make it
|
||
|
worse by going to the continent. The outcome of it was that
|
||
|
I finally lost my patience, and told him that from then on
|
||
|
he would do what I thought best--that I proposed to assume
|
||
|
command of the party, and that they might all consider
|
||
|
themselves under my orders, as much so as though we were
|
||
|
still aboard the Coldwater and in Pan-American waters.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Delcarte and Taylor immediately assured me that they had not
|
||
|
for an instant assumed anything different, and that they
|
||
|
were as ready to follow and obey me here as they would be
|
||
|
upon the other side of thirty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Snider said nothing, but he wore a sullen scowl. And I
|
||
|
wished then, as I had before, and as I did to a much greater
|
||
|
extent later, that fate had not decreed that he should have
|
||
|
chanced to be a member of the launch's party upon that
|
||
|
memorable day when last we quitted the Coldwater.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Victory, who was given a voice in our councils, was all for
|
||
|
going to the continent, or anywhere else, in fact, where she
|
||
|
might see new sights and experience new adventures.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Afterward we can come back to Grabritin," she said, "and if
|
||
|
Buckingham is not dead and we can catch him away from his
|
||
|
men and kill him, then I can return to my people, and we can
|
||
|
all live in peace and happiness."
|
||
|
|
||
|
She spoke of killing Buckingham with no greater concern than
|
||
|
one might evince in the contemplated destruction of a sheep;
|
||
|
yet she was neither cruel nor vindictive. In fact, Victory
|
||
|
is a very sweet and womanly woman. But human life is of
|
||
|
small account beyond thirty--a legacy from the bloody days
|
||
|
when thousands of men perished in the trenches between the
|
||
|
rising and the setting of a sun, when they laid them
|
||
|
lengthwise in these same trenches and sprinkled dirt over
|
||
|
them, when the Germans corded their corpses like wood and
|
||
|
set fire to them, when women and children and old men were
|
||
|
butchered, and great passenger ships were torpedoed without
|
||
|
warning.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Thirty-six, finally assured that we did not intend slaying
|
||
|
him, was as keen to accompany us as was Victory.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The crossing to the continent was uneventful, its monotony
|
||
|
being relieved, however, by the childish delight of Victory
|
||
|
and Thirty-six in the novel experience of riding safely upon
|
||
|
the bosom of the water, and of being so far from land.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With the possible exception of Snider, the little party
|
||
|
appeared in the best of spirits, laughing and joking, or
|
||
|
interestedly discussing the possibilities which the future
|
||
|
held for us: what we should find upon the continent, and
|
||
|
whether the inhabitants would be civilized or barbarian
|
||
|
peoples.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Victory asked me to explain the difference between the two,
|
||
|
and when I had tried to do so as clearly as possible, she
|
||
|
broke into a gay little laugh.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Oh," she cried, "then I am a barbarian!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
I could not but laugh, too, as I admitted that she was,
|
||
|
indeed, a barbarian. She was not offended, taking the
|
||
|
matter as a huge joke. But some time thereafter she sat in
|
||
|
silence, apparently deep in thought. Finally she looked up
|
||
|
at me, her strong white teeth gleaming behind her smiling
|
||
|
lips.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Should you take that thing you call 'razor,'" she said,
|
||
|
"and cut the hair from the face of Thirty-six, and exchange
|
||
|
garments with him, you would be the barbarian and Thirty-six
|
||
|
the civilized man. There is no other difference between
|
||
|
you, except your weapons. Clothe you in a wolfskin, give
|
||
|
you a knife and a spear, and set you down in the woods of
|
||
|
Grabritin--of what service would your civilization be to
|
||
|
you?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Delcarte and Taylor smiled at her reply, but Thirty-six and
|
||
|
Snider laughed uproariously. I was not surprised at Thirty-
|
||
|
six, but I thought that Snider laughed louder than the
|
||
|
occasion warranted. As a matter of fact, Snider, it seemed
|
||
|
to me, was taking advantage of every opportunity, however
|
||
|
slight, to show insubordination, and I determined then that
|
||
|
at the first real breach of discipline I should take action
|
||
|
that would remind Snider, ever after, that I was still his
|
||
|
commanding officer.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I could not help but notice that his eyes were much upon
|
||
|
Victory, and I did not like it, for I knew the type of man
|
||
|
he was. But as it would not be necessary ever to leave the
|
||
|
girl alone with him I felt no apprehension for her safety.
|
||
|
|
||
|
After the incident of the discussion of barbarians I thought
|
||
|
that Victory's manner toward me changed perceptibly. She
|
||
|
held aloof from me, and when Snider took his turn at the
|
||
|
wheel, sat beside him, upon the pretext that she wished to
|
||
|
learn how to steer the launch. I wondered if she had
|
||
|
guessed the man's antipathy for me, and was seeking his
|
||
|
company solely for the purpose of piquing me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Snider was, too, taking full advantage of his opportunity.
|
||
|
Often he leaned toward the girl to whisper in her ear, and
|
||
|
he laughed much, which was unusual with Snider.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of course, it was nothing at all to me; yet, for some
|
||
|
unaccountable reason, the sight of the two of them sitting
|
||
|
there so close to one another and seeming to be enjoying
|
||
|
each other's society to such a degree irritated me
|
||
|
tremendously, and put me in such a bad humor that I took no
|
||
|
pleasure whatsoever in the last few hours of the crossing.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We aimed to land near the site of ancient Ostend. But when
|
||
|
we neared the coast we discovered no indication of any human
|
||
|
habitations whatever, let alone a city. After we had
|
||
|
landed, we found the same howling wilderness about us that
|
||
|
we had discovered on the British Isle. There was no
|
||
|
slightest indication that civilized man had ever set a foot
|
||
|
upon that portion of the continent of Europe.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Although I had feared as much, since our experience in
|
||
|
England, I could not but own to a feeling of marked
|
||
|
disappointment, and to the gravest fears of the future,
|
||
|
which induced a mental depression that was in no way
|
||
|
dissipated by the continued familiarity between Victory and
|
||
|
Snider.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I was angry with myself that I permitted that matter to
|
||
|
affect me as it had. I did not wish to admit to myself that
|
||
|
I was angry with this uncultured little savage, that it made
|
||
|
the slightest difference to me what she did or what she did
|
||
|
not do, or that I could so lower myself as to feel personal
|
||
|
enmity towards a common sailor. And yet, to be honest, I
|
||
|
was doing both.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Finding nothing to detain us about the spot where Ostend
|
||
|
once had stood, we set out up the coast in search of the
|
||
|
mouth of the River Rhine, which I purposed ascending in
|
||
|
search of civilized man. It was my intention to explore the
|
||
|
Rhine as far up as the launch would take us. If we found no
|
||
|
civilization there we would return to the North Sea,
|
||
|
continue up the coast to the Elbe, and follow that river and
|
||
|
the canals of Berlin. Here, at least, I was sure that we
|
||
|
should find what we sought--and, if not, then all Europe had
|
||
|
reverted to barbarism.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The weather remained fine, and we made excellent progress,
|
||
|
but everywhere along the Rhine we met with the same
|
||
|
disappointment--no sign of civilized man, in fact, no sign
|
||
|
of man at all.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I was not enjoying the exploration of modern Europe as I had
|
||
|
anticipated--I was unhappy. Victory seemed changed, too. I
|
||
|
had enjoyed her company at first, but since the trip across
|
||
|
the Channel I had held aloof from her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Her chin was in the air most of the time, and yet I rather
|
||
|
think that she regretted her friendliness with Snider, for I
|
||
|
noticed that she avoided him entirely. He, on the contrary,
|
||
|
emboldened by her former friendliness, sought every
|
||
|
opportunity to be near her. I should have liked nothing
|
||
|
better than a reasonably good excuse to punch his head; yet,
|
||
|
paradoxically, I was ashamed of myself for harboring him any
|
||
|
ill will. I realized that there was something the matter
|
||
|
with me, but I did not know what it was.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Matters remained thus for several days, and we continued our
|
||
|
journey up the Rhine. At Cologne, I had hoped to find some
|
||
|
reassuring indications, but there was no Cologne. And as
|
||
|
there had been no other cities along the river up to that
|
||
|
point, the devastation was infinitely greater than time
|
||
|
alone could have wrought. Great guns, bombs, and mines must
|
||
|
have leveled every building that man had raised, and then
|
||
|
nature, unhindered, had covered the ghastly evidence of
|
||
|
human depravity with her beauteous mantle of verdure.
