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8075 lines
373 KiB
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**Welcome To The World of Free Plain Vanilla Electronic Texts**
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The Project Gutenberg Etext of Burroughs' "A Princess of Mars"
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The Project Gutenberg Etext of A PRINCESS OF MARS
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by Edgar Rice Burroughs
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CHAPTER I
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ON THE ARIZONA HILLS
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I am a very old man; how old I do not know. Possibly I am
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a hundred, possibly more; but I cannot tell because I have
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never aged as other men, nor do I remember any childhood.
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So far as I can recollect I have always been a man, a man
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of about thirty. I appear today as I did forty years and
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more ago, and yet I feel that I cannot go on living forever;
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that some day I shall die the real death from which there is
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no resurrection. I do not know why I should fear death,
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I who have died twice and am still alive; but yet I have the
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same horror of it as you who have never died, and it is
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because of this terror of death, I believe, that I am so
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|
convinced of my mortality.
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And because of this conviction I have determined to write
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down the story of the interesting periods of my life and of
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my death. I cannot explain the phenomena;I can only set
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down here in the words of an ordinary soldier of fortune a
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chronicle of the strange events that befell me during the ten
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years that my dead body lay undiscovered in an Arizona
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cave.
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I have never told this story, nor shall mortal man see this
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manuscript until after I have passed over for eternity. I know
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that the average human mind will not believe what it cannot
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grasp, and so I do not purpose being pilloried by the public,
|
|
the pulpit, and the press, and held up as a colossal
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liar when I am but telling the simple truths which some day
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science will substantiate. Possibly the suggestions which I
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gained upon Mars, and the knowledge which I can set down
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in this chronicle, will aid in an earlier understanding of the
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mysteries of our sister planet; mysteries to you, but no
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longer mysteries to me.
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My name is John Carter; I am better known as Captain Jack
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Carter of Virginia. At the close of the Civil War I found
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myself possessed of several hundred thousand dollars
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(Confederate) and a captain's commission in the cavalry arm
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of an army which no longer existed; the servant of a state
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which had vanished with the hopes of the South. Masterless,
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penniless, and with my only means of livelihood, fighting,
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gone, I determined to work my way to the southwest and
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attempt to retrieve my fallen fortunes in a search for gold.
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I spent nearly a year prospecting in company with another
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Confederate officer, Captain James K. Powell of Richmond.
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We were extremely fortunate, for late in the winter of
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1865, after many hardships and privations, we located the
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most remarkable gold-bearing quartz vein that our wildest
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dreams had ever pictured. Powell, who was a mining engineer
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by education, stated that we had uncovered over a million
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dollars worth of ore in a trifle over three months.
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As our equipment was crude in the extreme we decided
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that one of us must return to civilization, purchase the
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necessary machinery and return with a sufficient force of
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men properly to work the mine.
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As Powell was familiar with the country, as well as with
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the mechanical requirements of mining we determined that
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it would be best for him to make the trip. It was agreed that
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I was to hold down our claim against the remote possibility
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of its being jumped by some wandering prospector.
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On March 3, 1866, Powell and I packed his provisions on
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two of our burros, and bidding me good-bye he mounted
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his horse, and started down the mountainside toward the
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valley, across which led the first stage of his journey.
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The morning of Powell's departure was, like nearly
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all Arizona mornings, clear and beautiful; I could see
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him and his little pack animals picking their way down the
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mountainside toward the valley, and all during the morning I
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would catch occasional glimpses of them as they topped a hog
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back or came out upon a level plateau. My last sight of
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Powell was about three in the afternoon as he entered the
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shadows of the range on the opposite side of the valley.
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Some half hour later I happened to glance casually across
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the valley and was much surprised to note three little dots
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in about the same place I had last seen my friend and his
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two pack animals. I am not given to needless worrying, but
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the more I tried to convince myself that all was well with
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Powell, and that the dots I had seen on his trail were
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antelope or wild horses, the less I was able to assure myself.
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Since we had entered the territory we had not seen a
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hostile Indian, and we had, therefore, become careless in the
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extreme, and were wont to ridicule the stories we had
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heard of the great numbers of these vicious marauders that
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were supposed to haunt the trails, taking their toll in lives
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and torture of every white party which fell into their
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merciless clutches.
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Powell, I knew, was well armed and, further, an
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experienced Indian fighter; but I too had lived and fought
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for years among the Sioux in the North, and I knew that his
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chances were small against a party of cunning trailing
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Apaches. Finally I could endure the suspense no longer,
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and, arming myself with my two Colt revolvers and a
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carbine, I strapped two belts of cartridges about me and
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catching my saddle horse, started down the trail taken by
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Powell in the morning.
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As soon as I reached comparatively level ground I urged
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my mount into a canter and continued this, where the going
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permitted, until, close upon dusk, I discovered the point
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where other tracks joined those of Powell. They were the
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tracks of unshod ponies, three of them, and the ponies had
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been galloping.
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I followed rapidly until, darkness shutting down, I was
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forced to await the rising of the moon, and given an opportunity
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to speculate on the question of the wisdom of my chase.
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Possibly I had conjured up impossible dangers, like
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some nervous old housewife, and when I should catch up
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with Powell would get a good laugh for my pains.
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However, I am not prone to sensitiveness, and the following
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of a sense of duty, wherever it may lead, has always been a
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kind of fetich with me throughout my life; which may account
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for the honors bestowed upon me by three republics and the
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decorations and friendships of an old and powerful emperor
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and several lesser kings, in whose service my sword has
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been red many a time.
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About nine o'clock the moon was sufficiently bright for
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me to proceed on my way and I had no difficulty in following
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the trail at a fast walk, and in some places at a brisk
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trot until, about midnight, I reached the water hole where
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Powell had expected to camp. I came upon the spot unexpectedly,
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finding it entirely deserted, with no signs of having been
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recently occupied as a camp.
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I was interested to note that the tracks of the pursuing
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horsemen, for such I was now convinced they must be, continued
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after Powell with only a brief stop at the hole for water;
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and always at the same rate of speed as his.
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I was positive now that the trailers were Apaches and that
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they wished to capture Powell alive for the fiendish pleasure
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|
of the torture, so I urged my horse onward at a most
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|
dangerous pace, hoping against hope that I would catch up
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with the red rascals before they attacked him.
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Further speculation was suddenly cut short by the faint
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report of two shots far ahead of me. I knew that Powell
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would need me now if ever, and I instantly urged my
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horse to his topmost speed up the narrow and difficult
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mountain trail.
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I had forged ahead for perhaps a mile or more without
|
|
hearing further sounds, when the trail suddenly debouched
|
|
onto a small, open plateau near the summit of the pass. I
|
|
had passed through a narrow, overhanging gorge just before
|
|
entering suddenly upon this table land, and the sight which
|
|
met my eyes filled me with consternation and dismay.
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The little stretch of level land was white with Indian
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tepees, and there were probably half a thousand red warriors
|
|
clustered around some object near the center of the camp.
|
|
Their attention was so wholly riveted to this point of interest
|
|
that they did not notice me, and I easily could have
|
|
turned back into the dark recesses of the gorge and made
|
|
my escape with perfect safety. The fact, however, that this
|
|
thought did not occur to me until the following day removes
|
|
any possible right to a claim to heroism to which the narration
|
|
of this episode might possibly otherwise entitle me.
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|
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I do not believe that I am made of the stuff which
|
|
constitutes heroes, because, in all of the hundreds of instances
|
|
that my voluntary acts have placed me face to face with
|
|
death, I cannot recall a single one where any alternative
|
|
step to that I took occurred to me until many hours later.
|
|
My mind is evidently so constituted that I am subconsciously
|
|
forced into the path of duty without recourse to tiresome
|
|
mental processes. However that may be, I have never regretted
|
|
that cowardice is not optional with me.
|
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|
|
In this instance I was, of course, positive that Powell was
|
|
the center of attraction, but whether I thought or acted first
|
|
I do not know, but within an instant from the moment the
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scene broke upon my view I had whipped out my revolvers
|
|
and was charging down upon the entire army of warriors,
|
|
shooting rapidly, and whooping at the top of my lungs.
|
|
Singlehanded, I could not have pursued better tactics, for
|
|
the red men, convinced by sudden surprise that not less
|
|
than a regiment of regulars was upon them, turned and fled
|
|
in every direction for their bows, arrows, and rifles.
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The view which their hurried routing disclosed filled me
|
|
with apprehension and with rage. Under the clear rays of the
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Arizona moon lay Powell, his body fairly bristling with the
|
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hostile arrows of the braves. That he was already dead I
|
|
could not but be convinced, and yet I would have saved his
|
|
body from mutilation at the hands of the Apaches as
|
|
quickly as I would have saved the man himself from death.
|
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|
|
Riding close to him I reached down from the saddle,
|
|
and grasping his cartridge belt drew him up across the withers
|
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of my mount. A backward glance convinced me that to
|
|
return by the way I had come would be more hazardous
|
|
than to continue across the plateau, so, putting spurs to my
|
|
poor beast, I made a dash for the opening to the pass which
|
|
I could distinguish on the far side of the table land.
|
|
|
|
The Indians had by this time discovered that I was alone
|
|
and I was pursued with imprecations, arrows, and rifle balls.
|
|
The fact that it is difficult to aim anything but imprecations
|
|
accurately by moonlight, that they were upset by the sudden
|
|
and unexpected manner of my advent, and that I was a
|
|
rather rapidly moving target saved me from the various
|
|
deadly projectiles of the enemy and permitted me to reach
|
|
the shadows of the surrounding peaks before an orderly
|
|
pursuit could be organized.
|
|
|
|
My horse was traveling practically unguided as I knew
|
|
that I had probably less knowledge of the exact location of
|
|
the trail to the pass than he, and thus it happened that he
|
|
entered a defile which led to the summit of the range and not
|
|
to the pass which I had hoped would carry me to the
|
|
valley and to safety. It is probable, however, that to this
|
|
fact I owe my life and the remarkable experiences and
|
|
adventures which befell me during the following ten years.
|
|
|
|
My first knowledge that I was on the wrong trail came
|
|
when I heard the yells of the pursuing savages suddenly
|
|
grow fainter and fainter far off to my left.
|
|
|
|
I knew then that they had passed to the left of the jagged
|
|
rock formation at the edge of the plateau, to the right of
|
|
which my horse had borne me and the body of Powell.
|
|
|
|
I drew rein on a little level promontory overlooking the
|
|
trail below and to my left, and saw the party of pursuing
|
|
savages disappearing around the point of a neighboring peak.
|
|
|
|
I knew the Indians would soon discover that they were
|
|
on the wrong trail and that the search for me would be renewed
|
|
in the right direction as soon as they located my tracks.
|
|
|
|
I had gone but a short distance further when what
|
|
seemed to be an excellent trail opened up around the face of
|
|
a high cliff. The trail was level and quite broad and led upward
|
|
and in the general direction I wished to go. The cliff
|
|
arose for several hundred feet on my right, and on my left
|
|
was an equal and nearly perpendicular drop to the bottom
|
|
of a rocky ravine.
|
|
|
|
I had followed this trail for perhaps a hundred yards
|
|
when a sharp turn to the right brought me to the mouth of
|
|
a large cave. The opening was about four feet in height and
|
|
three to four feet wide, and at this opening the trail ended.
|
|
|
|
It was now morning, and, with the customary lack of dawn
|
|
which is a startling characteristic of Arizona, it had become
|
|
daylight almost without warning.
|
|
|
|
Dismounting, I laid Powell upon the ground, but the most
|
|
painstaking examination failed to reveal the faintest spark
|
|
of life. I forced water from my canteen between his dead
|
|
lips, bathed his face and rubbed his hands, working over him
|
|
continuously for the better part of an hour in the face of
|
|
the fact that I knew him to be dead.
|
|
|
|
I was very fond of Powell; he was thoroughly a man in
|
|
every respect; a polished southern gentleman; a staunch and
|
|
true friend; and it was with a feeling of the deepest grief that
|
|
I finally gave up my crude endeavors at resuscitation.
|
|
|
|
Leaving Powell's body where it lay on the ledge I crept
|
|
into the cave to reconnoiter. I found a large chamber,
|
|
possibly a hundred feet in diameter and thirty or forty feet
|
|
in height; a smooth and well-worn floor, and many other
|
|
evidences that the cave had, at some remote period, been inhabited.
|
|
The back of the cave was so lost in dense shadow that I could not
|
|
distinguish whether there were openings into other apartments or not.
|
|
|
|
As I was continuing my examination I commenced to feel
|
|
a pleasant drowsiness creeping over me which I attributed
|
|
to the fatigue of my long and strenuous ride, and the reaction
|
|
from the excitement of the fight and the pursuit. I felt
|
|
comparatively safe in my present location as I knew that
|
|
one man could defend the trail to the cave against an army.
|
|
|
|
I soon became so drowsy that I could scarcely resist the
|
|
strong desire to throw myself on the floor of the cave for
|
|
a few moments' rest, but I knew that this would never do, as
|
|
it would mean certain death at the hands of my red friends,
|
|
who might be upon me at any moment. With an effort I
|
|
started toward the opening of the cave only to reel drunkenly
|
|
against a side wall, and from there slip prone upon the floor.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER II
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE ESCAPE OF THE DEAD
|
|
|
|
|
|
A sense of delicious dreaminess overcame me, my muscles
|
|
relaxed, and I was on the point of giving way to my desire
|
|
to sleep when the sound of approaching horses reached my
|
|
ears. I attempted to spring to my feet but was horrified to
|
|
discover that my muscles refused to respond to my will. I was
|
|
now thoroughly awake, but as unable to move a muscle as
|
|
though turned to stone. It was then, for the first time, that I
|
|
noticed a slight vapor filling the cave. It was extremely
|
|
tenuous and only noticeable against the opening which led to
|
|
daylight. There also came to my nostrils a faintly pungent
|
|
odor, and I could only assume that I had been overcome by
|
|
some poisonous gas, but why I should retain my mental
|
|
faculties and yet be unable to move I could not fathom.
|
|
|
|
I lay facing the opening of the cave and where I could see
|
|
the short stretch of trail which lay between the cave and the
|
|
turn of the cliff around which the trail led. The noise of the
|
|
approaching horses had ceased, and I judged the Indians were
|
|
creeping stealthily upon me along the little ledge which led to
|
|
my living tomb. I remember that I hoped they would make
|
|
short work of me as I did not particularly relish the thought
|
|
of the innumerable things they might do to me if the spirit
|
|
prompted them.
|
|
|
|
I had not long to wait before a stealthy sound apprised me
|
|
of their nearness, and then a war-bonneted, paint-streaked
|
|
face was thrust cautiously around the shoulder of the cliff, and
|
|
savage eyes looked into mine. That he could see me in the
|
|
dim light of the cave I was sure for the early morning sun was
|
|
falling full upon me through the opening.
|
|
|
|
The fellow, instead of approaching, merely stood and stared;
|
|
his eyes bulging and his jaw dropped. And then another
|
|
savage face appeared, and a third and fourth and fifth, craning
|
|
their necks over the shoulders of their fellows whom they
|
|
could not pass upon the narrow ledge. Each face was the
|
|
picture of awe and fear, but for what reason I did not know,
|
|
nor did I learn until ten years later. That there were still
|
|
other braves behind those who regarded me was apparent from
|
|
the fact that the leaders passed back whispered word to those
|
|
behind them.
|
|
|
|
Suddenly a low but distinct moaning sound issued from the
|
|
recesses of the cave behind me, and, as it reached the ears of
|
|
the Indians, they turned and fled in terror, panic-stricken. So
|
|
frantic were their efforts to escape from the unseen thing
|
|
behind me that one of the braves was hurled headlong from
|
|
the cliff to the rocks below. Their wild cries echoed in the
|
|
canyon for a short time, and then all was still once more.