|
||
|
Splendid trees reared their stately tops where splendid
|
||
|
cathedrals once had reared their domes, and sweet wild
|
||
|
flowers blossomed in simple serenity in soil that once was
|
||
|
drenched with human blood.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Nature had reclaimed what man had once stolen from her and
|
||
|
defiled. A herd of zebras grazed where once the German
|
||
|
kaiser may have reviewed his troops. An antelope rested
|
||
|
peacefully in a bed of daisies where, perhaps, two hundred
|
||
|
years ago a big gun belched its terror-laden messages of
|
||
|
death, of hate, of destruction against the works of man and
|
||
|
God alike.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We were in need of fresh meat, yet I hesitated to shatter
|
||
|
the quiet and peaceful serenity of the view with the crack
|
||
|
of a rifle and the death of one of those beautiful creatures
|
||
|
before us. But it had to be done--we must eat. I left the
|
||
|
work to Delcarte, however, and in a moment we had two
|
||
|
antelope and the landscape to ourselves.
|
||
|
|
||
|
After eating, we boarded the launch and continued up the
|
||
|
river. For two days we passed through a primeval
|
||
|
wilderness. In the afternoon of the second day we landed
|
||
|
upon the west bank of the river, and, leaving Snider and
|
||
|
Thirty-six to guard Victory and the launch, Delcarte,
|
||
|
Taylor, and I set out after game.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We tramped away from the river for upwards of an hour before
|
||
|
discovering anything, and then only a small red deer, which
|
||
|
Taylor brought down with a neat shot of two hundred yards.
|
||
|
It was getting too late to proceed farther, so we rigged a
|
||
|
sling, and the two men carried the deer back toward the
|
||
|
launch while I walked a hundred yards ahead, in the hope of
|
||
|
bagging something further for our larder.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We had covered about half the distance to the river, when I
|
||
|
suddenly came face to face with a man. He was as primitive
|
||
|
and uncouth in appearance as the Grabritins--a shaggy,
|
||
|
unkempt savage, clothed in a shirt of skin cured with the
|
||
|
head on, the latter surmounting his own head to form a
|
||
|
bonnet, and giving to him a most fearful and ferocious
|
||
|
aspect.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The fellow was armed with a long spear and a club, the
|
||
|
latter dangling down his back from a leathern thong about
|
||
|
his neck. His feet were incased in hide sandals.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At sight of me, he halted for an instant, then turned and
|
||
|
dove into the forest, and, though I called reassuringly to
|
||
|
him in English he did not return nor did I again see him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The sight of the wild man raised my hopes once more that
|
||
|
elsewhere we might find men in a higher state of
|
||
|
civilization--it was the society of civilized man that I
|
||
|
craved--and so, with a lighter heart, I continued on toward
|
||
|
the river and the launch.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I was still some distance ahead of Delcarte and Taylor, when
|
||
|
I came in sight of the Rhine again. But I came to the
|
||
|
water's edge before I noticed that anything was amiss with
|
||
|
the party we had left there a few hours before.
|
||
|
|
||
|
My first intimation of disaster was the absence of the
|
||
|
launch from its former moorings. And then, a moment later--
|
||
|
I discovered the body of a man lying upon the bank. Running
|
||
|
toward it, I saw that it was Thirty-six, and as I stopped
|
||
|
and raised the Grabritin's head in my arms, I heard a faint
|
||
|
moan break from his lips. He was not dead, but that he was
|
||
|
badly injured was all too evident.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Delcarte and Taylor came up a moment later, and the three of
|
||
|
us worked over the fellow, hoping to revive him that he
|
||
|
might tell us what had happened, and what had become of the
|
||
|
others. My first thought was prompted by the sight I had
|
||
|
recently had of the savage native. The little party had
|
||
|
evidently been surprised, and in the attack Thirty-six had
|
||
|
been wounded and the others taken prisoners. The thought
|
||
|
was almost like a physical blow in the face--it stunned me.
|
||
|
Victory in the hands of these abysmal brutes! It was
|
||
|
frightful. I almost shook poor Thirty-six in my efforts to
|
||
|
revive him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I explained my theory to the others, and then Delcarte
|
||
|
shattered it by a single movement of the hand. He drew
|
||
|
aside the lion's skin that covered half of the Grabritin's
|
||
|
breast, revealing a neat, round hole in Thirty-six's chest--
|
||
|
a hole that could have been made by no other weapon than a
|
||
|
rifle.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Snider!" I exclaimed. Delcarte nodded. At about the same
|
||
|
time the eyelids of the wounded man fluttered, and raised.
|
||
|
He looked up at us, and very slowly the light of
|
||
|
consciousness returned to his eyes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What happened, Thirty-six?" I asked him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He tried to reply, but the effort caused him to cough,
|
||
|
bringing about a hemorrhage of the lungs and again he fell
|
||
|
back exhausted. For several long minutes he lay as one
|
||
|
dead, then in an almost inaudible whisper he spoke.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Snider--" He paused, tried to speak again, raised a hand,
|
||
|
and pointed down-river. "They--went--back," and then he
|
||
|
shuddered convulsively and died.
|
||
|
|
||
|
None of us voiced his belief. But I think they were all
|
||
|
alike: Victory and Snider had stolen the launch, and
|
||
|
deserted us.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
7
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
We stood there, grouped about the body of the dead
|
||
|
Grabritin, looking futilely down the river to where it made
|
||
|
an abrupt curve to the west, a quarter of a mile below us,
|
||
|
and was lost to sight, as though we expected to see the
|
||
|
truant returning to us with our precious launch--the thing
|
||
|
that meant life or death to us in this unfriendly, savage
|
||
|
world.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I felt, rather than saw, Taylor turn his eyes slowly toward
|
||
|
my profile, and, as mine swung to meet them, the expression
|
||
|
upon his face recalled me to my duty and responsibility as
|
||
|
an officer.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The utter hopelessness that was reflected in his face must
|
||
|
have been the counterpart of what I myself felt, but in that
|
||
|
brief instant I determined to hide my own misgivings that I
|
||
|
might bolster up the courage of the others.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We are lost!" was written as plainly upon Taylor's face as
|
||
|
though his features were the printed words upon an open
|
||
|
book. He was thinking of the launch, and of the launch
|
||
|
alone. Was I? I tried to think that I was. But a greater
|
||
|
grief than the loss of the launch could have engendered in
|
||
|
me, filled my heart--a sullen, gnawing misery which I tried
|
||
|
to deny--which I refused to admit--but which persisted in
|
||
|
obsessing me until my heart rose and filled my throat, and I
|
||
|
could not speak when I would have uttered words of
|
||
|
reassurance to my companions.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And then rage came to my relief--rage against the vile
|
||
|
traitor who had deserted three of his fellow countrymen in
|
||
|
so frightful a position. I tried to feel an equal rage
|
||
|
against the woman, but somehow I could not, and kept
|
||
|
searching for excuses for her--her youth, her inexperience,
|
||
|
her savagery.
|
||
|
|
||
|
My rising anger swept away my temporary helplessness. I
|
||
|
smiled, and told Taylor not to look so glum.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We will follow them," I said, "and the chances are that we
|
||
|
shall overtake them. They will not travel as rapidly as
|
||
|
Snider probably hopes. He will be forced to halt for fuel
|
||
|
and for food, and the launch must follow the windings of the
|
||
|
river; we can take short cuts while they are traversing the
|
||
|
detour. I have my map--thank God! I always carry it upon my
|
||
|
person--and with that and the compass we will have an
|
||
|
advantage over them."
|
||
|
|
||
|
My words seemed to cheer them both, and they were for
|
||
|
starting off at once in pursuit. There was no reason why we
|
||
|
should delay, and we set forth down the river. As we
|
||
|
tramped along, we discussed a question that was uppermost in
|
||
|
the mind of each--what we should do with Snider when we had
|
||
|
captured him, for with the action of pursuit had come the
|
||
|
optimistic conviction that we should succeed. As a matter
|
||
|
of fact, we had to succeed. The very thought of remaining
|
||
|
in this utter wilderness for the rest of our lives was
|
||
|
impossible.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We arrived at nothing very definite in the matter of
|
||
|
Snider's punishment, since Taylor was for shooting him,
|
||
|
Delcarte insisting that he should be hanged, while I,
|
||
|
although fully conscious of the gravity of his offense,
|
||
|
could not bring myself to give the death penalty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I fell to wondering what charm Victory had found in such a
|
||
|
man as Snider, and why I insisted upon finding excuses for
|
||
|
her and trying to defend her indefensible act. She was
|
||
|
nothing to me. Aside from the natural gratitude I felt for
|
||
|
her since she had saved my life, I owed her nothing. She
|
||
|
was a half-naked little savage--I, a gentleman, and an
|
||
|
officer in the world's greatest navy. There could be no
|
||
|
close bonds of interest between us.