|
|
|
|
The sound which had frightened them was not repeated, but
|
|
it had been sufficient as it was to start me speculating on the
|
|
possible horror which lurked in the shadows at my back. Fear
|
|
is a relative term and so I can only measure my feelings at
|
|
that time by what I had experienced in previous positions of
|
|
danger and by those that I have passed through since; but I can
|
|
say without shame that if the sensations I endured during the
|
|
next few minutes were fear, then may God help the coward,
|
|
for cowardice is of a surety its own punishment.
|
|
|
|
To be held paralyzed, with one's back toward some horrible
|
|
and unknown danger from the very sound of which the
|
|
ferocious Apache warriors turn in wild stampede, as a flock of
|
|
sheep would madly flee from a pack of wolves, seems to me
|
|
the last word in fearsome predicaments for a man who had
|
|
ever been used to fighting for his life with all the energy of a
|
|
powerful physique.
|
|
|
|
Several times I thought I heard faint sounds behind me as
|
|
of somebody moving cautiously, but eventually even these
|
|
ceased, and I was left to the contemplation of my position
|
|
without interruption. I could but vaguely conjecture the cause
|
|
of my paralysis, and my only hope lay in that it might pass off
|
|
as suddenly as it had fallen upon me.
|
|
|
|
Late in the afternoon my horse, which had been standing
|
|
with dragging rein before the cave, started slowly down the
|
|
trail, evidently in search of food and water, and I was left
|
|
alone with my mysterious unknown companion and the dead
|
|
body of my friend, which lay just within my range of vision
|
|
upon the ledge where I had placed it in the early morning.
|
|
|
|
From then until possibly midnight all was silence, the
|
|
silence of the dead; then, suddenly, the awful moan of the
|
|
morning broke upon my startled ears, and there came again
|
|
from the black shadows the sound of a moving thing, and a
|
|
faint rustling as of dead leaves. The shock to my already
|
|
overstrained nervous system was terrible in the extreme, and
|
|
with a superhuman effort I strove to break my awful bonds.
|
|
It was an effort of the mind, of the will, of the nerves; not
|
|
muscular, for I could not move even so much as my little
|
|
finger, but none the less mighty for all that. And then
|
|
something gave, there was a momentary feeling of nausea, a sharp
|
|
click as of the snapping of a steel wire, and I stood with my
|
|
back against the wall of the cave facing my unknown foe.
|
|
|
|
And then the moonlight flooded the cave, and there before
|
|
me lay my own body as it had been lying all these hours,
|
|
with the eyes staring toward the open ledge and the hands
|
|
resting limply upon the ground. I looked first at my lifeless
|
|
clay there upon the floor of the cave and then down at myself
|
|
in utter bewilderment; for there I lay clothed, and yet here I
|
|
stood but naked as at the minute of my birth.
|
|
|
|
The transition had been so sudden and so unexpected that
|
|
it left me for a moment forgetful of aught else than my
|
|
strange metamorphosis. My first thought was, is this then
|
|
death! Have I indeed passed over forever into that other life!
|
|
But I could not well believe this, as I could feel my heart
|
|
pounding against my ribs from the exertion of my efforts to
|
|
release myself from the anaesthesis which had held me. My
|
|
breath was coming in quick, short gasps, cold sweat stood out
|
|
from every pore of my body, and the ancient experiment of
|
|
pinching revealed the fact that I was anything other than a
|
|
wraith.
|
|
|
|
Again was I suddenly recalled to my immediate surroundings
|
|
by a repetition of the weird moan from the depths of the
|
|
cave. Naked and unarmed as I was, I had no desire to face
|
|
the unseen thing which menaced me.
|
|
|
|
My revolvers were strapped to my lifeless body which, for
|
|
some unfathomable reason, I could not bring myself to touch.
|
|
My carbine was in its boot, strapped to my saddle, and as my
|
|
horse had wandered off I was left without means of defense.
|
|
My only alternative seemed to lie in flight and my decision
|
|
was crystallized by a recurrence of the rustling sound from
|
|
the thing which now seemed, in the darkness of the cave and
|
|
to my distorted imagination, to be creeping stealthily upon me.
|
|
|
|
Unable longer to resist the temptation to escape this horrible
|
|
place I leaped quickly through the opening into the starlight
|
|
of a clear Arizona night. The crisp, fresh mountain air
|
|
outside the cave acted as an immediate tonic and I felt new
|
|
life and new courage coursing through me. Pausing upon the
|
|
brink of the ledge I upbraided myself for what now seemed
|
|
to me wholly unwarranted apprehension. I reasoned with
|
|
myself that I had lain helpless for many hours within the
|
|
cave, yet nothing had molested me, and my better judgment,
|
|
when permitted the direction of clear and logical reasoning,
|
|
convinced me that the noises I had heard must have resulted
|
|
from purely natural and harmless causes; probably the
|
|
conformation of the cave was such that a slight breeze had
|
|
caused the sounds I heard.
|
|
|
|
I decided to investigate, but first I lifted my head to fill my
|
|
lungs with the pure, invigorating night air of the mountains.
|
|
As I did so I saw stretching far below me the beautiful vista
|
|
of rocky gorge, and level, cacti-studded flat, wrought by the
|
|
moonlight into a miracle of soft splendor and wondrous enchantment.
|
|
|
|
Few western wonders are more inspiring than the beauties
|
|
of an Arizona moonlit landscape; the silvered mountains in
|
|
the distance, the strange lights and shadows upon hog back
|
|
and arroyo, and the grotesque details of the stiff, yet beautiful
|
|
cacti form a picture at once enchanting and inspiring; as
|
|
though one were catching for the first time a glimpse of some
|
|
dead and forgotten world, so different is it from the aspect of
|
|
any other spot upon our earth.
|
|
|
|
As I stood thus meditating, I turned my gaze from the
|
|
landscape to the heavens where the myriad stars formed a
|
|
gorgeous and fitting canopy for the wonders of the earthly
|
|
scene. My attention was quickly riveted by a large red star
|
|
close to the distant horizon. As I gazed upon it I felt a spell
|
|
of overpowering fascination--it was Mars, the god of war,
|
|
and for me, the fighting man, it had always held the power of
|
|
irresistible enchantment. As I gazed at it on that far-gone
|
|
night it seemed to call across the unthinkable void, to lure me
|
|
to it, to draw me as the lodestone attracts a particle of iron.
|
|
|
|
My longing was beyond the power of opposition; I closed
|
|
my eyes, stretched out my arms toward the god of my vocation
|
|
and felt myself drawn with the suddenness of thought through
|
|
the trackless immensity of space. There was an instant of
|
|
extreme cold and utter darkness.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER III
|
|
|
|
|
|
MY ADVENT ON MARS
|
|
|
|
|
|
I opened my eyes upon a strange and weird landscape. I
|
|
knew that I was on Mars; not once did I question either my
|
|
sanity or my wakefulness. I was not asleep, no need for pinching
|
|
here; my inner consciousness told me as plainly that I was
|
|
upon Mars as your conscious mind tells you that you are upon
|
|
Earth. You do not question the fact; neither did I.
|
|
|
|
I found myself lying prone upon a bed of yellowish,
|
|
mosslike vegetation which stretched around me in all directions
|
|
for interminable miles. I seemed to be lying in a deep, circular
|
|
basin, along the outer verge of which I could distinguish the
|
|
irregularities of low hills.
|
|
|
|
It was midday, the sun was shining full upon me and the
|
|
heat of it was rather intense upon my naked body, yet no
|
|
greater than would have been true under similar conditions on
|
|
an Arizona desert. Here and there were slight outcroppings
|
|
of quartz-bearing rock which glistened in the sunlight; and
|
|
a little to my left, perhaps a hundred yards, appeared a low,
|
|
walled enclosure about four feet in height. No water, and
|
|
no other vegetation than the moss was in evidence, and as I
|
|
was somewhat thirsty I determined to do a little exploring.
|
|
|
|
Springing to my feet I received my first Martian surprise,
|
|
for the effort, which on Earth would have brought me standing
|
|
upright, carried me into the Martian air to the height of about
|
|
three yards. I alighted softly upon the ground, however, without
|
|
appreciable shock or jar. Now commenced a series of
|
|
evolutions which even then seemed ludicrous in the extreme.
|
|
I found that I must learn to walk all over again, as the muscular
|
|
exertion which carried me easily and safely upon Earth played
|
|
strange antics with me upon Mars.
|
|
|
|
Instead of progressing in a sane and dignified manner, my
|
|
attempts to walk resulted in a variety of hops which took me
|
|
clear of the ground a couple of feet at each step and landed
|
|
me sprawling upon my face or back at the end of each second
|
|
or third hop. My muscles, perfectly attuned and accustomed
|
|
to the force of gravity on Earth, played the mischief with me
|
|
in attempting for the first time to cope with the lesser gravitation
|
|
and lower air pressure on Mars.
|
|
|
|
I was determined, however, to explore the low structure
|
|
which was the only evidence of habitation in sight, and so I
|
|
hit upon the unique plan of reverting to first principles in
|
|
locomotion, creeping. I did fairly well at this and in a few
|
|
moments had reached the low, encircling wall of the enclosure.
|
|
|
|
There appeared to be no doors or windows upon the side
|
|
nearest me, but as the wall was but about four feet high I
|
|
cautiously gained my feet and peered over the top upon the
|
|
strangest sight it had ever been given me to see.
|
|
|
|
The roof of the enclosure was of solid glass about four or
|
|
five inches in thickness, and beneath this were several hundred
|
|
large eggs, perfectly round and snowy white. The eggs were
|
|
nearly uniform in size being about two and one-half feet in
|
|
diameter.
|
|
|
|
Five or six had already hatched and the grotesque caricatures
|
|
which sat blinking in the sunlight were enough to cause
|
|
me to doubt my sanity. They seemed mostly head, with little
|
|
scrawny bodies, long necks and six legs, or, as I afterward
|
|
learned, two legs and two arms, with an intermediary pair of
|
|
limbs which could be used at will either as arms or legs. Their
|
|
eyes were set at the extreme sides of their heads a trifle above
|
|
the center and protruded in such a manner that they could
|
|
be directed either forward or back and also independently of
|
|
each other, thus permitting this queer animal to look in any
|
|
direction, or in two directions at once, without the necessity
|
|
of turning the head.
|
|
|
|
The ears, which were slightly above the eyes and closer together,
|
|
were small, cup-shaped antennae, protruding not more than an inch on
|
|
these young specimens. Their noses were but longitudinal slits in
|
|
the center of their faces, midway between their mouths and ears.
|
|
|
|
There was no hair on their bodies, which were of a very
|
|
light yellowish-green color. In the adults, as I was to learn
|
|
quite soon, this color deepens to an olive green and is darker
|
|
in the male than in the female. Further, the heads of the
|
|
adults are not so out of proportion to their bodies as in the
|
|
case of the young.
|
|
|
|
The iris of the eyes is blood red, as in Albinos, while the
|
|
pupil is dark. The eyeball itself is very white, as are the teeth.
|
|
These latter add a most ferocious appearance to an otherwise
|
|
fearsome and terrible countenance, as the lower tusks
|
|
curve upward to sharp points which end about where the eyes
|
|
of earthly human beings are located. The whiteness of the
|
|
teeth is not that of ivory, but of the snowiest and most gleaming
|
|
of china. Against the dark background of their olive
|
|
skins their tusks stand out in a most striking manner, making
|
|
these weapons present a singularly formidable appearance.
|
|
|
|
Most of these details I noted later, for I was given but little
|
|
time to speculate on the wonders of my new discovery. I had
|
|
seen that the eggs were in the process of hatching, and as I
|
|
stood watching the hideous little monsters break from their
|
|
shells I failed to note the approach of a score of full-grown
|
|
Martians from behind me.
|
|
|
|
Coming, as they did, over the soft and soundless moss,
|
|
which covers practically the entire surface of Mars with the
|
|
exception of the frozen areas at the poles and the scattered
|
|
cultivated districts, they might have captured me easily, but
|
|
their intentions were far more sinister. It was the rattling of
|
|
the accouterments of the foremost warrior which warned me.
|
|
|
|
On such a little thing my life hung that I often marvel that
|
|
I escaped so easily. Had not the rifle of the leader of the
|
|
party swung from its fastenings beside his saddle in such a
|
|
way as to strike against the butt of his great metal shod spear
|
|
I should have snuffed out without ever knowing that death was
|
|
near me. But the little sound caused me to turn, and there
|
|
upon me, not ten feet from my breast, was the point of that
|
|
huge spear, a spear forty feet long, tipped with gleaming
|
|
metal, and held low at the side of a mounted replica of the
|
|
little devils I had been watching.
|
|
|
|
But how puny and harmless they now looked beside this
|
|
huge and terrific incarnation of hate, of vengeance and of
|
|
death. The man himself, for such I may call him, was fully
|
|
fifteen feet in height and, on Earth, would have weighed some
|
|
four hundred pounds. He sat his mount as we sit a horse,
|
|
grasping the animal's barrel with his lower limbs, while the
|
|
hands of his two right arms held his immense spear low at the
|
|
side of his mount; his two left arms were outstretched laterally
|
|
to help preserve his balance, the thing he rode having neither
|
|
bridle or reins of any description for guidance.
|
|
|
|
And his mount! How can earthly words describe it! It
|
|
towered ten feet at the shoulder; had four legs on either
|
|
side; a broad flat tail, larger at the tip than at the root, and
|
|
which it held straight out behind while running; a gaping
|
|
mouth which split its head from its snout to its long, massive
|
|
neck.
|
|
|
|
Like its master, it was entirely devoid of hair, but was of a
|
|
dark slate color and exceeding smooth and glossy. Its belly
|
|
was white, and its legs shaded from the slate of its shoulders
|
|
and hips to a vivid yellow at the feet. The feet themselves were
|
|
heavily padded and nailless, which fact had also contributed
|
|
to the noiselessness of their approach, and, in common
|
|
with a multiplicity of legs, is a characteristic feature of the
|
|
fauna of Mars. The highest type of man and one other animal,
|
|
the only mammal existing on Mars, alone have well-formed
|
|
nails, and there are absolutely no hoofed animals in existence
|
|
there.
|
|
|
|
Behind this first charging demon trailed nineteen others,
|
|
similar in all respects, but, as I learned later, bearing
|
|
individual characteristics peculiar to themselves; precisely as
|
|
no two of us are identical although we are all cast in a similar
|
|
mold. This picture, or rather materialized nightmare, which
|
|
I have described at length, made but one terrible and swift
|
|
impression on me as I turned to meet it.
|
|
|
|
Unarmed and naked as I was, the first law of nature manifested
|
|
itself in the only possible solution of my immediate problem,
|
|
and that was to get out of the vicinity of the point of
|
|
the charging spear. Consequently I gave a very earthly and at
|
|
the same time superhuman leap to reach the top of the
|
|
Martian incubator, for such I had determined it must be.
|
|
|
|
My effort was crowned with a success which appalled me
|
|
no less than it seemed to surprise the Martian warriors, for it
|
|
carried me fully thirty feet into the air and landed me a
|
|
hundred feet from my pursuers and on the opposite side of
|
|
the enclosure.
|
|
|
|
I alighted upon the soft moss easily and without mishap,
|
|
and turning saw my enemies lined up along the further wall.
|
|
Some were surveying me with expressions which I afterward
|
|
discovered marked extreme astonishment, and the others were
|
|
evidently satisfying themselves that I had not molested their
|
|
young.
|
|
|
|
They were conversing together in low tones, and
|
|
gesticulating and pointing toward me. Their discovery that I had
|
|
not harmed the little Martians, and that I was unarmed, must have
|
|
caused them to look upon me with less ferocity; but, as I was
|
|
to learn later, the thing which weighed most in my favor was
|
|
my exhibition of hurdling.