|
||
|
|
||
|
This line of reflection I discovered to be as distressing as
|
||
|
the former, but, though I tried to turn my mind to other
|
||
|
things, it persisted in returning to the vision of an oval
|
||
|
face, sun-tanned; of smiling lips, revealing white and even
|
||
|
teeth; of brave eyes that harbored no shadow of guile; and
|
||
|
of a tumbling mass of wavy hair that crowned the loveliest
|
||
|
picture on which my eyes had ever rested.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Every time this vision presented itself I felt myself turn
|
||
|
cold with rage and hate against Snider. I could forgive the
|
||
|
launch, but if he had wronged her he should die--he should
|
||
|
die at my own hands; in this I was determined.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For two days we followed the river northward, cutting off
|
||
|
where we could, but confined for the most part to the game
|
||
|
trails that paralleled the stream. One afternoon, we cut
|
||
|
across a narrow neck of land that saved us many miles, where
|
||
|
the river wound to the west and back again.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Here we decided to halt, for we had had a hard day of it,
|
||
|
and, if the truth were known, I think that we had all given
|
||
|
up hope of overtaking the launch other than by the merest
|
||
|
accident.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We had shot a deer just before our halt, and, as Taylor and
|
||
|
Delcarte were preparing it, I walked down to the water to
|
||
|
fill our canteens. I had just finished, and was
|
||
|
straightening up, when something floating around a bend
|
||
|
above me caught my eye. For a moment I could not believe
|
||
|
the testimony of my own senses. It was a boat.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I shouted to Delcarte and Taylor, who came running to my
|
||
|
side.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The launch!" cried Delcarte; and, indeed, it was the
|
||
|
launch, floating down-river from above us. Where had it
|
||
|
been? How had we passed it? And how were we to reach it
|
||
|
now, should Snider and the girl discover us?
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It's drifting," said Taylor. "I see no one in it."
|
||
|
|
||
|
I was stripping off my clothes, and Delcarte soon followed
|
||
|
my example. I told Taylor to remain on shore with the
|
||
|
clothing and rifles. He might also serve us better there,
|
||
|
since it would give him an opportunity to take a shot at
|
||
|
Snider should the man discover us and show himself.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With powerful strokes we swam out in the path of the
|
||
|
oncoming launch. Being a stronger swimmer than Delcarte, I
|
||
|
soon was far in the lead, reaching the center of the channel
|
||
|
just as the launch bore down upon me. It was drifting
|
||
|
broadside on. I seized the gunwale and raised myself
|
||
|
quickly, so that my chin topped the side. I expected a blow
|
||
|
the moment that I came within the view of the occupants, but
|
||
|
no blow fell.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Snider lay upon his back in the bottom of the boat alone.
|
||
|
Even before I had clambered in and stooped above him I knew
|
||
|
that he was dead. Without examining him further, I ran
|
||
|
forward to the control board and pressed the starting
|
||
|
button. To my relief, the mechanism responded--the launch
|
||
|
was uninjured. Coming about, I picked up Delcarte. He was
|
||
|
astounded at the sight that met his eyes, and immediately
|
||
|
fell to examining Snider's body for signs of life or an
|
||
|
explanation of the manner in which he met his death.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The fellow had been dead for hours--he was cold and still.
|
||
|
But Delcarte's search was not without results, for above
|
||
|
Snider's heart was a wound, a slit about an inch in length--
|
||
|
such a slit as a sharp knife would make, and in the dead
|
||
|
fingers of one hand was clutched a strand of long brown
|
||
|
hair--Victory's hair was brown.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They say that dead men tell no tales, but Snider told the
|
||
|
story of his end as clearly as though the dead lips had
|
||
|
parted and poured forth the truth. The beast had attacked
|
||
|
the girl, and she had defended her honor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We buried Snider beside the Rhine, and no stone marks his
|
||
|
last resting place. Beasts do not require headstones.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Then we set out in the launch, turning her nose upstream.
|
||
|
When I had told Delcarte and Taylor that I intended
|
||
|
searching for the girl, neither had demurred.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"We had her wrong in our thoughts," said Delcarte, "and the
|
||
|
least that we can do in expiation is to find and rescue
|
||
|
her."
|
||
|
|
||
|
We called her name aloud every few minutes as we motored up
|
||
|
the river, but, though we returned all the way to our former
|
||
|
camping place, we did not find her. I then decided to
|
||
|
retrace our journey, letting Taylor handle the launch, while
|
||
|
Delcarte and I, upon opposite sides of the river, searched
|
||
|
for some sign of the spot where Victory had landed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We found nothing until we had reached a point a few miles
|
||
|
above the spot where I had first seen the launch drifting
|
||
|
down toward us, and there I discovered the remnants of a
|
||
|
recent camp fire.
|
||
|
|
||
|
That Victory carried flint and steel I was aware, and that
|
||
|
it was she who built the fire I was positive. But which way
|
||
|
had she gone since she stopped here?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Would she go on down the river, that she might thus bring
|
||
|
herself nearer her own Grabritin, or would she have sought
|
||
|
to search for us upstream, where she had seen us last?
|
||
|
|
||
|
I had hailed Taylor, and sent him across the river to take
|
||
|
in Delcarte, that the two might join me and discuss my
|
||
|
discovery and our future plans.
|
||
|
|
||
|
While waiting for them, I stood looking out over the river,
|
||
|
my back toward the woods that stretched away to the east
|
||
|
behind me. Delcarte was just stepping into the launch upon
|
||
|
the opposite side of the stream, when, without the least
|
||
|
warning, I was violently seized by both arms and about the
|
||
|
waist--three or four men were upon me at once; my rifle was
|
||
|
snatched from my hands and my revolver from my belt.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I struggled for an instant, but finding my efforts of no
|
||
|
avail, I ceased them, and turned my head to have a look at
|
||
|
my assailants. At the same time several others of them
|
||
|
walked around in front of me, and, to my astonishment, I
|
||
|
found myself looking upon uniformed soldiery, armed with
|
||
|
rifles, revolvers, and sabers, but with faces as black as
|
||
|
coal.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
8
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Delcorte and Taylor were now in mis-stream, coming toward
|
||
|
us, and I called to them to keep aloof until I knew whether
|
||
|
the intentions of my captors were friendly or otherwise. My
|
||
|
good men wanted to come on and annihilate the blacks. But
|
||
|
there were upward of a hundred of the latter, all well
|
||
|
armed, and so I commanded Delcarte to keep out of harm's
|
||
|
way, and stay where he was till I needed him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A young officer called and beckoned to them. But they
|
||
|
refused to come, and so he gave orders that resulted in my
|
||
|
hands being secured at my back, after which the company
|
||
|
marched away, straight toward the east.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I noticed that the men wore spurs, which seemed strange to
|
||
|
me. But when, late in the afternoon, we arrived at their
|
||
|
encampment, I discovered that my captors were cavalrymen.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the center of a plain stood a log fort, with a block-
|
||
|
house at each of its four corners. As we approached, I saw
|
||
|
a herd of cavalry horses grazing under guard outside the
|
||
|
walls of the post. They were small, stocky horses, but the
|
||
|
telltale saddle galls proclaimed their calling. The flag
|
||
|
flying from a tall staff inside the palisade was one which I
|
||
|
had never before seen nor heard of.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We marched directly into the compound, where the company was
|
||
|
dismissed, with the exception of a guard of four privates,
|
||
|
who escorted me in the wake of the young officer. The
|
||
|
latter led us across a small parade ground, where a battery
|
||
|
of light field guns was parked, and toward a log building,
|
||
|
in front of which rose the flagstaff.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I was escorted within the building into the presence of an
|
||
|
old negro, a fine looking man, with a dignified and military
|
||
|
bearing. He was a colonel, I was to learn later, and to him
|
||
|
I owe the very humane treatment that was accorded me while I
|
||
|
remained his prisoner.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He listened to the report of his junior, and then turned to
|
||
|
question me, but with no better results than the former had
|
||
|
accomplished. Then he summoned an orderly, and gave some
|
||
|
instructions. The soldier saluted, and left the room,
|
||
|
returning in about five minutes with a hairy old white man--
|
||
|
just such a savage, primeval-looking fellow as I had
|
||
|
discovered in the woods the day that Snider had disappeared
|
||
|
with the launch.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The colonel evidently expected to use the fellow as
|
||
|
interpreter, but when the savage addressed me it was in a
|
||
|
language as foreign to me as was that of the blacks. At
|
||
|
last the old officer gave it up, and, shaking his head, gave
|
||
|
instructions for my removal.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From his office I was led to a guardhouse, in which I found
|
||
|
about fifty half-naked whites, clad in the skins of wild
|
||
|
beasts. I tried to converse with them, but not one of them
|
||
|
could understand Pan-American, nor could I make head or tail
|
||
|
of their jargon.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For over a month I remained a prisoner there, working from
|
||
|
morning until night at odd jobs about the headquarters
|
||
|
building of the commanding officer. The other prisoners
|
||
|
worked harder than I did, and I owe my better treatment
|
||
|
solely to the kindliness and discrimination of the old
|
||
|
colonel.
|
||
|
|
||
|
What had become of Victory, of Delcarte, of Taylor I could
|
||
|
not know; nor did it seem likely that I should ever learn.
|
||
|
I was most depressed. But I whiled away my time in
|
||
|
performing the duties given me to the best of my ability and
|
||
|
attempting to learn the language of my captors.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Who they were or where they came from was a mystery to me.
|
||
|
That they were the outpost of some pow-erful black nation
|
||
|
seemed likely, yet where the seat of that nation lay I could
|
||
|
not guess.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They looked upon the whites as their inferiors, and treated
|
||
|
us accordingly. They had a literature of their own, and
|
||
|
many of the men, even the common soldiers, were omnivorous
|
||
|
readers. Every two weeks a dust-covered trooper would trot
|
||
|
his jaded mount into the post and deliver a bulging sack of
|
||
|
mail at headquarters. The next day he would be away again
|
||
|
upon a fresh horse toward the south, carrying the soldiers'
|
||
|
letters to friends in the far off land of mystery from
|
||
|
whence they all had come.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Troops, sometimes mounted and sometimes afoot, left the post
|
||
|
daily for what I assumed to be patrol duty. I judged the
|
||
|
little force of a thousand men were detailed here to
|
||
|
maintain the authority of a distant government in a
|
||
|
conquered country. Later, I learned that my surmise was
|
||
|
correct, and this was but one of a great chain of similar
|
||
|
posts that dotted the new frontier of the black nation into
|
||
|
whose hands I had fallen.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Slowly I learned their tongue, so that I could understand
|
||
|
what was said before me, and make myself understood. I had
|
||
|
seen from the first that I was being treated as a slave--
|
||
|
that all whites that fell into the hands of the blacks were
|
||
|
thus treated.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Almost daily new prisoners were brought in, and about three
|
||
|
weeks after I was brought in to the post a troop of cavalry
|
||
|
came from the south to relieve one of the troops stationed
|
||
|
there. There was great jubilation in the encampment after
|
||
|
the arrival of the newcomers, old friendships were renewed
|
||
|
and new ones made. But the happiest men were those of the
|
||
|
troop that was to be relieved.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The next morning they started away, and as they were forced
|
||
|
upon the parade ground we prisoners were marched from our
|
||
|
quarters and lined up before them. A couple of long chains
|
||
|
were brought, with rings in the links every few feet. At
|
||
|
first I could not guess the purpose of these chains. But I
|
||
|
was soon to learn.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A couple of soldiers snapped the first ring around the neck
|
||
|
of a powerful white slave, and one by one the rest of us
|
||
|
were herded to our places, and the work of shackling us neck
|
||
|
to neck commenced.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The colonel stood watching the procedure. Presently his
|
||
|
eyes fell upon me, and he spoke to a young officer at his
|
||
|
side. The latter stepped toward me and motioned me to
|
||
|
follow him. I did so, and was led back to the colonel.
|
||
|
|
||
|
By this time I could understand a few words of their strange
|
||
|
language, and when the colonel asked me if I would prefer to
|
||
|
remain at the post as his body servant, I signified my
|
||
|
willingness as emphatically as possible, for I had seen
|
||
|
enough of the brutality of the common soldiers toward their
|
||
|
white slaves to have no desire to start out upon a march of
|
||
|
unknown length, chained by the neck, and driven on by the
|
||
|
great whips that a score of the soldiers carried to
|
||
|
accelerate the speed of their charges.
|
||
|
|
||
|
About three hundred prisoners who had been housed in six
|
||
|
prisons at the post marched out of the gates that morning,
|
||
|
toward what fate and what future I could not guess. Neither
|
||
|
had the poor devils themselves more than the most vague
|
||
|
conception of what lay in store for them, except that they
|
||
|
were going elsewhere to continue in the slavery that they
|
||
|
had known since their capture by their black conquerors--a
|
||
|
slavery that was to continue until death released them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
My position was altered at the post. From working about the
|
||
|
headquarters office, I was transferred to the colonel's
|
||
|
living quarters. I had greater freedom, and no longer slept
|
||
|
in one of the prisons, but had a little room to myself off
|
||
|
the kitchen of the colonel's log house.
|
||
|
|
||
|
My master was always kind to me, and under him I rapidly
|
||
|
learned the language of my captors, and much concerning them
|
||
|
that had been a mystery to me before. His name was Abu
|
||
|
Belik. He was a colonel in the cavalry of Abyssinia, a
|
||
|
country of which I do not remember ever hearing, but which
|
||
|
Colonel Belik assured me is the oldest civilized country in
|
||
|
the world.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Colonel Belik was born in Adis Abeba, the capital of the
|
||
|
empire, and until recently had been in command of the
|
||
|
emperor's palace guard. Jealousy and the ambition and
|
||
|
intrigue of another officer had lost him the favor of his
|
||
|
emperor, and he had been detailed to this frontier post as a
|
||
|
mark of his sovereign's displeasure.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Some fifty years before, the young emperor, Menelek XIV, was
|
||
|
ambitious. He knew that a great world lay across the waters
|
||
|
far to the north of his capital. Once he had crossed the
|
||
|
desert and looked out upon the blue sea that was the
|
||
|
northern boundary of his dominions.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There lay another world to conquer. Menelek busied himself
|
||
|
with the building of a great fleet, though his people were
|
||
|
not a maritime race. His army crossed into Europe. It met
|
||
|
with little resistance, and for fifty years his soldiers had
|
||
|
been pushing his boundaries farther and farther toward the
|
||
|
north.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The yellow men from the east and north are contesting our
|
||
|
rights here now," said the colonel, "but we shall win--we
|
||
|
shall conquer the world, carrying Christianity to all the
|
||
|
benighted heathen of Europe, and Asia as well."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You are a Christian people?" I asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He looked at me in surprise, nodding his head affirmatively.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I am a Christian," I said. "My people are the most
|
||
|
powerful on earth."
|
||
|
|
||
|
He smiled, and shook his head indulgently, as a father to a
|
||
|
child who sets up his childish judgment against that of his
|
||
|
elders.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Then I set out to prove my point. I told him of our cities,
|
||
|
of our army, of our great navy. He came right back at me
|
||
|
asking for figures, and when he was done I had to admit that
|
||
|
only in our navy were we numerically superior.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Menelek XIV is the undisputed ruler of all the continent of
|
||
|
Africa, of all of ancient Europe except the British Isles,
|
||
|
Scandinavia, and eastern Russia, and has large possessions
|
||
|
and prosperous colonies in what once were Arabia and Turkey
|
||
|
in Asia.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He has a standing army of ten million men, and his people
|
||
|
possess slaves--white slaves--to the number of ten or
|
||
|
fifteen million.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Colonel Belik was much surprised, however, upon his part to
|
||
|
learn of the great nation which lay across the ocean, and
|
||
|
when he found that I was a naval officer, he was inclined to
|
||
|
accord me even greater consideration than formerly. It was
|
||
|
difficult for him to believe my assertion that there were
|
||
|
but few blacks in my country, and that these occupied a
|
||
|
lower social plane than the whites.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Just the reverse is true in Colonel Belik's land. He
|
||
|
considered whites inferior beings, creatures of a lower
|
||
|
order, and assuring me that even the few white freemen of
|
||
|
Abyssinia were never accorded anything approximating a
|
||
|
position of social equality with the blacks. They live in
|
||
|
the poorer districts of the cities, in little white
|
||
|
colonies, and a black who marries a white is socially
|
||
|
ostracized.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The arms and ammunition of the Abyssinians are greatly
|
||
|
inferior to ours, yet they are tremendously effective
|
||
|
against the ill-armed barbarians of Europe. Their rifles
|
||
|
are of a type similar to the magazine rifles of twentieth
|
||
|
century Pan-America, but carrying only five cartridges in
|
||
|
the magazine, in addition to the one in the chamber. They
|
||
|
are of extraordinary length, even those of the cavalry, and
|
||
|
are of extreme accuracy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Abyssinians themselves are a fine looking race of black
|
||
|
men--tall, muscular, with fine teeth, and regular features,
|
||
|
which incline distinctly toward Semitic mold--I refer to the
|
||
|
full-blooded natives of Abyssinia. They are the patricians--
|
||
|
the aristocracy. The army is officered almost exclusively
|
||
|
by them. Among the soldiery a lower type of negro
|
||
|
predominates, with thicker lips and broader, flatter noses.