|
|
|
|
While the Martians are immense, their bones are very large
|
|
and they are muscled only in proportion to the gravitation
|
|
which they must overcome. The result is that they are infinitely
|
|
less agile and less powerful, in proportion to their weight,
|
|
than an Earth man, and I doubt that were one of them suddenly
|
|
to be transported to Earth he could lift his own weight from
|
|
the ground; in fact, I am convinced that he could not do so.
|
|
|
|
My feat then was as marvelous upon Mars as it would have
|
|
been upon Earth, and from desiring to annihilate me they
|
|
suddenly looked upon me as a wonderful discovery to be
|
|
captured and exhibited among their fellows.
|
|
|
|
The respite my unexpected agility had given me permitted
|
|
me to formulate plans for the immediate future and to note
|
|
more closely the appearance of the warriors, for I could not
|
|
disassociate these people in my mind from those other
|
|
warriors who, only the day before, had been pursuing me.
|
|
|
|
I noted that each was armed with several other weapons in
|
|
addition to the huge spear which I have described. The
|
|
weapon which caused me to decide against an attempt at
|
|
escape by flight was what was evidently a rifle of some
|
|
description, and which I felt, for some reason, they were
|
|
peculiarly efficient in handling.
|
|
|
|
These rifles were of a white metal stocked with wood, which
|
|
I learned later was a very light and intensely hard growth
|
|
much prized on Mars, and entirely unknown to us denizens
|
|
of Earth. The metal of the barrel is an alloy composed
|
|
principally of aluminum and steel which they have learned
|
|
to temper to a hardness far exceeding that of the steel with
|
|
which we are familiar. The weight of these rifles is comparatively
|
|
little, and with the small caliber, explosive, radium projectiles
|
|
which they use, and the great length of the barrel, they are
|
|
deadly in the extreme and at ranges which would be unthinkable
|
|
on Earth. The theoretic effective radius of this rifle is
|
|
three hundred miles, but the best they can do in actual
|
|
service when equipped with their wireless finders and
|
|
sighters is but a trifle over two hundred miles.
|
|
|
|
This is quite far enough to imbue me with great respect for
|
|
the Martian firearm, and some telepathic force must have
|
|
warned me against an attempt to escape in broad daylight
|
|
from under the muzzles of twenty of these death-dealing
|
|
machines.
|
|
|
|
The Martians, after conversing for a short time, turned and
|
|
rode away in the direction from which they had come, leaving
|
|
one of their number alone by the enclosure. When they had
|
|
covered perhaps two hundred yards they halted, and turning
|
|
their mounts toward us sat watching the warrior by the
|
|
enclosure.
|
|
|
|
He was the one whose spear had so nearly transfixed me,
|
|
and was evidently the leader of the band, as I had noted that
|
|
they seemed to have moved to their present position at his
|
|
direction. When his force had come to a halt he dismounted,
|
|
threw down his spear and small arms, and came around the
|
|
end of the incubator toward me, entirely unarmed and as
|
|
naked as I, except for the ornaments strapped upon his head,
|
|
limbs, and breast.
|
|
|
|
When he was within about fifty feet of me he unclasped an
|
|
enormous metal armlet, and holding it toward me in the
|
|
open palm of his hand, addressed me in a clear, resonant
|
|
voice, but in a language, it is needless to say, I could not
|
|
understand. He then stopped as though waiting for my reply,
|
|
pricking up his antennae-like ears and cocking his strange-looking
|
|
eyes still further toward me.
|
|
|
|
As the silence became painful I concluded to hazard a little
|
|
conversation on my own part, as I had guessed that he was
|
|
making overtures of peace. The throwing down of his weapons
|
|
and the withdrawing of his troop before his advance toward
|
|
me would have signified a peaceful mission anywhere on
|
|
Earth, so why not, then, on Mars!
|
|
|
|
Placing my hand over my heart I bowed low to the Martian
|
|
and explained to him that while I did not understand his
|
|
language, his actions spoke for the peace and friendship that
|
|
at the present moment were most dear to my heart. Of course
|
|
I might have been a babbling brook for all the intelligence
|
|
my speech carried to him, but he understood the action with
|
|
which I immediately followed my words.
|
|
|
|
Stretching my hand toward him, I advanced and took the
|
|
armlet from his open palm, clasping it about my arm above the
|
|
elbow; smiled at him and stood waiting. His wide mouth
|
|
spread into an answering smile, and locking one of his
|
|
intermediary arms in mine we turned and walked back toward
|
|
his mount. At the same time he motioned his followers to
|
|
advance. They started toward us on a wild run, but were checked
|
|
by a signal from him. Evidently he feared that were I to be
|
|
really frightened again I might jump entirely out of the landscape.
|
|
|
|
He exchanged a few words with his men, motioned to me
|
|
that I would ride behind one of them, and then mounted his
|
|
own animal. The fellow designated reached down two or
|
|
three hands and lifted me up behind him on the glossy
|
|
back of his mount, where I hung on as best I could by the
|
|
belts and straps which held the Martian's weapons and ornaments.
|
|
|
|
|
|
The entire cavalcade then turned and galloped away toward
|
|
the range of hills in the distance.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER IV
|
|
|
|
|
|
A PRISONER
|
|
|
|
|
|
We had gone perhaps ten miles when the ground began to
|
|
rise very rapidly. We were, as I was later to learn, nearing the
|
|
edge of one of Mars' long-dead seas, in the bottom of which
|
|
my encounter with the Martians had taken place.
|
|
|
|
In a short time we gained the foot of the mountains, and
|
|
after traversing a narrow gorge came to an open valley, at the
|
|
far extremity of which was a low table land upon which I
|
|
beheld an enormous city. Toward this we galloped, entering it
|
|
by what appeared to be a ruined roadway leading out from the
|
|
city, but only to the edge of the table land, where it ended
|
|
abruptly in a flight of broad steps.
|
|
|
|
Upon closer observation I saw as we passed them that the
|
|
buildings were deserted, and while not greatly decayed had
|
|
the appearance of not having been tenanted for years, possibly
|
|
for ages. Toward the center of the city was a large plaza, and
|
|
upon this and in the buildings immediately surrounding it
|
|
were camped some nine or ten hundred creatures of the same
|
|
breed as my captors, for such I now considered them despite
|
|
the suave manner in which I had been trapped.
|
|
|
|
With the exception of their ornaments all were naked. The
|
|
women varied in appearance but little from the men, except
|
|
that their tusks were much larger in proportion to their height,
|
|
in some instances curving nearly to their high-set ears. Their
|
|
bodies were smaller and lighter in color, and their fingers
|
|
and toes bore the rudiments of nails, which were entirely
|
|
lacking among the males. The adult females ranged in height
|
|
from ten to twelve feet.
|
|
|
|
The children were light in color, even lighter than the
|
|
women, and all looked precisely alike to me, except that some
|
|
were taller than others; older, I presumed.
|
|
|
|
I saw no signs of extreme age among them, nor is there any
|
|
appreciable difference in their appearance from the age of
|
|
maturity, about forty, until, at about the age of one thousand
|
|
years, they go voluntarily upon their last strange pilgrimage
|
|
down the river Iss, which leads no living Martian knows
|
|
whither and from whose bosom no Martian has ever returned,
|
|
or would be allowed to live did he return after once embarking
|
|
upon its cold, dark waters.
|
|
|
|
Only about one Martian in a thousand dies of sickness or
|
|
disease, and possibly about twenty take the voluntary pilgrimage.
|
|
The other nine hundred and seventy-nine die violent deaths
|
|
in duels, in hunting, in aviation and in war; but perhaps by far
|
|
the greatest death loss comes during the age of childhood,
|
|
when vast numbers of the little Martians fall victims
|
|
to the great white apes of Mars.
|
|
|
|
The average life expectancy of a Martian after the age of
|
|
maturity is about three hundred years, but would be nearer
|
|
the one-thousand mark were it not for the various means
|
|
leading to violent death. Owing to the waning resources
|
|
of the planet it evidently became necessary to counteract
|
|
the increasing longevity which their remarkable skill in
|
|
therapeutics and surgery produced, and so human life has come
|
|
to be considered but lightly on Mars, as is evidenced by their
|
|
dangerous sports and the almost continual warfare between
|
|
the various communities.
|
|
|
|
There are other and natural causes tending toward a
|
|
diminution of population, but nothing contributes so greatly
|
|
to this end as the fact that no male or female Martian is ever
|
|
voluntarily without a weapon of destruction.
|
|
|
|
As we neared the plaza and my presence was discovered we
|
|
were immediately surrounded by hundreds of the creatures
|
|
who seemed anxious to pluck me from my seat behind my
|
|
guard. A word from the leader of the party stilled their
|
|
clamor, and we proceeded at a trot across the plaza to the
|
|
entrance of as magnificent an edifice as mortal eye has rested
|
|
upon.
|
|
|
|
The building was low, but covered an enormous area. It
|
|
was constructed of gleaming white marble inlaid with gold
|
|
and brilliant stones which sparkled and scintillated in the
|
|
sunlight. The main entrance was some hundred feet in width
|
|
and projected from the building proper to form a huge canopy
|
|
above the entrance hall. There was no stairway, but a gentle
|
|
incline to the first floor of the building opened into an
|
|
enormous chamber encircled by galleries.
|
|
|
|
On the floor of this chamber, which was dotted with highly
|
|
carved wooden desks and chairs, were assembled about forty
|
|
or fifty male Martians around the steps of a rostrum. On the
|
|
platform proper squatted an enormous warrior heavily loaded
|
|
with metal ornaments, gay-colored feathers and beautifully
|
|
wrought leather trappings ingeniously set with precious stones.
|
|
From his shoulders depended a short cape of white fur lined
|
|
with brilliant scarlet silk.
|
|
|
|
What struck me as most remarkable about this assemblage
|
|
and the hall in which they were congregated was the fact
|
|
that the creatures were entirely out of proportion to the desks,
|
|
chairs, and other furnishings; these being of a size adapted to
|
|
human beings such as I, whereas the great bulks of the
|
|
Martians could scarcely have squeezed into the chairs, nor was
|
|
there room beneath the desks for their long legs. Evidently,
|
|
then, there were other denizens on Mars than the wild and
|
|
grotesque creatures into whose hands I had fallen, but the
|
|
evidences of extreme antiquity which showed all around me
|
|
indicated that these buildings might have belonged to some
|
|
long-extinct and forgotten race in the dim antiquity of Mars.
|
|
|
|
Our party had halted at the entrance to the building, and at
|
|
a sign from the leader I had been lowered to the ground.
|
|
Again locking his arm in mine, we had proceeded into the
|
|
audience chamber. There were few formalities observed in
|
|
approaching the Martian chieftain. My captor merely strode
|
|
up to the rostrum, the others making way for him as he
|
|
advanced. The chieftain rose to his feet and uttered the name
|
|
of my escort who, in turn, halted and repeated the name of
|
|
the ruler followed by his title.
|
|
|
|
At the time, this ceremony and the words they uttered
|
|
meant nothing to me, but later I came to know that this was
|
|
the customary greeting between green Martians. Had the men
|
|
been strangers, and therefore unable to exchange names, they
|
|
would have silently exchanged ornaments, had their missions
|
|
been peaceful--otherwise they would have exchanged shots,
|
|
or have fought out their introduction with some other of their
|
|
various weapons.
|
|
|
|
My captor, whose name was Tars Tarkas, was virtually the
|
|
vice-chieftain of the community, and a man of great ability as
|
|
a statesman and warrior. He evidently explained briefly the
|
|
incidents connected with his expedition, including my capture,
|
|
and when he had concluded the chieftain addressed me at
|
|
some length.
|
|
|
|
I replied in our good old English tongue merely to
|
|
convince him that neither of us could understand the other;
|
|
but I noticed that when I smiled slightly on concluding, he did
|
|
likewise. This fact, and the similar occurrence during my first
|
|
talk with Tars Tarkas, convinced me that we had at least
|
|
something in common; the ability to smile, therefore to laugh;
|
|
denoting a sense of humor. But I was to learn that the
|
|
Martian smile is merely perfunctory, and that the Martian
|
|
laugh is a thing to cause strong men to blanch in horror.
|
|
|
|
The ideas of humor among the green men of Mars are
|
|
widely at variance with our conceptions of incitants to
|
|
merriment. The death agonies of a fellow being are, to these
|
|
strange creatures provocative of the wildest hilarity, while
|
|
their chief form of commonest amusement is to inflict death
|
|
on their prisoners of war in various ingenious and horrible
|
|
ways.
|
|
|
|
The assembled warriors and chieftains examined me closely,
|
|
feeling my muscles and the texture of my skin. The principal
|
|
chieftain then evidently signified a desire to see me perform,
|
|
and, motioning me to follow, he started with Tars Tarkas for
|
|
the open plaza.
|
|
|
|
Now, I had made no attempt to walk, since my first signal
|
|
failure, except while tightly grasping Tars Tarkas' arm, and
|
|
so now I went skipping and flitting about among the desks
|
|
and chairs like some monstrous grasshopper. After bruising
|
|
myself severely, much to the amusement of the Martians, I
|
|
again had recourse to creeping, but this did not suit them and
|
|
I was roughly jerked to my feet by a towering fellow who had
|
|
laughed most heartily at my misfortunes.
|
|
|
|
As he banged me down upon my feet his face was bent
|
|
close to mine and I did the only thing a gentleman might do
|
|
under the circumstances of brutality, boorishness, and lack of
|
|
consideration for a stranger's rights; I swung my fist squarely
|
|
to his jaw and he went down like a felled ox. As he sunk to
|
|
the floor I wheeled around with my back toward the nearest
|
|
desk, expecting to be overwhelmed by the vengeance of his
|
|
fellows, but determined to give them as good a battle as the
|
|
unequal odds would permit before I gave up my life.
|
|
|
|
My fears were groundless, however, as the other Martians,
|
|
at first struck dumb with wonderment, finally broke into wild
|
|
peals of laughter and applause. I did not recognize the
|
|
applause as such, but later, when I had become acquainted
|
|
with their customs, I learned that I had won what they seldom
|
|
accord, a manifestation of approbation.
|
|
|
|
The fellow whom I had struck lay where he had fallen, nor
|
|
did any of his mates approach him. Tars Tarkas advanced
|
|
toward me, holding out one of his arms, and we thus proceeded
|
|
to the plaza without further mishap. I did not, of course,
|
|
know the reason for which we had come to the open, but I
|
|
was not long in being enlightened. They first repeated
|
|
the word "sak" a number of times, and then Tars Tarkas made
|
|
several jumps, repeating the same word before each leap; then,
|
|
turning to me, he said, "sak!" I saw what they were after, and
|
|
gathering myself together I "sakked" with such marvelous
|
|
success that I cleared a good hundred and fifty feet; nor did I
|
|
this time, lose my equilibrium, but landed squarely upon my
|
|
feet without falling. I then returned by easy jumps of twenty-
|
|
five or thirty feet to the little group of warriors.
|
|
|
|
My exhibition had been witnessed by several hundred lesser
|
|
Martians, and they immediately broke into demands for a
|
|
repetition, which the chieftain then ordered me to make; but
|
|
I was both hungry and thirsty, and determined on the spot
|
|
that my only method of salvation was to demand the
|
|
consideration from these creatures which they evidently would
|
|
not voluntarily accord. I therefore ignored the repeated
|
|
commands to "sak," and each time they were made I motioned
|
|
to my mouth and rubbed my stomach.
|
|
|
|
Tars Tarkas and the chief exchanged a few words, and the
|
|
former, calling to a young female among the throng, gave
|
|
her some instructions and motioned me to accompany her. I
|
|
grasped her proffered arm and together we crossed the plaza
|
|
toward a large building on the far side.
|
|
|
|
My fair companion was about eight feet tall, having just
|
|
arrived at maturity, but not yet to her full height. She was of
|
|
a light olive-green color, with a smooth, glossy hide. Her
|
|
name, as I afterward learned, was Sola, and she belonged to
|
|
the retinue of Tars Tarkas. She conducted me to a spacious
|
|
chamber in one of the buildings fronting on the plaza, and
|
|
which, from the litter of silks and furs upon the floor, I took
|
|
to be the sleeping quarters of several of the natives.
|
|
|
|
The room was well lighted by a number of large windows
|
|
and was beautifully decorated with mural paintings and mosaics,
|
|
but upon all there seemed to rest that indefinable touch
|
|
of the finger of antiquity which convinced me that the
|
|
architects and builders of these wondrous creations had nothing
|
|
in common with the crude half-brutes which now occupied them.
|
|
|
|
Sola motioned me to be seated upon a pile of silks near
|
|
the center of the room, and, turning, made a peculiar hissing
|
|
sound, as though signaling to someone in an adjoining room.
|
|
In response to her call I obtained my first sight of a new
|
|
Martian wonder. It waddled in on its ten short legs, and
|
|
squatted down before the girl like an obedient puppy. The
|
|
thing was about the size of a Shetland pony, but its head bore
|
|
a slight resemblance to that of a frog, except that the jaws
|
|
were equipped with three rows of long, sharp tusks.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER V
|
|
|
|
|
|
I ELUDE MY WATCH DOG
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sola stared into the brute's wicked-looking eyes, muttered a
|
|
word or two of command, pointed to me, and left the chamber.
|
|
I could not but wonder what this ferocious-looking monstrosity
|
|
might do when left alone in such close proximity to such a
|
|
relatively tender morsel of meat; but my fears were groundless,
|
|
as the beast, after surveying me intently for a moment, crossed
|
|
the room to the only exit which led to the street, and lay down
|
|
full length across the threshold.
|
|
|
|
This was my first experience with a Martian watch dog, but
|
|
it was destined not to be my last, for this fellow guarded me
|
|
carefully during the time I remained a captive among these
|
|
green men; twice saving my life, and never voluntarily being
|
|
away from me a moment.
|
|
|
|
While Sola was away I took occasion to examine more
|
|
minutely the room in which I found myself captive. The
|
|
mural painting depicted scenes of rare and wonderful beauty;
|
|
mountains, rivers, lake, ocean, meadow, trees and flowers,
|
|
winding roadways, sun-kissed gardens--scenes which might
|
|
have portrayed earthly views but for the different colorings of
|
|
the vegetation. The work had evidently been wrought by a
|
|
master hand, so subtle the atmosphere, so perfect the technique;
|
|
yet nowhere was there a representation of a living animal,
|
|
either human or brute, by which I could guess at the likeness
|
|
of these other and perhaps extinct denizens of Mars.
|
|
|
|
While I was allowing my fancy to run riot in wild conjecture
|
|
on the possible explanation of the strange anomalies which
|
|
I had so far met with on Mars, Sola returned bearing both
|
|
food and drink. These she placed on the floor beside me,
|
|
and seating herself a short ways off regarded me intently.
|
|
The food consisted of about a pound of some solid substance of
|
|
the consistency of cheese and almost tasteless, while the liquid
|
|
was apparently milk from some animal. It was not unpleasant
|
|
to the taste, though slightly acid, and I learned in a short time
|
|
to prize it very highly. It came, as I later discovered, not from
|
|
an animal, as there is only one mammal on Mars and that one
|
|
very rare indeed, but from a large plant which grows practically
|
|
without water, but seems to distill its plentiful supply of
|
|
milk from the products of the soil, the moisture of the air,
|
|
and the rays of the sun. A single plant of this species will give
|
|
eight or ten quarts of milk per day.
|
|
|
|
After I had eaten I was greatly invigorated, but feeling the
|
|
need of rest I stretched out upon the silks and was soon
|
|
asleep. I must have slept several hours, as it was dark when
|
|
I awoke, and I was very cold. I noticed that someone had
|
|
thrown a fur over me, but it had become partially dislodged
|
|
and in the darkness I could not see to replace it. Suddenly a
|
|
hand reached out and pulled the fur over me, shortly afterwards
|
|
adding another to my covering.
|
|
|
|
I presumed that my watchful guardian was Sola, nor was
|
|
I wrong. This girl alone, among all the green Martians with
|
|
whom I came in contact, disclosed characteristics of sympathy,
|
|
kindliness, and affection; her ministrations to my bodily wants
|
|
were unfailing, and her solicitous care saved me from much
|
|
suffering and many hardships.
|
|
|
|
As I was to learn, the Martian nights are extremely cold,
|
|
and as there is practically no twilight or dawn, the changes
|
|
in temperature are sudden and most uncomfortable, as are the
|
|
transitions from brilliant daylight to darkness. The nights are
|
|
either brilliantly illumined or very dark, for if neither of the
|
|
two moons of Mars happen to be in the sky almost total
|
|
darkness results, since the lack of atmosphere, or, rather, the
|
|
very thin atmosphere, fails to diffuse the starlight to any
|
|
great extent; on the other hand, if both of the moons are in
|
|
the heavens at night the surface of the ground is brightly
|
|
illuminated.
|
|
|
|
Both of Mars' moons are vastly nearer her than is our
|
|
moon to Earth; the nearer moon being but about five thousand
|
|
miles distant, while the further is but little more than
|
|
fourteen thousand miles away, against the nearly one-quarter
|
|
million miles which separate us from our moon. The nearer
|
|
moon of Mars makes a complete revolution around the planet
|
|
in a little over seven and one-half hours, so that she may be
|
|
seen hurtling through the sky like some huge meteor two or
|
|
three times each night, revealing all her phases during each
|
|
transit of the heavens.
|
|
|
|
The further moon revolves about Mars in something over
|
|
thirty and one-quarter hours, and with her sister satellite
|
|
makes a nocturnal Martian scene one of splendid and weird
|
|
grandeur. And it is well that nature has so graciously and
|
|
abundantly lighted the Martian night, for the green men of
|
|
Mars, being a nomadic race without high intellectual development,
|
|
have but crude means for artificial lighting; depending
|
|
principally upon torches, a kind of candle, and a peculiar oil
|
|
lamp which generates a gas and burns without a wick.
|
|
|
|
This last device produces an intensely brilliant far-reaching
|
|
white light, but as the natural oil which it requires can only
|
|
be obtained by mining in one of several widely separated and
|
|
remote localities it is seldom used by these creatures whose
|
|
only thought is for today, and whose hatred for manual labor
|
|
has kept them in a semi-barbaric state for countless ages.
|
|
|
|
After Sola had replenished my coverings I again slept, nor
|
|
did I awaken until daylight. The other occupants of the room,
|
|
five in number, were all females, and they were still sleeping,
|
|
piled high with a motley array of silks and furs. Across the
|
|
threshold lay stretched the sleepless guardian brute, just as I
|
|
had last seen him on the preceding day; apparently he had not
|
|
moved a muscle; his eyes were fairly glued upon me, and I
|
|
fell to wondering just what might befall me should I endeavor
|
|
to escape.
|
|
I have ever been prone to seek adventure and to investigate
|
|
and experiment where wiser men would have left well enough
|
|
alone. It therefore now occurred to me that the surest way of
|
|
learning the exact attitude of this beast toward me would be
|
|
to attempt to leave the room. I felt fairly secure in my belief
|
|
that I could escape him should he pursue me once I was
|
|
outside the building, for I had begun to take great pride in
|
|
my ability as a jumper. Furthermore, I could see from the
|
|
shortness of his legs that the brute himself was no jumper and
|
|
probably no runner.
|
|
|
|
Slowly and carefully, therefore, I gained my feet, only to
|
|
see that my watcher did the same; cautiously I advanced
|
|
toward him, finding that by moving with a shuffling gait I
|
|
could retain my balance as well as make reasonably rapid
|
|
progress. As I neared the brute he backed cautiously away
|
|
from me, and when I had reached the open he moved to one
|
|
side to let me pass. He then fell in behind me and followed
|
|
about ten paces in my rear as I made my way along the
|
|
deserted street.
|
|
|
|
Evidently his mission was to protect me only, I thought,
|
|
but when we reached the edge of the city he suddenly sprang
|
|
before me, uttering strange sounds and baring his ugly and
|
|
ferocious tusks. Thinking to have some amusement at his
|
|
expense, I rushed toward him, and when almost upon him
|
|
sprang into the air, alighting far beyond him and away from
|
|
the city. He wheeled instantly and charged me with the most
|
|
appalling speed I had ever beheld. I had thought his short
|
|
legs a bar to swiftness, but had he been coursing with
|
|
greyhounds the latter would have appeared as though asleep
|
|
on a door mat. As I was to learn, this is the fleetest animal
|
|
on Mars, and owing to its intelligence, loyalty, and ferocity is
|
|
used in hunting, in war, and as the protector of the Martian man.
|
|
|
|
I quickly saw that I would have difficulty in escaping the
|
|
fangs of the beast on a straightaway course, and so I met his
|
|
charge by doubling in my tracks and leaping over him as he
|
|
was almost upon me. This maneuver gave me a considerable
|
|
advantage, and I was able to reach the city quite a bit ahead
|
|
of him, and as he came tearing after me I jumped for a window
|
|
about thirty feet from the ground in the face of one of the
|
|
buildings overlooking the valley.
|
|
|
|
Grasping the sill I pulled myself up to a sitting posture
|
|
without looking into the building, and gazed down at the
|
|
baffled animal beneath me. My exultation was short-lived,
|
|
however, for scarcely had I gained a secure seat upon the sill
|
|
than a huge hand grasped me by the neck from behind and
|
|
dragged me violently into the room. Here I was thrown upon
|
|
my back, and beheld standing over me a colossal ape-like
|
|
creature, white and hairless except for an enormous shock of
|
|
bristly hair upon its head.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VI
|
|
|
|
|
|
A FIGHT THAT WON FRIENDS
|
|
|
|
|
|
The thing, which more nearly resembled our earthly men
|
|
than it did the Martians I had seen, held me pinioned to the
|
|
ground with one huge foot, while it jabbered and gesticulated
|
|
at some answering creature behind me. This other, which was
|
|
evidently its mate, soon came toward us, bearing a mighty
|
|
stone cudgel with which it evidently intended to brain me.
|
|
|
|
The creatures were about ten or fifteen feet tall, standing
|
|
erect, and had, like the green Martians, an intermediary set
|
|
of arms or legs, midway between their upper and lower limbs.
|
|
Their eyes were close together and non-protruding; their ears
|
|
were high set, but more laterally located than those of the
|
|
Martians, while their snouts and teeth were strikingly like
|
|
those of our African gorilla. Altogether they were not unlovely
|
|
when viewed in comparison with the green Martians.
|
|
|
|
The cudgel was swinging in the arc which ended upon my
|
|
upturned face when a bolt of myriad-legged horror hurled itself
|
|
through the doorway full upon the breast of my executioner.
|
|
With a shriek of fear the ape which held me leaped through
|
|
the open window, but its mate closed in a terrific death
|
|
struggle with my preserver, which was nothing less than
|
|
my faithful watch-thing; I cannot bring myself to call so
|
|
hideous a creature a dog.
|
|
|
|
As quickly as possible I gained my feet and backing against
|
|
the wall I witnessed such a battle as it is vouchsafed few
|
|
beings to see. The strength, agility, and blind ferocity of these
|
|
two creatures is approached by nothing known to earthly man.
|
|
My beast had an advantage in his first hold, having sunk his
|
|
mighty fangs far into the breast of his adversary; but the
|
|
great arms and paws of the ape, backed by muscles far
|
|
transcending those of the Martian men I had seen, had locked
|
|
the throat of my guardian and slowly were choking out his
|
|
life, and bending back his head and neck upon his body, where
|
|
I momentarily expected the former to fall limp at the end of a
|
|
broken neck.
|
|
|
|
In accomplishing this the ape was tearing away the entire
|
|
front of its breast, which was held in the vise-like grip of the
|
|
powerful jaws. Back and forth upon the floor they rolled,
|
|
neither one emitting a sound of fear or pain. Presently I saw
|
|
the great eyes of my beast bulging completely from their
|
|
sockets and blood flowing from its nostrils. That he was
|
|
weakening perceptibly was evident, but so also was the ape,
|
|
whose struggles were growing momentarily less.
|
|
|
|
Suddenly I came to myself and, with that strange instinct
|
|
which seems ever to prompt me to my duty, I seized the
|
|
cudgel, which had fallen to the floor at the commencement of
|
|
the battle, and swinging it with all the power of my earthly
|
|
arms I crashed it full upon the head of the ape, crushing his
|
|
skull as though it had been an eggshell.
|
|
|
|
Scarcely had the blow descended when I was confronted
|
|
with a new danger. The ape's mate, recovered from its first
|
|
shock of terror, had returned to the scene of the encounter
|
|
by way of the interior of the building. I glimpsed him just
|
|
before he reached the doorway and the sight of him, now
|
|
roaring as he perceived his lifeless fellow stretched upon the
|
|
floor, and frothing at the mouth, in the extremity of his rage,
|
|
filled me, I must confess, with dire forebodings.
|
|
|
|
I am ever willing to stand and fight when the odds are not
|
|
too overwhelmingly against me, but in this instance I perceived
|
|
neither glory nor profit in pitting my relatively puny strength
|
|
against the iron muscles and brutal ferocity of this enraged
|
|
denizen of an unknown world; in fact, the only outcome
|
|
of such an encounter, so far as I might be concerned,
|
|
seemed sudden death.
|
|
|
|
I was standing near the window and I knew that once in
|
|
the street I might gain the plaza and safety before the creature
|
|
could overtake me; at least there was a chance for safety in
|
|
flight, against almost certain death should I remain and fight
|
|
however desperately.
|
|
|
|
It is true I held the cudgel, but what could I do with it
|
|
against his four great arms? Even should I break one of them
|
|
with my first blow, for I figured that he would attempt to ward
|
|
off the cudgel, he could reach out and annihilate me with the
|
|
others before I could recover for a second attack.
|
|
|
|
In the instant that these thoughts passed through my mind
|
|
I had turned to make for the window, but my eyes alighting on
|
|
the form of my erstwhile guardian threw all thoughts of flight
|
|
to the four winds. He lay gasping upon the floor of the
|
|
chamber, his great eyes fastened upon me in what seemed a
|
|
pitiful appeal for protection. I could not withstand that look,
|
|
nor could I, on second thought, have deserted my rescuer
|
|
without giving as good an account of myself in his behalf
|
|
as he had in mine.
|
|
|
|
Without more ado, therefore, I turned to meet the charge
|
|
of the infuriated bull ape. He was now too close upon me for
|
|
the cudgel to prove of any effective assistance, so I merely
|
|
threw it as heavily as I could at his advancing bulk. It struck
|
|
him just below the knees, eliciting a howl of pain and rage,
|
|
and so throwing him off his balance that he lunged full upon
|
|
me with arms wide stretched to ease his fall.
|
|
|
|
Again, as on the preceding day, I had recourse to earthly
|
|
tactics, and swinging my right fist full upon the point of his
|
|
chin I followed it with a smashing left to the pit of his
|
|
stomach. The effect was marvelous, for, as I lightly
|
|
sidestepped, after delivering the second blow, he reeled
|
|
and fell upon the floor doubled up with pain and gasping
|
|
for wind. Leaping over his prostrate body, I seized the cudgel
|
|
and finished the monster before he could regain his feet.
|
|
|
|
As I delivered the blow a low laugh rang out behind me,
|
|
and, turning, I beheld Tars Tarkas, Sola, and three or four
|
|
warriors standing in the doorway of the chamber. As my eyes
|
|
met theirs I was, for the second time, the recipient of their
|
|
zealously guarded applause.
|
|
|
|
My absence had been noted by Sola on her awakening, and
|
|
she had quickly informed Tars Tarkas, who had set out
|
|
immediately with a handful of warriors to search for me.
|
|
As they had approached the limits of the city they had witnessed
|
|
the actions of the bull ape as he bolted into the building,
|
|
frothing with rage.