|
||
|
These men are recruited, so the colonel told me, from among
|
||
|
the conquered tribes of Africa. They are good soldiers--
|
||
|
brave and loyal. They can read and write, and they are
|
||
|
endowed with a self-confidence and pride which, from my
|
||
|
readings of the words of ancient African explorers, must
|
||
|
have been wanting in their earliest progenitors. On the
|
||
|
whole, it is apparent that the black race has thrived far
|
||
|
better in the past two centuries under men of its own color
|
||
|
than it had under the domination of whites during all
|
||
|
previous history.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I had been a prisoner at the little frontier post for over a
|
||
|
month, when orders came to Colonel Belik to hasten to the
|
||
|
eastern frontier with the major portion of his command,
|
||
|
leaving only one troop to garrison the fort. As his body
|
||
|
servant, I accompanied him mounted upon a fiery little
|
||
|
Abyssinian pony.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We marched rapidly for ten days through the heart of the
|
||
|
ancient German empire, halting when night found us in
|
||
|
proximity to water. Often we passed small posts similar to
|
||
|
that at which the colonel's regiment had been quartered,
|
||
|
finding in each instance that only a single company or troop
|
||
|
remained for defence, the balance having been withdrawn
|
||
|
toward the northeast, in the same direction in which we were
|
||
|
moving.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Naturally, the colonel had not confided to me the nature of
|
||
|
his orders. But the rapidity of our march and the fact that
|
||
|
all available troops were being hastened toward the
|
||
|
northeast assured me that a matter of vital importance to
|
||
|
the dominion of Menelek XIV in that part of Europe was
|
||
|
threatening or had already broken.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I could not believe that a simple rising of the savage
|
||
|
tribes of whites would necessitate the mobilizing of such a
|
||
|
force as we presently met with converging from the south
|
||
|
into our trail. There were large bodies of cavalry and
|
||
|
infantry, endless streams of artillery wagons and guns, and
|
||
|
countless horse-drawn covered vehicles laden with camp
|
||
|
equipage, munitions, and provisions.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Here, for the first time, I saw camels, great caravans of
|
||
|
them, bearing all sorts of heavy burdens, and miles upon
|
||
|
miles of elephants doing similar service. It was a scene of
|
||
|
wondrous and barbaric splendor, for the men and beasts from
|
||
|
the south were gaily caparisoned in rich colors, in marked
|
||
|
contrast to the gray uniformed forces of the frontier, with
|
||
|
which I had been familiar.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The rumor reached us that Menelek himself was coming, and
|
||
|
the pitch of excitement to which this announcement raised
|
||
|
the troops was little short of miraculous--at least, to one
|
||
|
of my race and nationality whose rulers for centuries had
|
||
|
been but ordinary men, holding office at the will of the
|
||
|
people for a few brief years.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As I witnessed it, I could not but speculate upon the moral
|
||
|
effect upon his troops of a sovereign's presence in the
|
||
|
midst of battle. All else being equal in war between the
|
||
|
troops of a republic and an empire, could not this
|
||
|
exhilarated mental state, amounting almost to hysteria on
|
||
|
the part of the imperial troops, weigh heavily against the
|
||
|
soldiers of a president? I wonder.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But if the emperor chanced to be absent? What then? Again I
|
||
|
wonder.
|
||
|
|
||
|
On the eleventh day we reached our destination--a walled
|
||
|
frontier city of about twenty thousand. We passed some
|
||
|
lakes, and crossed some old canals before entering the
|
||
|
gates. Within, beside the frame buildings, were many built
|
||
|
of ancient brick and well-cut stone. These, I was told,
|
||
|
were of material taken from the ruins of the ancient city
|
||
|
which, once, had stood upon the site of the present town.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The name of the town, translated from the Abyssinian, is New
|
||
|
Gondar. It stands, I am convinced, upon the ruins of
|
||
|
ancient Berlin, the one time capital of the old German
|
||
|
empire, but except for the old building material used in the
|
||
|
new town there is no sign of the former city.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The day after we arrived, the town was gaily decorated with
|
||
|
flags, streamers, gorgeous rugs, and banners, for the rumor
|
||
|
had proved true--the emperor was coming.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Colonel Belik had accorded me the greatest liberty,
|
||
|
permitting me to go where I pleased, after my few duties had
|
||
|
been performed. As a result of his kindness, I spent much
|
||
|
time wandering about New Gondar, talking with the
|
||
|
inhabitants, and exploring the city of black men.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As I had been given a semi-military uniform which bore
|
||
|
insignia indicating that I was an officer's body servant,
|
||
|
even the blacks treated me with a species of respect, though
|
||
|
I could see by their manner that I was really as the dirt
|
||
|
beneath their feet. They answered my questions civilly
|
||
|
enough, but they would not enter into conversation with me.
|
||
|
It was from other slaves that I learned the gossip of the
|
||
|
city.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Troops were pouring in from the west and south, and pouring
|
||
|
out toward the east. I asked an old slave who was sweeping
|
||
|
the dirt into little piles in the gutters of the street
|
||
|
where the soldiers were going. He looked at me in surprise.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Why, to fight the yellow men, of course," he said. "They
|
||
|
have crossed the border, and are marching toward New
|
||
|
Gondar."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Who will win?" I asked.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He shrugged his shoulders. "Who knows?" he said. "I hope
|
||
|
it will be the yellow men, but Menelek is powerful--it will
|
||
|
take many yellow men to defeat him."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Crowds were gathering along the sidewalks to view the
|
||
|
emperor's entry into the city. I took my place among them,
|
||
|
although I hate crowds, and I am glad that I did, for I
|
||
|
witnessed such a spectacle of barbaric splendor as no other
|
||
|
Pan-American has ever looked upon.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Down the broad main thoroughfare, which may once have been
|
||
|
the historic Unter den Linden, came a brilliant cortege. At
|
||
|
the head rode a regiment of red-coated hussars--enormous
|
||
|
men, black as night. There were troops of riflemen mounted
|
||
|
on camels. The emperor rode in a golden howdah upon the
|
||
|
back of a huge elephant so covered with rich hangings and
|
||
|
embellished with scintillating gems that scarce more than
|
||
|
the beast's eyes and feet were visible.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Menelek was a rather gross-looking man, well past middle
|
||
|
age, but he carried himself with an air of dignity befitting
|
||
|
one descended in unbroken line from the Prophet--as was his
|
||
|
claim.
|
||
|
|
||
|
His eyes were bright but crafty, and his features denoted
|
||
|
both sensuality and cruelness. In his youth he may have
|
||
|
been a rather fine looking black, but when I saw him his
|
||
|
appearance was revolting--to me, at least.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Following the emperor came regiment after regiment from the
|
||
|
various branches of the service, among them batteries of
|
||
|
field guns mounted on elephants.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the center of the troops following the imperial elephant
|
||
|
marched a great caravan of slaves. The old street sweeper
|
||
|
at my elbow told me that these were the gifts brought in
|
||
|
from the far outlying districts by the commanding officers
|
||
|
of the frontier posts. The majority of them were women,
|
||
|
destined, I was told, for the harems of the emperor and his
|
||
|
favorites. It made my old companion clench his fists to see
|
||
|
those poor white women marching past to their horrid fates,
|
||
|
and, though I shared his sentiments, I was as powerless to
|
||
|
alter their destinies as he.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For a week the troops kept pouring in and out of New Gondar--
|
||
|
in, always, from the south and west, but always toward the
|
||
|
east. Each new contingent brought its gifts to the emperor.
|
||
|
From the south they brought rugs and ornaments and jewels;
|
||
|
from the west, slaves; for the commanding officers of the
|
||
|
western frontier posts had naught else to bring.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From the number of women they brought, I judged that they
|
||
|
knew the weakness of their imperial master.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And then soldiers commenced coming in from the east, but not
|
||
|
with the gay assurance of those who came from the south and
|
||
|
west--no, these others came in covered wagons, blood-soaked
|
||
|
and suffering. They came at first in little parties of
|
||
|
eight or ten, and then they came in fifties, in hundreds,
|
||
|
and one day a thousand maimed and dying men were carted into
|
||
|
New Gondar.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was then that Menelek XIV became uneasy. For fifty years
|
||
|
his armies had conquered wherever they had marched. At
|
||
|
first he had led them in person, lately his presence within
|
||
|
a hundred miles of the battle line had been sufficient for
|
||
|
large engagements--for minor ones only the knowledge that
|
||
|
they were fighting for the glory of their sovereign was
|
||
|
necessary to win victories.
|
||
|
|
||
|
One morning, New Gondar was awakened by the booming of
|
||
|
cannon. It was the first intimation that the townspeople
|
||
|
had received that the enemy was forcing the imperial troops
|
||
|
back upon the city. Dust covered couriers galloped in from
|
||
|
the front. Fresh troops hastened from the city, and about
|
||
|
noon Menelek rode out surrounded by his staff.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For three days thereafter we could hear the cannonading and
|
||
|
the spitting of the small arms, for the battle line was
|
||
|
scarce two leagues from New Gondar. The city was filled
|
||
|
with wounded. Just outside, soldiers were engaged in
|
||
|
throwing up earthworks. It was evident to the least
|
||
|
enlightened that Menelek expected further reverses.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And then the imperial troops fell back upon these new
|
||
|
defenses, or, rather, they were forced back by the enemy.
|
||
|
Shells commenced to fall within the city. Menelek returned
|
||
|
and took up his headquarters in the stone building that was
|
||
|
called the palace. That night came a lull in the
|
||
|
hostilities--a truce had been arranged.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Colonel Belik summoned me about seven o'clock to dress him
|
||
|
for a function at the palace. In the midst of death and
|
||
|
defeat the emperor was about to give a great banquet to his
|
||
|
officers. I was to accompany my master and wait upon him--
|
||
|
I, Jefferson Turck, lieutenant in the Pan-American navy!