|
|
|
|
They had followed immediately behind him, thinking it
|
|
barely possible that his actions might prove a clew to my
|
|
whereabouts and had witnessed my short but decisive battle
|
|
with him. This encounter, together with my set-to with the
|
|
Martian warrior on the previous day and my feats of jumping
|
|
placed me upon a high pinnacle in their regard. Evidently
|
|
devoid of all the finer sentiments of friendship, love, or
|
|
affection, these people fairly worship physical prowess and
|
|
bravery, and nothing is too good for the object of their
|
|
adoration as long as he maintains his position by repeated
|
|
examples of his skill, strength, and courage.
|
|
|
|
Sola, who had accompanied the searching party of her own
|
|
volition, was the only one of the Martians whose face had not
|
|
been twisted in laughter as I battled for my life. She, on the
|
|
contrary, was sober with apparent solicitude and, as soon as I
|
|
had finished the monster, rushed to me and carefully examined
|
|
my body for possible wounds or injuries. Satisfying herself
|
|
that I had come off unscathed she smiled quietly, and,
|
|
taking my hand, started toward the door of the chamber.
|
|
|
|
Tars Tarkas and the other warriors had entered and were
|
|
standing over the now rapidly reviving brute which had saved
|
|
my life, and whose life I, in turn, had rescued. They seemed
|
|
to be deep in argument, and finally one of them addressed me,
|
|
but remembering my ignorance of his language turned back to
|
|
Tars Tarkas, who, with a word and gesture, gave some command
|
|
to the fellow and turned to follow us from the room.
|
|
|
|
There seemed something menacing in their attitude toward
|
|
my beast, and I hesitated to leave until I had learned the
|
|
outcome. It was well I did so, for the warrior drew an
|
|
evil looking pistol from its holster and was on the point of
|
|
putting an end to the creature when I sprang forward and
|
|
struck up his arm. The bullet striking the wooden casing of
|
|
the window exploded, blowing a hole completely through the
|
|
wood and masonry.
|
|
|
|
I then knelt down beside the fearsome-looking thing, and
|
|
raising it to its feet motioned for it to follow me. The looks
|
|
of surprise which my actions elicited from the Martians were
|
|
ludicrous; they could not understand, except in a feeble and
|
|
childish way, such attributes as gratitude and compassion.
|
|
The warrior whose gun I had struck up looked enquiringly at
|
|
Tars Tarkas, but the latter signed that I be left to my own
|
|
devices, and so we returned to the plaza with my great beast
|
|
following close at heel, and Sola grasping me tightly by the
|
|
arm.
|
|
|
|
I had at least two friends on Mars; a young woman who
|
|
watched over me with motherly solicitude, and a dumb brute
|
|
which, as I later came to know, held in its poor ugly carcass
|
|
more love, more loyalty, more gratitude than could have been
|
|
found in the entire five million green Martians who rove the
|
|
deserted cities and dead sea bottoms of Mars.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VII
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHILD-RAISING ON MARS
|
|
|
|
|
|
After a breakfast, which was an exact replica of the meal of
|
|
the preceding day and an index of practically every meal
|
|
which followed while I was with the green men of Mars, Sola
|
|
escorted me to the plaza, where I found the entire community
|
|
engaged in watching or helping at the harnessing of huge
|
|
mastodonian animals to great three-wheeled chariots. There
|
|
were about two hundred and fifty of these vehicles, each
|
|
drawn by a single animal, any one of which, from their
|
|
appearance, might easily have drawn the entire wagon train
|
|
when fully loaded.
|
|
|
|
The chariots themselves were large, commodious, and
|
|
gorgeously decorated. In each was seated a female Martian
|
|
loaded with ornaments of metal, with jewels and silks and furs,
|
|
and upon the back of each of the beasts which drew the chariots
|
|
was perched a young Martian driver. Like the animals upon which
|
|
the warriors were mounted, the heavier draft animals wore neither
|
|
bit nor bridle, but were guided entirely by telepathic means.
|
|
|
|
This power is wonderfully developed in all Martians, and
|
|
accounts largely for the simplicity of their language and the
|
|
relatively few spoken words exchanged even in long conversations.
|
|
It is the universal language of Mars, through the medium
|
|
of which the higher and lower animals of this world of
|
|
paradoxes are able to communicate to a greater or less extent,
|
|
depending upon the intellectual sphere of the species and the
|
|
development of the individual.
|
|
|
|
As the cavalcade took up the line of march in single file,
|
|
Sola dragged me into an empty chariot and we proceeded
|
|
with the procession toward the point by which I had entered
|
|
the city the day before. At the head of the caravan rode some
|
|
two hundred warriors, five abreast, and a like number
|
|
brought up the rear, while twenty-five or thirty outriders
|
|
flanked us on either side.
|
|
|
|
Every one but myself--men, women, and children--were
|
|
heavily armed, and at the tail of each chariot trotted a
|
|
Martian hound, my own beast following closely behind ours; in
|
|
fact, the faithful creature never left me voluntarily during the
|
|
entire ten years I spent on Mars. Our way led out across the
|
|
little valley before the city, through the hills, and down into
|
|
the dead sea bottom which I had traversed on my journey
|
|
from the incubator to the plaza. The incubator, as it proved,
|
|
was the terminal point of our journey this day, and, as the
|
|
entire cavalcade broke into a mad gallop as soon as we
|
|
reached the level expanse of sea bottom, we were soon within
|
|
sight of our goal.
|
|
|
|
On reaching it the chariots were parked with military
|
|
precision on the four sides of the enclosure, and half a score
|
|
of warriors, headed by the enormous chieftain, and including
|
|
Tars Tarkas and several other lesser chiefs, dismounted and
|
|
advanced toward it. I could see Tars Tarkas explaining something
|
|
to the principal chieftain, whose name, by the way, was,
|
|
as nearly as I can translate it into English, Lorquas Ptomel,
|
|
Jed; jed being his title.
|
|
|
|
I was soon appraised of the subject of their conversation, as,
|
|
calling to Sola, Tars Tarkas signed for her to send me to him.
|
|
I had by this time mastered the intricacies of walking under
|
|
Martian conditions, and quickly responding to his command
|
|
I advanced to the side of the incubator where the warriors
|
|
stood.
|
|
|
|
As I reached their side a glance showed me that all but a
|
|
very few eggs had hatched, the incubator being fairly alive
|
|
with the hideous little devils. They ranged in height from
|
|
three to four feet, and were moving restlessly about the
|
|
enclosure as though searching for food.
|
|
|
|
As I came to a halt before him, Tars Tarkas pointed over
|
|
the incubator and said, "Sak." I saw that he wanted me to
|
|
repeat my performance of yesterday for the edification of
|
|
Lorquas Ptomel, and, as I must confess that my prowess gave
|
|
me no little satisfaction, I responded quickly, leaping entirely
|
|
over the parked chariots on the far side of the incubator. As
|
|
I returned, Lorquas Ptomel grunted something at me, and
|
|
turning to his warriors gave a few words of command relative
|
|
to the incubator. They paid no further attention to me and I
|
|
was thus permitted to remain close and watch their operations,
|
|
which consisted in breaking an opening in the wall of the
|
|
incubator large enough to permit of the exit of the young Martians.
|
|
|
|
On either side of this opening the women and the younger Martians,
|
|
both male and female, formed two solid walls leading out
|
|
through the chariots and quite away into the plain beyond.
|
|
Between these walls the little Martians scampered,
|
|
wild as deer; being permitted to run the full length of the
|
|
aisle, where they were captured one at a time by the women
|
|
and older children; the last in the line capturing the first little
|
|
one to reach the end of the gauntlet, her opposite in the line
|
|
capturing the second, and so on until all the little fellows had
|
|
left the enclosure and been appropriated by some youth or
|
|
female. As the women caught the young they fell out of line
|
|
and returned to their respective chariots, while those who fell
|
|
into the hands of the young men were later turned over to
|
|
some of the women.
|
|
|
|
I saw that the ceremony, if it could be dignified by such
|
|
a name, was over, and seeking out Sola I found her in our
|
|
chariot with a hideous little creature held tightly in her arms.
|
|
|
|
The work of rearing young, green Martians consists solely
|
|
in teaching them to talk, and to use the weapons of warfare
|
|
with which they are loaded down from the very first year of
|
|
their lives. Coming from eggs in which they have lain for
|
|
five years, the period of incubation, they step forth into the
|
|
world perfectly developed except in size. Entirely unknown
|
|
to their mothers, who, in turn, would have difficulty in
|
|
pointing out the fathers with any degree of accuracy, they are
|
|
the common children of the community, and their education
|
|
devolves upon the females who chance to capture them as
|
|
they leave the incubator.
|
|
|
|
Their foster mothers may not even have had an egg in the
|
|
incubator, as was the case with Sola, who had not commenced
|
|
to lay, until less than a year before she became the mother of
|
|
another woman's offspring. But this counts for little among
|
|
the green Martians, as parental and filial love is as unknown to
|
|
them as it is common among us. I believe this horrible system
|
|
which has been carried on for ages is the direct cause of the
|
|
loss of all the finer feelings and higher humanitarian instincts
|
|
among these poor creatures. From birth they know no father
|
|
or mother love, they know not the meaning of the word home;
|
|
they are taught that they are only suffered to live until they
|
|
can demonstrate by their physique and ferocity that they are
|
|
fit to live. Should they prove deformed or defective in any way
|
|
they are promptly shot; nor do they see a tear shed for a
|
|
single one of the many cruel hardships they pass through from
|
|
earliest infancy.
|
|
|
|
I do not mean that the adult Martians are unnecessarily or
|
|
intentionally cruel to the young, but theirs is a hard and
|
|
pitiless struggle for existence upon a dying planet, the natural
|
|
resources of which have dwindled to a point where the support
|
|
of each additional life means an added tax upon the community
|
|
into which it is thrown.
|
|
|
|
By careful selection they rear only the hardiest specimens
|
|
of each species, and with almost supernatural foresight
|
|
they regulate the birth rate to merely offset the loss by death.
|
|
|
|
Each adult Martian female brings forth about thirteen eggs
|
|
each year, and those which meet the size, weight, and specific
|
|
gravity tests are hidden in the recesses of some subterranean
|
|
vault where the temperature is too low for incubation. Every
|
|
year these eggs are carefully examined by a council of twenty
|
|
chieftains, and all but about one hundred of the most perfect
|
|
are destroyed out of each yearly supply. At the end of five
|
|
years about five hundred almost perfect eggs have been chosen
|
|
from the thousands brought forth. These are then placed in
|
|
the almost air-tight incubators to be hatched by the sun's rays
|
|
after a period of another five years. The hatching which we
|
|
had witnessed today was a fairly representative event of its
|
|
kind, all but about one per cent of the eggs hatching in two
|
|
days. If the remaining eggs ever hatched we knew nothing of
|
|
the fate of the little Martians. They were not wanted, as their
|
|
offspring might inherit and transmit the tendency to prolonged
|
|
incubation, and thus upset the system which has maintained
|
|
for ages and which permits the adult Martians to figure the
|
|
proper time for return to the incubators, almost to an hour.
|
|
|
|
The incubators are built in remote fastnesses, where there
|
|
is little or no likelihood of their being discovered by other
|
|
tribes. The result of such a catastrophe would mean no children
|
|
in the community for another five years. I was later to witness
|
|
the results of the discovery of an alien incubator.
|
|
|
|
The community of which the green Martians with whom
|
|
my lot was cast formed a part was composed of some thirty
|
|
thousand souls. They roamed an enormous tract of arid and
|
|
semi-arid land between forty and eighty degrees south latitude,
|
|
and bounded on the east and west by two large fertile tracts.
|
|
Their headquarters lay in the southwest corner of this district,
|
|
near the crossing of two of the so-called Martian canals.
|
|
|
|
As the incubator had been placed far north of their own
|
|
territory in a supposedly uninhabited and unfrequented area,
|
|
we had before us a tremendous journey, concerning which I,
|
|
of course, knew nothing.
|
|
|
|
After our return to the dead city I passed several days in
|
|
comparative idleness. On the day following our return all the
|
|
warriors had ridden forth early in the morning and had not
|
|
returned until just before darkness fell. As I later learned,
|
|
they had been to the subterranean vaults in which the eggs
|
|
were kept and had transported them to the incubator, which
|
|
they had then walled up for another five years, and which, in
|
|
all probability, would not be visited again during that period.
|
|
|
|
The vaults which hid the eggs until they were ready for the
|
|
incubator were located many miles south of the incubator,
|
|
and would be visited yearly by the council of twenty chieftains.
|
|
Why they did not arrange to build their vaults and incubators
|
|
nearer home has always been a mystery to me, and, like many
|
|
other Martian mysteries, unsolved and unsolvable by earthly
|
|
reasoning and customs.
|
|
|
|
Sola's duties were now doubled, as she was compelled to
|
|
care for the young Martian as well as for me, but neither one
|
|
of us required much attention, and as we were both about
|
|
equally advanced in Martian education, Sola took it upon
|
|
herself to train us together.
|
|
|
|
Her prize consisted in a male about four feet tall, very
|
|
strong and physically perfect; also, he learned quickly, and we
|
|
had considerable amusement, at least I did, over the keen
|
|
rivalry we displayed. The Martian language, as I have said,
|
|
is extremely simple, and in a week I could make all my
|
|
wants known and understand nearly everything that was said
|
|
to me. Likewise, under Sola's tutelage, I developed my
|
|
telepathic powers so that I shortly could sense practically
|
|
everything that went on around me.
|
|
|
|
What surprised Sola most in me was that while I could
|
|
catch telepathic messages easily from others, and often when
|
|
they were not intended for me, no one could read a jot from
|
|
my mind under any circumstances. At first this vexed me, but
|
|
later I was very glad of it, as it gave me an undoubted
|
|
advantage over the Martians.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER VIII
|
|
|
|
|
|
A FAIR CAPTIVE FROM THE SKY
|
|
|
|
|
|
The third day after the incubator ceremony we set forth
|
|
toward home, but scarcely had the head of the procession
|
|
debouched into the open ground before the city than orders
|
|
were given for an immediate and hasty return. As though
|
|
trained for years in this particular evolution, the green
|
|
Martians melted like mist into the spacious doorways of the
|
|
nearby buildings, until, in less than three minutes, the entire
|
|
cavalcade of chariots, mastodons and mounted warriors was nowhere
|
|
to be seen.
|
|
|
|
Sola and I had entered a building upon the front of the city,
|
|
in fact, the same one in which I had had my encounter
|
|
with the apes, and, wishing to see what had caused the sudden
|
|
retreat, I mounted to an upper floor and peered from the
|
|
window out over the valley and the hills beyond; and there
|
|
I saw the cause of their sudden scurrying to cover. A huge
|
|
craft, long, low, and gray-painted, swung slowly over the
|
|
crest of the nearest hill. Following it came another, and
|
|
another, and another, until twenty of them, swinging low
|
|
above the ground, sailed slowly and majestically toward us.
|
|
|
|
Each carried a strange banner swung from stem to stern
|
|
above the upper works, and upon the prow of each was
|
|
painted some odd device that gleamed in the sunlight and
|
|
showed plainly even at the distance at which we were from
|
|
the vessels. I could see figures crowding the forward decks
|
|
and upper works of the air craft. Whether they had discovered
|
|
us or simply were looking at the deserted city I could not say,
|
|
but in any event they received a rude reception, for suddenly
|
|
and without warning the green Martian warriors fired a terrific
|
|
volley from the windows of the buildings facing the little
|
|
valley across which the great ships were so peacefully advancing.
|
|
|
|
Instantly the scene changed as by magic; the foremost
|
|
vessel swung broadside toward us, and bringing her guns into
|
|
play returned our fire, at the same time moving parallel to
|
|
our front for a short distance and then turning back with the
|
|
evident intention of completing a great circle which would
|
|
bring her up to position once more opposite our firing line;
|
|
the other vessels followed in her wake, each one opening upon
|
|
us as she swung into position. Our own fire never diminished,
|
|
and I doubt if twenty-five per cent of our shots went wild. It
|
|
had never been given me to see such deadly accuracy of aim,
|
|
and it seemed as though a little figure on one of the craft
|
|
dropped at the explosion of each bullet, while the banners and
|
|
upper works dissolved in spurts of flame as the irresistible
|
|
projectiles of our warriors mowed through them.
|
|
|
|
The fire from the vessels was most ineffectual, owing, as I
|
|
afterward learned, to the unexpected suddenness of the first
|
|
volley, which caught the ship's crews entirely unprepared and
|
|
the sighting apparatus of the guns unprotected from the
|
|
deadly aim of our warriors.
|
|
|
|
It seems that each green warrior has certain objective points
|
|
for his fire under relatively identical circumstances of warfare.
|
|
For example, a proportion of them, always the best marksmen,
|
|
direct their fire entirely upon the wireless finding and
|
|
sighting apparatus of the big guns of an attacking naval
|
|
force; another detail attends to the smaller guns in the same
|
|
way; others pick off the gunners; still others the officers;
|
|
while certain other quotas concentrate their attention upon the
|
|
other members of the crew, upon the upper works, and upon the
|
|
steering gear and propellers.
|
|
|
|
Twenty minutes after the first volley the great fleet swung
|
|
trailing off in the direction from which it had first appeared.
|
|
Several of the craft were limping perceptibly, and seemed
|
|
but barely under the control of their depleted crews. Their fire
|
|
had ceased entirely and all their energies seemed focused
|
|
upon escape. Our warriors then rushed up to the roofs of the
|
|
buildings which we occupied and followed the retreating armada
|
|
with a continuous fusillade of deadly fire.
|
|
|
|
One by one, however, the ships managed to dip below the
|
|
crests of the outlying hills until only one barely moving craft
|
|
was in sight. This had received the brunt of our fire and
|
|
seemed to be entirely unmanned, as not a moving figure was
|
|
visible upon her decks. Slowly she swung from her course,
|
|
circling back toward us in an erratic and pitiful manner.
|
|
Instantly the warriors ceased firing, for it was quite apparent
|
|
that the vessel was entirely helpless, and, far from being in a
|
|
position to inflict harm upon us, she could not even control
|
|
herself sufficiently to escape.
|
|
|
|
As she neared the city the warriors rushed out upon the
|
|
plain to meet her, but it was evident that she still was too high
|
|
for them to hope to reach her decks. From my vantage point in
|
|
the window I could see the bodies of her crew strewn about,
|
|
although I could not make out what manner of creatures they
|
|
might be. Not a sign of life was manifest upon her as she
|
|
drifted slowly with the light breeze in a southeasterly
|
|
direction.
|
|
|
|
She was drifting some fifty feet above the ground, followed
|
|
by all but some hundred of the warriors who had been ordered
|
|
back to the roofs to cover the possibility of a return of the
|
|
fleet, or of reinforcements. It soon became evident that she
|
|
would strike the face of the buildings about a mile south of
|
|
our position, and as I watched the progress of the chase I
|
|
saw a number of warriors gallop ahead, dismount and enter
|
|
the building she seemed destined to touch.
|
|
|
|
As the craft neared the building, and just before she struck,
|
|
the Martian warriors swarmed upon her from the windows,
|
|
and with their great spears eased the shock of the collision,
|
|
and in a few moments they had thrown out grappling hooks
|
|
and the big boat was being hauled to ground by their fellows
|
|
below.
|
|
|
|
After making her fast, they swarmed the sides and searched
|
|
the vessel from stem to stern. I could see them examining the
|
|
dead sailors, evidently for signs of life, and presently a party
|
|
of them appeared from below dragging a little figure among
|
|
them. The creature was considerably less than half as tall as
|
|
the green Martian warriors, and from my balcony I could see
|
|
that it walked erect upon two legs and surmised that it was
|
|
some new and strange Martian monstrosity with which I had
|
|
not as yet become acquainted.
|
|
|
|
They removed their prisoner to the ground and then commenced
|
|
a systematic rifling of the vessel. This operation required
|
|
several hours, during which time a number of the chariots
|
|
were requisitioned to transport the loot, which consisted
|
|
in arms, ammunition, silks, furs, jewels, strangely carved
|
|
stone vessels, and a quantity of solid foods and liquids,
|
|
including many casks of water, the first I had seen since my
|
|
advent upon Mars.
|
|
|
|
After the last load had been removed the warriors made
|
|
lines fast to the craft and towed her far out into the valley in
|
|
a southwesterly direction. A few of them then boarded her and
|
|
were busily engaged in what appeared, from my distant position,
|
|
as the emptying of the contents of various carboys upon the
|
|
dead bodies of the sailors and over the decks and works
|
|
of the vessel.
|
|
|
|
This operation concluded, they hastily clambered over her
|
|
sides, sliding down the guy ropes to the ground. The last
|
|
warrior to leave the deck turned and threw something back
|
|
upon the vessel, waiting an instant to note the outcome of
|
|
his act. As a faint spurt of flame rose from the point where
|
|
the missile struck he swung over the side and was quickly
|
|
upon the ground. Scarcely had he alighted than the guy ropes
|
|
were simultaneous released, and the great warship, lightened
|
|
by the removal of the loot, soared majestically into the air,
|
|
her decks and upper works a mass of roaring flames.
|
|
|
|
Slowly she drifted to the southeast, rising higher and higher
|
|
as the flames ate away her wooden parts and diminished the
|
|
weight upon her. Ascending to the roof of the building I
|
|
watched her for hours, until finally she was lost in the dim
|
|
vistas of the distance. The sight was awe-inspiring in the
|
|
extreme as one contemplated this mighty floating funeral pyre,
|
|
drifting unguided and unmanned through the lonely wastes of
|
|
the Martian heavens; a derelict of death and destruction,
|
|
typifying the life story of these strange and ferocious
|
|
creatures into whose unfriendly hands fate had carried it.
|
|
|
|
Much depressed, and, to me, unaccountably so, I slowly
|
|
descended to the street. The scene I had witnessed seemed
|
|
to mark the defeat and annihilation of the forces of a kindred
|
|
people, rather than the routing by our green warriors of
|
|
a horde of similar, though unfriendly, creatures. I could not
|
|
fathom the seeming hallucination, nor could I free myself
|
|
from it; but somewhere in the innermost recesses of my
|
|
soul I felt a strange yearning toward these unknown foemen,
|
|
and a mighty hope surged through me that the fleet would
|
|
return and demand a reckoning from the green warriors
|
|
who had so ruthlessly and wantonly attacked it.
|
|
|
|
Close at my heel, in his now accustomed place, followed
|
|
Woola, the hound, and as I emerged upon the street Sola
|
|
rushed up to me as though I had been the object of some
|
|
search on her part. The cavalcade was returning to the plaza,
|
|
the homeward march having been given up for that day; nor,
|
|
in fact, was it recommenced for more than a week, owing
|
|
to the fear of a return attack by the air craft.
|
|
|
|
Lorquas Ptomel was too astute an old warrior to be
|
|
caught upon the open plains with a caravan of chariots and
|
|
children, and so we remained at the deserted city until the
|
|
danger seemed passed.
|
|
|
|
As Sola and I entered the plaza a sight met my eyes which
|
|
filled my whole being with a great surge of mingled hope,
|
|
fear, exultation, and depression, and yet most dominant
|
|
was a subtle sense of relief and happiness; for just
|
|
as we neared the throng of Martians I caught a glimpse of
|
|
the prisoner from the battle craft who was being roughly
|
|
dragged into a nearby building by a couple of green
|
|
Martian females.
|
|
|
|
And the sight which met my eyes was that of a slender,
|
|
girlish figure, similar in every detail to the earthly women
|
|
of my past life. She did not see me at first, but just as she
|
|
was disappearing through the portal of the building which
|
|
was to be her prison she turned, and her eyes met mine.
|
|
Her face was oval and beautiful in the extreme, her every
|
|
feature was finely chiseled and exquisite, her eyes large and
|
|
lustrous and her head surmounted by a mass of coal black,
|
|
waving hair, caught loosely into a strange yet becoming coiffure.
|
|
Her skin was of a light reddish copper color, against which
|
|
the crimson glow of her cheeks and the ruby of her beautifully
|
|
molded lips shone with a strangely enhancing effect.
|
|
|
|
She was as destitute of clothes as the green Martians who
|
|
accompanied her; indeed, save for her highly wrought ornaments
|
|
she was entirely naked, nor could any apparel have enhanced
|
|
the beauty of her perfect and symmetrical figure.
|
|
|
|
As her gaze rested on me her eyes opened wide in
|
|
astonishment, and she made a little sign with her free hand;
|
|
a sign which I did not, of course, understand. Just a moment
|
|
we gazed upon each other, and then the look of hope and
|
|
renewed courage which had glorified her face as she
|
|
discovered me, faded into one of utter dejection, mingled
|
|
with loathing and contempt. I realized I had not answered her
|
|
signal, and ignorant as I was of Martian customs, I intuitively
|
|
felt that she had made an appeal for succor and protection
|
|
which my unfortunate ignorance had prevented me from answering.
|
|
And then she was dragged out of my sight into the depths of the
|
|
deserted edifice.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER IX
|
|
|
|
|
|
I LEARN THE LANGUAGE
|
|
|
|
|
|
As I came back to myself I glanced at Sola, who had
|
|
witnessed this encounter and I was surprised to note a
|
|
strange expression upon her usually expressionless
|
|
countenance. What her thoughts were I did not know,
|
|
for as yet I had learned but little of the Martian tongue;
|
|
enough only to suffice for my daily needs.
|
|
|
|
As I reached the doorway of our building a strange surprise
|
|
awaited me. A warrior approached bearing the arms,
|
|
ornaments, and full accouterments of his kind. These he
|
|
presented to me with a few unintelligible words, and a
|
|
bearing at once respectful and menacing.
|
|
|
|
Later, Sola, with the aid of several of the other women,
|
|
remodeled the trappings to fit my lesser proportions, and
|
|
after they completed the work I went about garbed in all the
|
|
panoply of war.
|
|
|
|
From then on Sola instructed me in the mysteries of the
|
|
various weapons, and with the Martian young I spent several
|
|
hours each day practicing upon the plaza. I was not yet
|
|
proficient with all the weapons, but my great familiarity
|
|
with similar earthly weapons made me an unusually apt
|
|
pupil, and I progressed in a very satisfactory manner.
|
|
|
|
The training of myself and the young Martians was
|
|
conducted solely by the women, who not only attend to the
|
|
education of the young in the arts of individual defense
|
|
and offense, but are also the artisans who produce every
|
|
manufactured article wrought by the green Martians. They make
|
|
the powder, the cartridges, the firearms; in fact everything
|
|
of value is produced by the females. In time of actual warfare
|
|
they form a part of the reserves, and when the necessity
|
|
arises fight with even greater intelligence and ferocity
|
|
than the men.
|
|
|
|
The men are trained in the higher branches of the art of war;
|
|
in strategy and the maneuvering of large bodies of troops.
|
|
They make the laws as they are needed; a new law for
|
|
each emergency. They are unfettered by precedent in
|
|
the administration of justice. Customs have been handed
|
|
down by ages of repetition, but the punishment for ignoring
|
|
a custom is a matter for individual treatment by a jury of
|
|
the culprit's peers, and I may say that justice seldom
|
|
misses fire, but seems rather to rule in inverse ratio to
|
|
the ascendency of law. In one respect at least the Martians
|
|
are a happy people; they have no lawyers.
|
|
|
|
I did not see the prisoner again for several days subsequent
|
|
to our first encounter, and then only to catch a fleeting
|
|
glimpse of her as she was being conducted to the great
|
|
audience chamber where I had had my first meeting with
|
|
Lorquas Ptomel. I could not but note the unnecessary
|
|
harshness and brutality with which her guards treated her;
|
|
so different from the almost maternal kindliness which Sola
|
|
manifested toward me, and the respectful attitude of the few
|
|
green Martians who took the trouble to notice me at all.
|
|
|
|
I had observed on the two occasions when I had seen her
|
|
that the prisoner exchanged words with her guards, and this
|
|
convinced me that they spoke, or at least could make
|
|
themselves understood by a common language. With this added
|
|
incentive I nearly drove Sola distracted by my importunities
|
|
to hasten on my education and within a few more days
|
|
I had mastered the Martian tongue sufficiently well to enable
|
|
me to carry on a passable conversation and to fully understand
|
|
practically all that I heard.
|
|
|
|
At this time our sleeping quarters were occupied by three
|
|
or four females and a couple of the recently hatched young,
|
|
beside Sola and her youthful ward, myself, and Woola the
|
|
hound. After they had retired for the night it was customary
|
|
for the adults to carry on a desultory conversation for a
|
|
short time before lapsing into sleep, and now that I could
|
|
understand their language I was always a keen listener,
|
|
although I never proffered any remarks myself.
|
|
|
|
On the night following the prisoner's visit to the audience
|
|
chamber the conversation finally fell upon this subject, and
|
|
I was all ears on the instant. I had feared to question Sola
|
|
relative to the beautiful captive, as I could not but recall the
|
|
strange expression I had noted upon her face after my first
|
|
encounter with the prisoner. That it denoted jealousy I could
|
|
not say, and yet, judging all things by mundane standards
|
|
as I still did, I felt it safer to affect indifference in the matter
|
|
until I learned more surely Sola's attitude toward the object
|
|
of my solicitude.
|
|
|
|
Sarkoja, one of the older women who shared our domicile,
|
|
had been present at the audience as one of the captive's
|
|
guards, and it was toward her the question turned.
|
|
|
|
"When," asked one of the women, "will we enjoy the
|
|
death throes of the red one? or does Lorquas Ptomel, Jed,
|
|
intend holding her for ransom?"
|
|
|
|
"They have decided to carry her with us back to Thark,
|
|
and exhibit her last agonies at the great games before Tal
|
|
Hajus," replied Sarkoja.
|
|
|
|
"What will be the manner of her going out?" inquired
|
|
Sola. "She is very small and very beautiful; I had hoped that
|
|
they would hold her for ransom."
|
|
|
|
Sarkoja and the other women grunted angrily at this evidence
|
|
of weakness on the part of Sola.
|
|
|
|
"It is sad, Sola, that you were not born a million years
|
|
ago," snapped Sarkoja, "when all the hollows of the land
|
|
were filled with water, and the peoples were as soft as the
|
|
stuff they sailed upon. In our day we have progressed to a
|
|
point where such sentiments mark weakness and atavism. It
|
|
will not be well for you to permit Tars Tarkas to learn
|
|
that you hold such degenerate sentiments, as I doubt
|
|
that he would care to entrust such as you with the
|
|
grave responsibilities of maternity."
|
|
|
|
"I see nothing wrong with my expression of interest in
|
|
this red woman," retorted Sola. "She has never harmed us,
|
|
nor would she should we have fallen into her hands. it is
|
|
only the men of her kind who war upon us, and I have ever
|
|
thought that their attitude toward us is but the reflection
|
|
of ours toward them. They live at peace with all their fellows,
|
|
except when duty calls upon them to make war, while we
|
|
are at peace with none; forever warring among our own
|
|
kind as well as upon the red men, and even in our own
|
|
communities the individuals fight amongst themselves.
|
|
Oh, it is one continual, awful period of bloodshed from the
|
|
time we break the shell until we gladly embrace the bosom of
|
|
the river of mystery, the dark and ancient Iss which carries us
|
|
to an unknown, but at least no more frightful and terrible
|
|
existence! Fortunate indeed is he who meets his end in an
|
|
early death. Say what you please to Tars Tarkas, he can mete
|
|
out no worse fate to me than a continuation of the horrible
|
|
existence we are forced to lead in this life."