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the privacy of the colonel's quarters I had become
|
||
|
accustomed to my menial duties, lightened as they were by
|
||
|
the natural kindliness of my master, but the thought of
|
||
|
appearing in public as a common slave revolted every fine
|
||
|
instinct within me. Yet there was nothing for it but to
|
||
|
obey.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I cannot, even now, bring myself to a narration of the
|
||
|
humiliation which I experienced that night as I stood behind
|
||
|
my black master in silent servility, now pouring his wine,
|
||
|
now cutting up his meats for him, now fanning him with a
|
||
|
large, plumed fan of feathers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As fond as I had grown of him, I could have thrust a knife
|
||
|
into him, so keenly did I feel the affront that had been put
|
||
|
upon me. But at last the long banquet was concluded. The
|
||
|
tables were removed. The emperor ascended a dais at one end
|
||
|
of the room and seated himself upon a throne, and the
|
||
|
entertainment commenced. It was only what ancient history
|
||
|
might have led me to expect--musicians, dancing girls,
|
||
|
jugglers, and the like.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Near midnight, the master of ceremonies announced that the
|
||
|
slave women who had been presented to the emperor since his
|
||
|
arrival in New Gondar would be exhibited, that the royal
|
||
|
host would select such as he wished, after which he would
|
||
|
present the balance of them to his guests. Ah, what royal
|
||
|
generosity!
|
||
|
|
||
|
A small door at one side of the room opened, and the poor
|
||
|
creatures filed in and were ranged in a long line before the
|
||
|
throne. Their backs were toward me. I saw only an
|
||
|
occasional profile as now and then a bolder spirit among
|
||
|
them turned to survey the apartment and the gorgeous
|
||
|
assemblage of officers in their brilliant dress uniforms.
|
||
|
They were profiles of young girls, and pretty, but horror
|
||
|
was indelibly stamped upon them all. I shuddered as I
|
||
|
contemplated their sad fate, and turned my eyes away.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I heard the master of ceremonies command them to prostrate
|
||
|
themselves before the emperor, and the sounds as they went
|
||
|
upon their knees before him, touching their foreheads to the
|
||
|
floor. Then came the official's voice again, in sharp and
|
||
|
peremptory command.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Down, slave!" he cried. "Make obeisance to your
|
||
|
sovereign!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
I looked up, attracted by the tone of the man's voice, to
|
||
|
see a single, straight, slim figure standing erect in the
|
||
|
center of the line of prostrate girls, her arms folded
|
||
|
across her breast and little chin in the air. Her back was
|
||
|
toward me--I could not see her face, though I should like to
|
||
|
see the countenance of this savage young lioness, standing
|
||
|
there defiant among that herd of terrified sheep.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Down! Down!" shouted the master of ceremonies, taking a
|
||
|
step toward her and half drawing his sword.
|
||
|
|
||
|
My blood boiled. To stand there, inactive, while a negro
|
||
|
struck down that brave girl of my own race! Instinctively I
|
||
|
took a forward step to place myself in the man's path. But
|
||
|
at the same instant Menelek raised his hand in a gesture
|
||
|
that halted the officer. The emperor seemed interested, but
|
||
|
in no way angered at the girl's attitude.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Let us inquire," he said in a smooth, pleasant voice, "why
|
||
|
this young woman refuses to do homage to her sovereign," and
|
||
|
he put the question himself directly to her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
She answered him in Abyssinian, but brokenly and with an
|
||
|
accent that betrayed how recently she had acquired her
|
||
|
slight knowledge of the tongue.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I go on my knees to no one," she said. "I have no
|
||
|
sovereign. I myself am sovereign in my own country."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Menelek, at her words, leaned back in his throne and laughed
|
||
|
uproariously. Following his example, which seemed always
|
||
|
the correct procedure, the assembled guests vied with one
|
||
|
another in an effort to laugh more noisily than the emperor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The girl but tilted her chin a bit higher in the air--even
|
||
|
her back proclaimed her utter contempt for her captors.
|
||
|
Finally Menelek restored quiet by the simple expedient of a
|
||
|
frown, whereupon each loyal guest exchanged his mirthful
|
||
|
mien for an emulative scowl.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And who," asked Menelek, "are you, and by what name is your
|
||
|
country called?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I am Victory, Queen of Grabritin," replied the girl so
|
||
|
quickly and so unexpectedly that I gasped in astonishment.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
9
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
Victory! She was here, a slave to these black conquerors.
|
||
|
Once more I started toward her, but better judgment held me
|
||
|
back--I could do nothing to help her other than by stealth.
|
||
|
Could I even accomplish aught by this means? I did not
|
||
|
know. It seemed beyond the pale of possibility, and yet I
|
||
|
should try.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And you will not bend the knee to me?" continued Menelek,
|
||
|
after she had spoken. Victory shook her head in a most
|
||
|
decided negation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You shall be my first choice, then," said the emperor. "I
|
||
|
like your spirit, for the breaking of it will add to my
|
||
|
pleasure in you, and never fear but that it shall be broken--
|
||
|
this very night. Take her to my apartments," and he
|
||
|
motioned to an officer at his side
|
||
|
|
||
|
I was surprised to see Victory follow the man off in
|
||
|
apparent quiet submission. I tried to follow, that I might
|
||
|
be near her against some opportunity to speak with her or
|
||
|
assist in her escape. But, after I had followed them from
|
||
|
the throne room, through several other apartments, and down
|
||
|
a long corridor, I found my further progress barred by a
|
||
|
soldier who stood guard before a doorway through which the
|
||
|
officer conducted Victory.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Almost immediately the officer reappeared and started back
|
||
|
in the direction of the throne room. I had been hiding in a
|
||
|
doorway after the guard had turned me back, having taken
|
||
|
refuge there while his back was turned, and, as the officer
|
||
|
approached me, I withdrew into the room beyond, which was in
|
||
|
darkness. There I remained for a long time, watching the
|
||
|
sentry before the door of the room in which Victory was a
|
||
|
prisoner, and awaiting some favorable circumstance which
|
||
|
would give me entry to her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I have not attempted to fully describe my sensations at the
|
||
|
moment I recognized Victory, because, I can assure you, they
|
||
|
were entirely indescribable. I should never have imagined
|
||
|
that the sight of any human being could affect me as had
|
||
|
this unexpected discovery of Victory in the same room in
|
||
|
which I was, while I had thought of her for weeks either as
|
||
|
dead, or at best hundreds of miles to the west, and as
|
||
|
irretrievably lost to me as though she were, in truth, dead.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I was filled with a strange, mad impulse to be near her. It
|
||
|
was not enough merely to assist her, or protect her--I
|
||
|
desired to touch her--to take her in my arms. I was
|
||
|
astounded at myself. Another thing puzzled me--it was my
|
||
|
incomprehensible feeling of elation since I had again seen
|
||
|
her. With a fate worse than death staring her in the face,
|
||
|
and with the knowledge that I should probably die defending
|
||
|
her within the hour, I was still happier than I had been for
|
||
|
weeks--and all because I had seen again for a few brief
|
||
|
minutes the figure of a little heathen maiden. I couldn't
|
||
|
account for it, and it angered me; I had never before felt
|
||
|
any such sensations in the presence of a woman, and I had
|
||
|
made love to some very beautiful ones in my time.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It seemed ages that I stood in the shadow of that doorway,
|
||
|
in the ill-lit corridor of the palace of Menelek XIV. A
|
||
|
sickly gas jet cast a sad pallor upon the black face of the
|
||
|
sentry. The fellow seemed rooted to the spot. Evidently he
|
||
|
would never leave, or turn his back again.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I had been in hiding but a short time when I heard the sound
|
||
|
of distant cannon. The truce had ended, and the battle had
|
||
|
been resumed. Very shortly thereafter the earth shook to
|
||
|
the explosion of a shell within the city, and from time to
|
||
|
time thereafter other shells burst at no great distance from
|
||
|
the palace. The yellow men were bombarding New Gondar
|
||
|
again.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Presently officers and slaves commenced to traverse the
|
||
|
corridor on matters pertaining to their duties, and then
|
||
|
came the emperor, scowling and wrathful. He was followed by
|
||
|
a few personal attendants, whom he dismissed at the doorway
|
||
|
to his apartments--the same doorway through which Victory
|
||
|
had been taken. I chafed to follow him, but the corridor
|
||
|
was filled with people. At last they betook themselves to
|
||
|
their own apartments, which lay upon either side of the
|
||
|
corridor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
An officer and a slave entered the very room in which I hid,
|
||
|
forcing me to flatten myself to one side in the darkness
|
||
|
until they had passed. Then the slave made a light, and I
|
||
|
knew that I must find another hiding place.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Stepping boldly into the corridor, I saw that it was now
|
||
|
empty save for the single sentry before the emperor's door.
|
||
|
He glanced up as I emerged from the room, the occupants of
|
||
|
which had not seen me. I walked straight toward the
|
||
|
soldier, my mind made up in an instant. I tried to simulate
|
||
|
an expression of cringing servility, and I must have
|
||
|
succeeded, for I entirely threw the man off his guard, so
|
||
|
that he permitted me to approach within reach of his rifle
|
||
|
before stopping me. Then it was too late--for him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Without a word or a warning, I snatched the piece from his
|
||
|
grasp, and, at the same time struck him a terrific blow
|
||
|
between the eyes with my clenched fist. He staggered back
|
||
|
in surprise, too dumbfounded even to cry out, and then I
|
||
|
clubbed his rifle and felled him with a single mighty blow.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A moment later, I had burst into the room beyond. It was
|
||
|
empty!
|
||
|
|
||
|
I gazed about, mad with disappointment. Two doors opened
|
||
|
from this to other rooms. I ran to the nearer and listened.
|
||
|
Yes, voices were coming from beyond and one was a woman's,
|
||
|
level and cold and filled with scorn. There was no terror
|
||
|
in it. It was Victory's.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I turned the knob and pushed the door inward just in time to
|
||
|
see Menelek seize the girl and drag her toward the far end
|
||
|
of the apartment. At the same instant there was a deafening
|
||
|
roar just outside the palace--a shell had struck much nearer
|
||
|
than any of its predecessors. The noise of it drowned my
|
||
|
rapid rush across the room.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But in her struggles, Victory turned Menelek about so that
|
||
|
he saw me. She was striking him in the face with her
|
||
|
clenched fist, and now he was choking her.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At sight of me, he gave voice to a roar of anger.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What means this, slave?" he cried. "Out of here! Out of
|
||
|
here! Quick, before I kill you!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
But for answer I rushed upon him, striking him with the butt
|
||
|
of the rifle. He staggered back, dropping Victory to the
|
||
|
floor, and then he cried aloud for the guard, and came at
|
||
|
me. Again and again I struck him; but his thick skull might
|
||
|
have been armor plate, for all the damage I did it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He tried to close with me, seizing the rifle, but I was
|
||
|
stronger than he, and, wrenching the weapon from his grasp,
|
||
|
tossed it aside and made for his throat with my bare hands.
|
||
|
I had not dared fire the weapon for fear that its report
|
||
|
would bring the larger guard stationed at the farther end of
|
||
|
the corridor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We struggled about the room, striking one another, knocking
|
||
|
over furniture, and rolling upon the floor. Menelek was a
|
||
|
powerful man, and he was fighting for his life. Continually
|
||
|
he kept calling for the guard, until I succeeded in getting
|
||
|
a grip upon his throat; but it was too late. His cries had
|
||
|
been heard, and suddenly the door burst open, and a score of
|
||
|
armed guardsmen rushed into the apartment.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Victory seized the rifle from the floor and leaped between
|
||
|
me and them. I had the black emperor upon his back, and
|
||
|
both my hands were at his throat, choking the life from him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The rest happened in the fraction of a second. There was a
|
||
|
rending crash above us, then a deafening explosion within
|
||
|
the chamber. Smoke and powder fumes filled the room. Half
|
||
|
stunned, I rose from the lifeless body of my antagonist just
|
||
|
in time to see Victory stagger to her feet and turn toward
|
||
|
me. Slowly the smoke cleared to reveal the shattered
|
||
|
remnants of the guard. A shell had fallen through the
|
||
|
palace roof and exploded just in the rear of the detachment
|
||
|
of guardsmen who were coming to the rescue of their emperor.
|
||
|
Why neither Victory nor I were struck is a miracle. The
|
||
|
room was a wreck. A great, jagged hole was torn in the
|
||
|
ceiling, and the wall toward the corridor had been blown
|
||
|
entirely out.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As I rose, Victory had risen, too, and started toward me.
|
||
|
But when she saw that I was uninjured she stopped, and stood
|
||
|
there in the center of the demolished apartment looking at
|
||
|
me. Her expression was inscrutable--I could not guess
|
||
|
whether she was glad to see me, or not.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Victory!" I cried. "Thank God that you are safe!" And I
|
||
|
approached her, a greater gladness in my heart than I had
|
||
|
felt since the moment that I knew the Coldwater must be
|
||
|
swept beyond thirty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There was no answering gladness in her eyes. Instead, she
|
||
|
stamped her little foot in anger.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Why did it have to be you who saved me!" she exclaimed. "I
|
||
|
hate you!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Hate me?" I asked. "Why should you hate me, Victory? I do
|
||
|
not hate you. I--I--" What was I about to say? I was very
|
||
|
close to her as a great light broke over me. Why had I
|
||
|
never realized it before? The truth accounted for a great
|
||
|
many hitherto inexplicable moods that had claimed me from
|
||
|
time to time since first I had seen Victory.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Why should I hate you?" she repeated. "Because Snider told
|
||
|
me--he told me that you had promised me to him, but he did
|
||
|
not get me. I killed him, as I should like to kill you!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Snider lied!" I cried. And then I seized her and held her
|
||
|
in my arms, and made her listen to me, though she struggled
|
||
|
and fought like a young lioness. "I love you, Victory. You
|
||
|
must know that I love you--that I have always loved you, and
|
||
|
that I never could have made so base a promise."
|
||
|
|
||
|
She ceased her struggles, just a trifle, but still tried to
|
||
|
push me from her. "You called me a barbarian!" she said.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ah, so that was it! That still rankled. I crushed her to
|
||
|
me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You could not love a barbarian," she went on, but she had
|
||
|
ceased to struggle.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But I do love a barbarian, Victory!" I cried, "the dearest
|
||
|
barbarian in the world."
|
||
|
|
||
|
She raised her eyes to mine, and then her smooth, brown arms
|
||
|
encircled my neck and drew my lips down to hers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I love you--I have loved you always!" she said, and then
|
||
|
she buried her face upon my shoulder and sobbed. "I have
|
||
|
been so unhappy," she said, "but I could not die while I
|
||
|
thought that you might live."
|
||
|
|
||
|
As we stood there, momentarily forgetful of all else than
|
||
|
our new found happiness, the ferocity of the bombardment
|
||
|
increased until scarce thirty seconds elapsed between the
|
||
|
shells that rained about the palace.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To remain long would be to invite certain death. We could
|
||
|
not escape the way that we had entered the apartment, for
|
||
|
not only was the corridor now choked with debris, but beyond
|
||
|
the corridor there were doubtless many members of the
|
||
|
emperor's household who would stop us.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Upon the opposite side of the room was another door, and
|
||
|
toward this I led the way. It opened into a third apartment
|
||
|
with windows overlooking an inner court. From one of these
|
||
|
windows I surveyed the courtyard. Apparently it was empty,
|
||
|
and the rooms upon the opposite side were unlighted.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Assisting Victory to the open, I followed, and together we
|
||
|
crossed the court, discovering upon the opposite side a
|
||
|
number of wide, wooden doors set in the wall of the palace,
|
||
|
with small windows between. As we stood close behind one of
|
||
|
the doors, listening, a horse within neighed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The stables!" I whispered, and, a moment later, had pushed
|
||
|
back a door and entered. From the city about us we could
|
||
|
hear the din of great commotion, and quite close the sounds
|
||
|
of battle--the crack of thousands of rifles, the yells of
|
||
|
the soldiers, the hoarse commands of officers, and the blare
|
||
|
of bugles.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The bombardment had ceased as suddenly as it had commenced.