|
|
|
|
This wild outbreak on the part of Sola so greatly surprised
|
|
and shocked the other women, that, after a few words of
|
|
general reprimand, they all lapsed into silence and were
|
|
soon asleep. One thing the episode had accomplished was
|
|
to assure me of Sola's friendliness toward the poor girl, and
|
|
also to convince me that I had been extremely fortunate in
|
|
falling into her hands rather than those of some of the other
|
|
females. I knew that she was fond of me, and now that I
|
|
had discovered that she hated cruelty and barbarity I was
|
|
confident that I could depend upon her to aid me and the
|
|
girl captive to escape, provided of course that such a thing
|
|
was within the range of possibilities.
|
|
|
|
I did not even know that there were any better conditions
|
|
to escape to, but I was more than willing to take my chances
|
|
among people fashioned after my own mold rather than
|
|
to remain longer among the hideous and bloodthirsty green
|
|
men of Mars. But where to go, and how, was as much of a
|
|
puzzle to me as the age-old search for the spring of eternal
|
|
life has been to earthly men since the beginning of time.
|
|
|
|
I decided that at the first opportunity I would take Sola
|
|
into my confidence and openly ask her to aid me, and with
|
|
this resolution strong upon me I turned among my silks and
|
|
furs and slept the dreamless and refreshing sleep of Mars.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER X
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAMPION AND CHIEF
|
|
|
|
|
|
Early the next morning I was astir. Considerable freedom was
|
|
allowed me, as Sola had informed me that so long as I did
|
|
not attempt to leave the city I was free to go and come as
|
|
I pleased. She had warned me, however, against venturing forth
|
|
unarmed, as this city, like all other deserted metropolises of
|
|
an ancient Martian civilization, was peopled by the great
|
|
white apes of my second day's adventure.
|
|
|
|
In advising me that I must not leave the boundaries of
|
|
the city Sola had explained that Woola would prevent this
|
|
anyway should I attempt it, and she warned me most urgently
|
|
not to arouse his fierce nature by ignoring his warnings
|
|
should I venture too close to the forbidden territory. His
|
|
nature was such, she said, that he would bring me back into
|
|
the city dead or alive should I persist in opposing him;
|
|
"preferably dead," she added.
|
|
|
|
On this morning I had chosen a new street to explore when
|
|
suddenly I found myself at the limits of the city. Before
|
|
me were low hills pierced by narrow and inviting ravines.
|
|
I longed to explore the country before me, and, like the
|
|
pioneer stock from which I sprang, to view what the
|
|
landscape beyond the encircling hills might disclose
|
|
from the summits which shut out my view.
|
|
|
|
It also occurred to me that this would prove an excellent
|
|
opportunity to test the qualities of Woola. I was convinced
|
|
that the brute loved me; I had seen more evidences of affection
|
|
in him than in any other Martian animal, man or beast,
|
|
and I was sure that gratitude for the acts that had twice
|
|
saved his life would more than outweigh his loyalty to the
|
|
duty imposed upon him by cruel and loveless masters.
|
|
|
|
As I approached the boundary line Woola ran anxiously
|
|
before me, and thrust his body against my legs. His expression
|
|
was pleading rather than ferocious, nor did he bare his
|
|
great tusks or utter his fearful guttural warnings. Denied
|
|
the friendship and companionship of my kind, I had developed
|
|
considerable affection for Woola and Sola, for the normal
|
|
earthly man must have some outlet for his natural affections,
|
|
and so I decided upon an appeal to a like instinct in this
|
|
great brute, sure that I would not be disappointed.
|
|
|
|
I had never petted nor fondled him, but now I sat upon
|
|
the ground and putting my arms around his heavy neck I
|
|
stroked and coaxed him, talking in my newly acquired
|
|
Martian tongue as I would have to my hound at home, as I
|
|
would have talked to any other friend among the lower
|
|
animals. His response to my manifestation of affection was
|
|
remarkable to a degree; he stretched his great mouth to its
|
|
full width, baring the entire expanse of his upper rows of
|
|
tusks and wrinkling his snout until his great eyes were
|
|
almost hidden by the folds of flesh. If you have ever seen a
|
|
collie smile you may have some idea of Woola's facial distortion.
|
|
|
|
He threw himself upon his back and fairly wallowed at
|
|
my feet; jumped up and sprang upon me, rolling me upon
|
|
the ground by his great weight; then wriggling and squirming
|
|
around me like a playful puppy presenting its back for
|
|
the petting it craves. I could not resist the ludicrousness
|
|
of the spectacle, and holding my sides I rocked back and forth
|
|
in the first laughter which had passed my lips in many days;
|
|
the first, in fact, since the morning Powell had left camp
|
|
when his horse, long unused, had precipitately and unexpectedly
|
|
bucked him off headforemost into a pot of frijoles.
|
|
|
|
My laughter frightened Woola, his antics ceased and he
|
|
crawled pitifully toward me, poking his ugly head far into
|
|
my lap; and then I remembered what laughter signified on
|
|
Mars--torture, suffering, death. Quieting myself, I rubbed
|
|
the poor old fellow's head and back, talked to him for a few
|
|
minutes, and then in an authoritative tone commanded him
|
|
to follow me, and arising started for the hills.
|
|
|
|
There was no further question of authority between us;
|
|
Woola was my devoted slave from that moment hence, and
|
|
I his only and undisputed master. My walk to the hills
|
|
occupied but a few minutes, and I found nothing of particular
|
|
interest to reward me. Numerous brilliantly colored and
|
|
strangely formed wild flowers dotted the ravines and from
|
|
the summit of the first hill I saw still other hills stretching off
|
|
toward the north, and rising, one range above another, until
|
|
lost in mountains of quite respectable dimensions; though I
|
|
afterward found that only a few peaks on all Mars exceed
|
|
four thousand feet in height; the suggestion of magnitude
|
|
was merely relative.
|
|
|
|
My morning's walk had been large with importance to
|
|
me for it had resulted in a perfect understanding with Woola,
|
|
upon whom Tars Tarkas relied for my safe keeping. I now
|
|
knew that while theoretically a prisoner I was virtually free,
|
|
and I hastened to regain the city limits before the defection
|
|
of Woola could be discovered by his erstwhile masters. The
|
|
adventure decided me never again to leave the limits of my
|
|
prescribed stamping grounds until I was ready to venture forth
|
|
for good and all, as it would certainly result in a curtailment
|
|
of my liberties, as well as the probable death of Woola, were we
|
|
to be discovered.
|
|
|
|
On regaining the plaza I had my third glimpse of the
|
|
captive girl. She was standing with her guards before the
|
|
entrance to the audience chamber, and as I approached she
|
|
gave me one haughty glance and turned her back full upon
|
|
me. The act was so womanly, so earthly womanly, that
|
|
though it stung my pride it also warmed my heart with a
|
|
feeling of companionship; it was good to know that someone
|
|
else on Mars beside myself had human instincts of a civilized
|
|
order, even though the manifestation of them was so painful
|
|
and mortifying.
|
|
|
|
Had a green Martian woman desired to show dislike or contempt
|
|
she would, in all likelihood, have done it with a sword
|
|
thrust or a movement of her trigger finger; but as their
|
|
sentiments are mostly atrophied it would have required a
|
|
serious injury to have aroused such passions in them. Sola,
|
|
let me add, was an exception; I never saw her perform a cruel
|
|
or uncouth act, or fail in uniform kindliness and good
|
|
nature. She was indeed, as her fellow Martian had said of her,
|
|
an atavism; a dear and precious reversion to a former type
|
|
of loved and loving ancestor.
|
|
|
|
Seeing that the prisoner seemed the center of attraction I
|
|
halted to view the proceedings. I had not long to wait
|
|
for presently Lorquas Ptomel and his retinue of chieftains
|
|
approached the building and, signing the guards to follow with
|
|
the prisoner entered the audience chamber. Realizing that I
|
|
was a somewhat favored character, and also convinced that
|
|
the warriors did not know of my proficiency in their language,
|
|
as I had pleaded with Sola to keep this a secret on the
|
|
grounds that I did not wish to be forced to talk with the
|
|
men until I had perfectly mastered the Martian tongue, I
|
|
chanced an attempt to enter the audience chamber and listen
|
|
to the proceedings.
|
|
|
|
The council squatted upon the steps of the rostrum, while
|
|
below them stood the prisoner and her two guards. I saw
|
|
that one of the women was Sarkoja, and thus understood
|
|
how she had been present at the hearing of the preceding
|
|
day, the results of which she had reported to the occupants
|
|
of our dormitory last night. Her attitude toward the captive
|
|
was most harsh and brutal. When she held her, she sunk her
|
|
rudimentary nails into the poor girl's flesh, or twisted her
|
|
arm in a most painful manner. When it was necessary to
|
|
move from one spot to another she either jerked her roughly,
|
|
or pushed her headlong before her. She seemed to be venting
|
|
upon this poor defenseless creature all the hatred, cruelty,
|
|
ferocity, and spite of her nine hundred years, backed by
|
|
unguessable ages of fierce and brutal ancestors.
|
|
|
|
The other woman was less cruel because she was entirely
|
|
indifferent; if the prisoner had been left to her alone, and
|
|
fortunately she was at night, she would have received no
|
|
harsh treatment, nor, by the same token would she have
|
|
received any attention at all.
|
|
|
|
As Lorquas Ptomel raised his eyes to address the prisoner
|
|
they fell on me and he turned to Tars Tarkas with a word,
|
|
and gesture of impatience. Tars Tarkas made some reply
|
|
which I could not catch, but which caused Lorquas Ptomel to
|
|
smile; after which they paid no further attention to me.
|
|
|
|
"What is your name?" asked Lorquas Ptomel, addressing
|
|
the prisoner.
|
|
|
|
"Dejah Thoris, daughter of Mors Kajak of Helium."
|
|
|
|
"And the nature of your expedition?" he continued.
|
|
|
|
"It was a purely scientific research party sent out by my
|
|
father's father, the Jeddak of Helium, to rechart the air
|
|
currents, and to take atmospheric density tests," replied
|
|
the fair prisoner, in a low, well-modulated voice.
|
|
|
|
"We were unprepared for battle," she continued, "as we
|
|
were on a peaceful mission, as our banners and the colors of
|
|
our craft denoted. The work we were doing was as much in
|
|
your interests as in ours, for you know full well that were it
|
|
not for our labors and the fruits of our scientific operations
|
|
there would not be enough air or water on Mars to support
|
|
a single human life. For ages we have maintained the air and
|
|
water supply at practically the same point without an
|
|
appreciable loss, and we have done this in the face of
|
|
the brutal and ignorant interference of your green men.
|
|
|
|
"Why, oh, why will you not learn to live in amity with
|
|
your fellows, must you ever go on down the ages to your
|
|
final extinction but little above the plane of the dumb brutes
|
|
that serve you! A people without written language, without
|
|
art, without homes, without love; the victim of eons of the
|
|
horrible community idea. Owning everything in common,
|
|
even to your women and children, has resulted in your
|
|
owning nothing in common. You hate each other as you hate
|
|
all else except yourselves. Come back to the ways of our
|
|
common ancestors, come back to the light of kindliness
|
|
and fellowship. The way is open to you, you will find the
|
|
hands of the red men stretched out to aid you. Together we
|
|
may do still more to regenerate our dying planet. The grand-
|
|
daughter of the greatest and mightiest of the red jeddaks has
|
|
asked you. Will you come?"
|
|
|
|
Lorquas Ptomel and the warriors sat looking silently and
|
|
intently at the young woman for several moments after she
|
|
had ceased speaking. What was passing in their minds no
|
|
man may know, but that they were moved I truly believe,
|
|
and if one man high among them had been strong enough
|
|
to rise above custom, that moment would have marked a
|
|
new and mighty era for Mars.
|
|
|
|
I saw Tars Tarkas rise to speak, and on his face was such
|
|
an expression as I had never seen upon the countenance of a
|
|
green Martian warrior. It bespoke an inward and mighty
|
|
battle with self, with heredity, with age-old custom, and
|
|
as he opened his mouth to speak, a look almost of benignity,
|
|
of kindliness, momentarily lighted up his fierce and terrible
|
|
countenance.
|
|
|
|
What words of moment were to have fallen from his lips
|
|
were never spoken, as just then a young warrior, evidently
|
|
sensing the trend of thought among the older men, leaped
|
|
down from the steps of the rostrum, and striking the frail
|
|
captive a powerful blow across the face, which felled her to
|
|
the floor, placed his foot upon her prostrate form and turning
|
|
toward the assembled council broke into peals of horrid,
|
|
mirthless laughter.
|
|
|
|
For an instant I thought Tars Tarkas would strike him
|
|
dead, nor did the aspect of Lorquas Ptomel augur any too
|
|
favorably for the brute, but the mood passed, their old selves
|
|
reasserted their ascendency, and they smiled. It was portentous
|
|
however that they did not laugh aloud, for the brute's act
|
|
constituted a side-splitting witticism according to the
|
|
ethics which rule green Martian humor.
|
|
|
|
That I have taken moments to write down a part of what
|
|
occurred as that blow fell does not signify that I remained
|
|
inactive for any such length of time. I think I must have
|
|
sensed something of what was coming, for I realize now that
|
|
I was crouched as for a spring as I saw the blow aimed at
|
|
her beautiful, upturned, pleading face, and ere the hand
|
|
descended I was halfway across the hall.
|
|
|
|
Scarcely had his hideous laugh rang out but once, when
|
|
I was upon him. The brute was twelve feet in height and
|
|
armed to the teeth, but I believe that I could have accounted
|
|
for the whole roomful in the terrific intensity of my rage.
|
|
Springing upward, I struck him full in the face as he turned
|
|
at my warning cry and then as he drew his short-sword I
|
|
drew mine and sprang up again upon his breast, hooking one
|
|
leg over the butt of his pistol and grasping one of his huge
|
|
tusks with my left hand while I delivered blow after blow
|
|
upon his enormous chest.
|
|
|
|
He could not use his short-sword to advantage because I
|
|
was too close to him, nor could he draw his pistol, which
|
|
he attempted to do in direct opposition to Martian custom
|
|
which says that you may not fight a fellow warrior in
|
|
private combat with any other than the weapon with which you
|
|
are attacked. In fact he could do nothing but make a wild
|
|
and futile attempt to dislodge me. With all his immense bulk
|
|
he was little if any stronger than I, and it was but the matter
|
|
of a moment or two before he sank, bleeding and lifeless,
|
|
to the floor.
|
|
|
|
Dejah Thoris had raised herself upon one elbow and was
|
|
watching the battle with wide, staring eyes. When I had
|
|
regained my feet I raised her in my arms and bore her to
|
|
one of the benches at the side of the room.
|
|
|
|
Again no Martian interfered with me, and tearing a piece
|
|
of silk from my cape I endeavored to staunch the flow of
|
|
blood from her nostrils. I was soon successful as her
|
|
injuries amounted to little more than an ordinary nosebleed,
|
|
and when she could speak she placed her hand upon my
|
|
arm and looking up into my eyes, said:
|
|
|
|
"Why did you do it? You who refused me even friendly recognition
|
|
in the first hour of my peril! And now you risk your life and
|
|
kill one of your companions for my sake. I cannot understand.
|
|
What strange manner of man are you, that you consort with the
|
|
green men, though your form is that of my race, while your color
|
|
is little darker than that of the white ape? Tell me, are you
|
|
human, or are you more than human?"
|
|
|
|
"It is a strange tale," I replied, "too long to attempt to tell
|
|
you now, and one which I so much doubt the credibility of myself
|
|
that I fear to hope that others will believe it. Suffice it,
|
|
for the present, that I am your friend, and, so far as our
|
|
captors will permit, your protector and your servant."
|
|
|
|
"Then you too are a prisoner? But why, then, those arms
|
|
and the regalia of a Tharkian chieftain? What is your name?