|
||
|
I judged that the enemy was storming the city, for the
|
||
|
sounds we heard were the sounds of hand-to-hand combat.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Within the stables I groped about until I had found saddles
|
||
|
and bridles for two horses. But afterward, in the darkness,
|
||
|
I could find but a single mount. The doors of the opposite
|
||
|
side, leading to the street, were open, and we could see
|
||
|
great multitudes of men, women, and children fleeing toward
|
||
|
the west. Soldiers, afoot and mounted, were joining the mad
|
||
|
exodus. Now and then a camel or an elephant would pass
|
||
|
bearing some officer or dignitary to safety. It was evident
|
||
|
that the city would fall at any moment--a fact which was
|
||
|
amply proclaimed by the terror-stricken haste of the fear-
|
||
|
mad mob.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Horse, camel, and elephant trod helpless women and children
|
||
|
beneath their feet. A common soldier dragged a general from
|
||
|
his mount, and, leaping to the animal's back, fled down the
|
||
|
packed street toward the west. A woman seized a gun and
|
||
|
brained a court dignitary, whose horse had trampled her
|
||
|
child to death. Shrieks, curses, commands, supplications
|
||
|
filled the air. It was a frightful scene--one that will be
|
||
|
burned upon my memory forever.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I had saddled and bridled the single horse which had
|
||
|
evidently been overlooked by the royal household in its
|
||
|
flight, and, standing a little back in the shadow of the
|
||
|
stable's interior, Victory and I watched the surging throng
|
||
|
without.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To have entered it would have been to have courted greater
|
||
|
danger than we were already in. We decided to wait until
|
||
|
the stress of blacks thinned, and for more than an hour we
|
||
|
stood there while the sounds of battle raged upon the
|
||
|
eastern side of the city and the population flew toward the
|
||
|
west. More and more numerous became the uniformed soldiers
|
||
|
among the fleeing throng, until, toward the last, the street
|
||
|
was packed with them. It was no orderly retreat, but a
|
||
|
rout, complete and terrible.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The fighting was steadily approaching us now, until the
|
||
|
crack of rifles sounded in the very street upon which we
|
||
|
were looking. And then came a handful of brave men--a
|
||
|
little rear guard backing slowly toward the west, working
|
||
|
their smoking rifles in feverish haste as they fired volley
|
||
|
after volley at the foe we could not see.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But these were pressed back and back until the first line of
|
||
|
the enemy came opposite our shelter. They were men of
|
||
|
medium height, with olive complexions and almond eyes. In
|
||
|
them I recognized the descendants of the ancient Chinese
|
||
|
race.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They were well uniformed and superbly armed, and they fought
|
||
|
bravely and under perfect discipline. So rapt was I in the
|
||
|
exciting events transpiring in the street that I did not
|
||
|
hear the approach of a body of men from behind. It was a
|
||
|
party of the conquerors who had entered the palace and were
|
||
|
searching it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They came upon us so unexpectedly that we were prisoners
|
||
|
before we realized what had happened. That night we were
|
||
|
held under a strong guard just outside the eastern wall of
|
||
|
the city, and the next morning were started upon a long
|
||
|
march toward the east.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Our captors were not unkind to us, and treated the women
|
||
|
prisoners with respect. We marched for many days--so many
|
||
|
that I lost count of them--and at last we came to another
|
||
|
city--a Chinese city this time--which stands upon the site
|
||
|
of ancient Moscow.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It is only a small frontier city, but it is well built and
|
||
|
well kept. Here a large military force is maintained, and
|
||
|
here also, is a terminus of the railroad that crosses modern
|
||
|
China to the Pacific.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There was every evidence of a high civilization in all that
|
||
|
we saw within the city, which, in connection with the humane
|
||
|
treatment that had been accorded all prisoners upon the long
|
||
|
and tiresome march, encouraged me to hope that I might
|
||
|
appeal to some high officer here for the treatment which my
|
||
|
rank and birth merited.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We could converse with our captors only through the medium
|
||
|
of interpreters who spoke both Chinese and Abyssinian. But
|
||
|
there were many of these, and shortly after we reached the
|
||
|
city I persuaded one of them to carry a verbal message to
|
||
|
the officer who had commanded the troops during the return
|
||
|
from New Gondar, asking that I might be given a hearing by
|
||
|
some high official.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The reply to my request was a summons to appear before the
|
||
|
officer to whom I had addressed my appeal. A sergeant came
|
||
|
for me along with the interpreter, and I managed to obtain
|
||
|
his permission to let Victory accompany me--I had never left
|
||
|
her alone with the prisoners since we had been captured.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To my delight I found that the officer into whose presence
|
||
|
we were conducted spoke Abyssinian fluently. He was
|
||
|
astounded when I told him that I was a Pan-American. Unlike
|
||
|
all others whom I had spoken with since my arrival in
|
||
|
Europe, he was well acquainted with ancient history--was
|
||
|
familiar with twentieth century conditions in Pan-America,
|
||
|
and after putting a half dozen questions to me was satisfied
|
||
|
that I spoke the truth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When I told him that Victory was Queen of England he showed
|
||
|
little surprise, telling me that in their recent
|
||
|
explorations in ancient Russia they had found many
|
||
|
descendants of the old nobility and royalty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He immediately set aside a comfortable house for us,
|
||
|
furnished us with servants and with money, and in other ways
|
||
|
showed us every attention and kindness.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He told me that he would telegraph his emperor at once, and
|
||
|
the result was that we were presently commanded to repair to
|
||
|
Peking and present ourselves before the ruler.
|
||
|
|
||
|
We made the journey in a comfortable railway carriage,
|
||
|
through a country which, as we traveled farther toward the
|
||
|
east, showed increasing evidence of prosperity and wealth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At the imperial court we were received with great kindness,
|
||
|
the emperor being most inquisitive about the state of modern
|
||
|
Pan-America. He told me that while he personally deplored
|
||
|
the existence of the strict regulations which had raised a
|
||
|
barrier between the east and the west, he had felt, as had
|
||
|
his predecessors, that recognition of the wishes of the
|
||
|
great Pan-American federation would be most conducive to the
|
||
|
continued peace of the world.
|
||
|
|
||
|
His empire includes all of Asia, and the islands of the
|
||
|
Pacific as far east as 175dW. The empire of Japan no longer
|
||
|
exists, having been conquered and absorbed by China over a
|
||
|
hundred years ago. The Philippines are well administered,
|
||
|
and constitute one of the most progressive colonies of the
|
||
|
Chinese empire.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The emperor told me that the building of this great empire
|
||
|
and the spreading of enlightenment among its diversified and
|
||
|
savage peoples had required all the best efforts of nearly
|
||
|
two hundred years. Upon his accession to the throne he had
|
||
|
found the labor well nigh perfected and had turned his
|
||
|
attention to the reclamation of Europe.
|
||
|
|
||
|
His ambition is to wrest it from the hands of the blacks,
|
||
|
and then to attempt the work of elevating its fallen peoples
|
||
|
to the high estate from which the Great War precipitated
|
||
|
them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I asked him who was victorious in that war, and he shook his
|
||
|
head sadly as he replied:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Pan-America, perhaps, and China, with the blacks of
|
||
|
Abyssinia," he said. "Those who did not fight were the only
|
||
|
ones to reap any of the rewards that are supposed to belong
|
||
|
to victory. The combatants reaped naught but annihilation.
|
||
|
You have seen--better than any man you must realize that
|
||
|
there was no victory for any nation embroiled in that
|
||
|
frightful war."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"When did it end?" I asked him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Again he shook his head. "It has not ended yet. There has
|
||
|
never been a formal peace declared in Europe. After a while
|
||
|
there were none left to make peace, and the rude tribes
|
||
|
which sprang from the survivors continued to fight among
|
||
|
themselves because they knew no better condition of society.
|
||
|
War razed the works of man--war and pestilence razed man.
|
||
|
God give that there shall never be such another war!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
You all know how Porfirio Johnson returned to Pan-America
|
||
|
with John Alvarez in chains; how Alvarez's trial raised a
|
||
|
popular demonstration that the government could not ignore.
|
||
|
His eloquent appeal--not for himself, but for me--is
|
||
|
historic, as are its results. You know how a fleet was sent
|
||
|
across the Atlantic to search for me, how the restrictions
|
||
|
against crossing thirty to one hundred seventy-five were
|
||
|
removed forever, and how the officers were brought to
|
||
|
Peking, arriving upon the very day that Victory and I were
|
||
|
married at the imperial court.
|
||
|
|
||
|
My return to Pan-America was very different from anything I
|
||
|
could possibly have imagined a year before. Instead of
|
||
|
being received as a traitor to my country, I was acclaimed a
|
||
|
hero. It was good to get back again, good to witness the
|
||
|
kindly treatment that was accorded my dear Victory, and when
|
||
|
I learned that Delcarte and Taylor had been found at the
|
||
|
mouth of the Rhine and were already back in Pan-America my
|
||
|
joy was unalloyed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And now we are going back, Victory and I, with the men and
|
||
|
the munitions and power to reclaim England for her queen.
|
||
|
Again I shall cross thirty, but under what altered
|
||
|
conditions!
|
||
|
|
||
|
A new epoch for Europe is inaugurated, with enlightened
|
||
|
China on the east and enlightened Pan-America on the west--
|
||
|
the two great peace powers whom God has preserved to
|
||
|
regenerate chastened and forgiven Europe. I have been
|
||
|
through much--I have suffered much, but I have won two great
|
||
|
laurel wreaths beyond thirty. One is the opportunity to
|
||
|
rescue Europe from barbarism, the other is a little
|
||
|
barbarian, and the greater of these is--Victory.
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
End of Project Gutenberg etext of The Lost Continent by
|
||
|
Edgar Rice Burroughs
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|
||
|
|