|
|
Where your country?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes, Dejah Thoris, I too am a prisoner; my name is John
|
|
Carter, and I claim Virginia, one of the United States of
|
|
America, Earth, as my home; but why I am permitted to
|
|
wear arms I do not know, nor was I aware that my regalia
|
|
was that of a chieftain."
|
|
|
|
We were interrupted at this juncture by the approach of one
|
|
of the warriors, bearing arms, accouterments and ornaments,
|
|
and in a flash one of her questions was answered and a
|
|
puzzle cleared up for me. I saw that the body of my dead
|
|
antagonist had been stripped, and I read in the menacing
|
|
yet respectful attitude of the warrior who had brought me
|
|
these trophies of the kill the same demeanor as that evinced
|
|
by the other who had brought me my original equipment, and now
|
|
for the first time I realized that my blow, on the occasion of
|
|
my first battle in the audience chamber had resulted in the
|
|
death of my adversary.
|
|
|
|
The reason for the whole attitude displayed toward me was
|
|
now apparent; I had won my spurs, so to speak, and in the
|
|
crude justice, which always marks Martian dealings, and which,
|
|
among other things, has caused me to call her the planet of
|
|
paradoxes, I was accorded the honors due a conqueror;
|
|
the trappings and the position of the man I killed.
|
|
In truth, I was a Martian chieftain, and this I learned later
|
|
was the cause of my great freedom and my toleration in the
|
|
audience chamber.
|
|
|
|
As I had turned to receive the dead warrior's chattels I
|
|
had noticed that Tars Tarkas and several others had pushed
|
|
forward toward us, and the eyes of the former rested upon
|
|
me in a most quizzical manner. Finally he addressed me:
|
|
|
|
"You speak the tongue of Barsoom quite readily for one
|
|
who was deaf and dumb to us a few short days ago. Where
|
|
did you learn it, John Carter?"
|
|
|
|
"You, yourself, are responsible, Tars Tarkas," I replied, "in
|
|
that you furnished me with an instructress of remarkable
|
|
ability; I have to thank Sola for my learning."
|
|
|
|
"She has done well," he answered, "but your education in
|
|
other respects needs considerable polish. Do you know what
|
|
your unprecedented temerity would have cost you had you
|
|
failed to kill either of the two chieftains whose metal you
|
|
now wear?"
|
|
|
|
"I presume that that one whom I had failed to kill, would
|
|
have killed me," I answered, smiling.
|
|
|
|
"No, you are wrong. Only in the last extremity of self-defense
|
|
would a Martian warrior kill a prisoner; we like to save them
|
|
for other purposes," and his face bespoke possibilities that
|
|
were not pleasant to dwell upon.
|
|
|
|
"But one thing can save you now," he continued. "Should
|
|
you, in recognition of your remarkable valor, ferocity,
|
|
and prowess, be considered by Tal Hajus as worthy of his
|
|
service you may be taken into the community and become a
|
|
full-fledged Tharkian. Until we reach the headquarters of Tal
|
|
Hajus it is the will of Lorquas Ptomel that you be accorded
|
|
the respect your acts have earned you. You will be treated by
|
|
us as a Tharkian chieftain, but you must not forget that every
|
|
chief who ranks you is responsible for your safe delivery to
|
|
our mighty and most ferocious ruler. I am done."
|
|
|
|
"I hear you, Tars Tarkas," I answered. "As you know I
|
|
am not of Barsoom; your ways are not my ways, and I can
|
|
only act in the future as I have in the past, in accordance
|
|
with the dictates of my conscience and guided by the standards
|
|
of mine own people. If you will leave me alone I will go
|
|
in peace, but if not, let the individual Barsoomians with
|
|
whom I must deal either respect my rights as a stranger
|
|
among you, or take whatever consequences may befall. Of
|
|
one thing let us be sure, whatever may be your ultimate
|
|
intentions toward this unfortunate young woman, whoever
|
|
would offer her injury or insult in the future must figure on
|
|
making a full accounting to me. I understand that you belittle
|
|
all sentiments of generosity and kindliness, but I do not,
|
|
and I can convince your most doughty warrior that these
|
|
characteristics are not incompatible with an ability to fight."
|
|
|
|
Ordinarily I am not given to long speeches, nor ever before
|
|
had I descended to bombast, but I had guessed at the keynote
|
|
which would strike an answering chord in the breasts of the
|
|
green Martians, nor was I wrong, for my harangue evidently
|
|
deeply impressed them, and their attitude toward me
|
|
thereafter was still further respectful.
|
|
|
|
Tars Tarkas himself seemed pleased with my reply, but his
|
|
only comment was more or less enigmatical-- "And I think I
|
|
know Tal Hajus, Jeddak of Thark."
|
|
|
|
I now turned my attention to Dejah Thoris, and assisting
|
|
her to her feet I turned with her toward the exit, ignoring
|
|
her hovering guardian harpies as well as the inquiring
|
|
glances of the chieftains. Was I not now a chieftain also!
|
|
Well, then, I would assume the responsibilities of one.
|
|
They did not molest us, and so Dejah Thoris, Princess of
|
|
Helium, and John Carter, gentleman of Virginia, followed
|
|
by the faithful Woola, passed through utter silence from the
|
|
audience chamber of Lorquas Ptomel, Jed among the Tharks
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of Barsoom.
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CHAPTER XI
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WITH DEJAH THORIS
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As we reached the open the two female guards who had
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been detailed to watch over Dejah Thoris hurried up and
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made as though to assume custody of her once more. The
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poor child shrank against me and I felt her two little hands
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fold tightly over my arm. Waving the women away, I informed
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them that Sola would attend the captive hereafter, and I
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further warned Sarkoja that any more of her cruel attentions
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|
bestowed upon Dejah Thoris would result in Sarkoja's sudden
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|
and painful demise.
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My threat was unfortunate and resulted in more harm
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than good to Dejah Thoris, for, as I learned later, men do
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|
not kill women upon Mars, nor women, men. So Sarkoja
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merely gave us an ugly look and departed to hatch up
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deviltries against us.
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I soon found Sola and explained to her that I wished her
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to guard Dejah Thoris as she had guarded me; that I wished
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her to find other quarters where they would not be molested
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by Sarkoja, and I finally informed her that I myself would
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take up my quarters among the men.
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Sola glanced at the accouterments which were carried in
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my hand and slung across my shoulder.
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"You are a great chieftain now, John Carter," she said,
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"and I must do your bidding, though indeed I am glad to do
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it under any circumstances. The man whose metal you carry
|
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was young, but he was a great warrior, and had by his
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promotions and kills won his way close to the rank of Tars
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Tarkas, who, as you know, is second to Lorquas Ptomel only.
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You are eleventh, there are but ten chieftains in this
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community who rank you in prowess."
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"And if I should kill Lorquas Ptomel?" I asked.
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"You would be first, John Carter; but you may only win
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that honor by the will of the entire council that Lorquas
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Ptomel meet you in combat, or should he attack you, you
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may kill him in self-defense, and thus win first place."
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I laughed, and changed the subject. I had no particular
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desire to kill Lorquas Ptomel, and less to be a jed among
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the Tharks.
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I accompanied Sola and Dejah Thoris in a search for new
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quarters, which we found in a building nearer the audience
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chamber and of far more pretentious architecture than our
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former habitation. We also found in this building real
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sleeping apartments with ancient beds of highly wrought
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metal swinging from enormous gold chains depending from the
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marble ceilings. The decoration of the walls was most elaborate,
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and, unlike the frescoes in the other buildings I had examined,
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portrayed many human figures in the compositions.
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These were of people like myself, and of a much lighter
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color than Dejah Thoris. They were clad in graceful,
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flowing robes, highly ornamented with metal and jewels, and
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their luxuriant hair was of a beautiful golden and reddish
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bronze. The men were beardless and only a few wore arms.
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The scenes depicted for the most part, a fair-skinned,
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fair-haired people at play.
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Dejah Thoris clasped her hands with an exclamation of
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rapture as she gazed upon these magnificent works of art,
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wrought by a people long extinct; while Sola, on the other
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hand, apparently did not see them.
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We decided to use this room, on the second floor and
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overlooking the plaza, for Dejah Thoris and Sola, and
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another room adjoining and in the rear for the cooking and
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supplies. I then dispatched Sola to bring the bedding and
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such food and utensils as she might need, telling her that
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I would guard Dejah Thoris until her return.
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As Sola departed Dejah Thoris turned to me with a faint smile.
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"And whereto, then, would your prisoner escape should
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you leave her, unless it was to follow you and crave your
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protection, and ask your pardon for the cruel thoughts she
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|
has harbored against you these past few days?"
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"You are right," I answered, "there is no escape for either
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of us unless we go together."
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"I heard your challenge to the creature you call Tars Tarkas,
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and I think I understand your position among these people,
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but what I cannot fathom is your statement that you are
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not of Barsoom."
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"In the name of my first ancestor, then," she continued,
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"where may you be from? You are like unto my people,
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and yet so unlike. You speak my language, and yet I heard
|
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you tell Tars Tarkas that you had but learned it recently.
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All Barsoomians speak the same tongue from the ice-clad
|
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south to the ice-clad north, though their written languages
|
|
differ. Only in the valley Dor, where the river Iss empties
|
|
into the lost sea of Korus, is there supposed to
|
|
be a different language spoken, and, except in the legends of
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our ancestors, there is no record of a Barsoomian returning
|
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up the river Iss, from the shores of Korus in the valley of
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Dor. Do not tell me that you have thus returned! They
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would kill you horribly anywhere upon the surface of Barsoom
|
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if that were true; tell me it is not!"
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Her eyes were filled with a strange, weird light; her voice
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was pleading, and her little hands, reached up upon my
|
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breast, were pressed against me as though to wring a denial
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from my very heart.
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"I do not know your customs, Dejah Thoris, but in my
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own Virginia a gentleman does not lie to save himself; I am
|
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not of Dor; I have never seen the mysterious Iss; the lost
|
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sea of Korus is still lost, so far as I am concerned. Do you
|
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believe me?"
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And then it struck me suddenly that I was very anxious that
|
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she should believe me. It was not that I feared the results
|
|
which would follow a general belief that I had returned
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from the Barsoomian heaven or hell, or whatever it was.
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Why was it, then! Why should I care what she thought?
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I looked down at her; her beautiful face upturned, and her
|
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wonderful eyes opening up the very depth of her soul; and
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as my eyes met hers I knew why, and--I shuddered.
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A similar wave of feeling seemed to stir her; she drew
|
|
away from me with a sigh, and with her earnest, beautiful
|
|
face turned up to mine, she whispered: "I believe you, John
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Carter; I do not know what a 'gentleman' is, nor have I ever
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he does not wish to speak the truth he is silent. Where is
|
|
this Virginia, your country, John Carter?" she asked, and it
|
|
seemed that this fair name of my fair land had never sounded
|
|
more beautiful than as it fell from those perfect lips on that
|
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far-gone day.
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"I am of another world," I answered, "the great planet
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Earth, which revolves about our common sun and next within
|
|
the orbit of your Barsoom, which we know as Mars. How I
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|
came here I cannot tell you, for I do not know; but here I
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am, and since my presence has permitted me to serve Dejah
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Thoris I am glad that I am here."
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She gazed at me with troubled eyes, long and questioningly.
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That it was difficult to believe my statement I well knew,
|
|
nor could I hope that she would do so however much I craved
|
|
her confidence and respect. I would much rather not have
|
|
told her anything of my antecedents, but no man could look
|
|
into the depth of those eyes and refuse her slightest behest.
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Finally she smiled, and, rising, said: "I shall have to
|
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believe even though I cannot understand. I can readily
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perceive that you are not of the Barsoom of today; you are
|
|
like us, yet different--but why should I trouble my poor head
|
|
with such a problem, when my heart tells me that I believe
|
|
because I wish to believe!"
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It was good logic, good, earthly, feminine logic, and if it
|
|
satisfied her I certainly could pick no flaws in it. As a
|
|
matter of fact it was about the only kind of logic that could
|
|
be brought to bear upon my problem. We fell into a general
|
|
conversation then, asking and answering many questions on each
|
|
side. She was curious to learn of the customs of my people
|
|
and displayed a remarkable knowledge of events on Earth.
|
|
When I questioned her closely on this seeming familiarity
|
|
with earthly things she laughed, and cried out:
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"Why, every school boy on Barsoom knows the geography,
|
|
and much concerning the fauna and flora, as well as the
|
|
history of your planet fully as well as of his own. Can we
|
|
not see everything which takes place upon Earth, as you call
|
|
it; is it not hanging there in the heavens in plain sight?"
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This baffled me, I must confess, fully as much as my statements
|
|
had confounded her; and I told her so. She then explained
|
|
in general the instruments her people had used and been
|
|
perfecting for ages, which permit them to throw upon
|
|
a screen a perfect image of what is transpiring upon any
|
|
planet and upon many of the stars. These pictures are so
|
|
perfect in detail that, when photographed and enlarged,
|
|
objects no greater than a blade of grass may be distinctly
|
|
recognized. I afterward, in Helium, saw many of these
|
|
pictures, as well as the instruments which produced them.
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"If, then, you are so familiar with earthly things," I asked,
|
|
"why is it that you do not recognize me as identical with the
|
|
inhabitants of that planet?"
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She smiled again as one might in bored indulgence of a
|
|
questioning child.
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"Because, John Carter," she replied, "nearly every planet
|
|
and star having atmospheric conditions at all approaching
|
|
those of Barsoom, shows forms of animal life almost
|
|
identical with you and me; and, further, Earth men, almost
|
|
without exception, cover their bodies with strange, unsightly
|
|
pieces of cloth, and their heads with hideous contraptions
|
|
the purpose of which we have been unable to conceive; while
|
|
you, when found by the Tharkian warriors, were entirely
|
|
undisfigured and unadorned.
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|
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"The fact that you wore no ornaments is a strong proof of
|
|
your un-Barsoomian origin, while the absence of grotesque
|
|
coverings might cause a doubt as to your earthliness."
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|
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I then narrated the details of my departure from the Earth,
|
|
explaining that my body there lay fully clothed in all the, to
|
|
her, strange garments of mundane dwellers. At this point
|
|
Sola returned with our meager belongings and her young
|
|
Martian protege, who, of course, would have to share the
|
|
quarters with them.
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Sola asked us if we had had a visitor during her absence,
|
|
and seemed much surprised when we answered in the negative.
|
|
It seemed that as she had mounted the approach to the
|
|
upper floors where our quarters were located, she had met
|
|
Sarkoja descending. We decided that she must have been
|
|
eavesdropping, but as we could recall nothing of importance
|
|
that had passed between us we dismissed the matter as of
|
|
little consequence, merely promising ourselves to be warned
|
|
to the utmost caution in the future.
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|
|
Dejah Thoris and I then fell to examining the architecture and
|
|
decorations of the beautiful chambers of the building we were
|
|
occupying. She told me that these people had presumably
|
|
flourished over a hundred thousand years before.
|
|
They were the early progenitors of her race, but had mixed
|
|
with the other great race of early Martians, who were very
|
|
dark, almost black, and also with the reddish yellow race
|
|
which had flourished at the same time.
|
|
|
|
These three great divisions of the higher Martians had
|
|
been forced into a mighty alliance as the drying up of the
|
|
Martian seas had compelled them to seek the comparatively few
|
|
and always diminishing fertile areas, and to defend themselves,
|
|
under new conditions of life, against the wild hordes of green men.
|
|
|
|
Ages of close relationship and intermarrying had resulted
|
|
in the race of red men, of which Dejah Thoris was a fair
|
|
and beautiful daughter. During the ages of hardships and
|
|
incessant warring between their own various races, as well
|
|
as with the green men, and before they had fitted themselves
|
|
to the changed conditions, much of the high civilization
|
|
and many of the arts of the fair-haired Martians had
|
|
become lost; but the red race of today has reached a point
|
|
where it feels that it has made up in new discoveries and in
|
|
a more practical civilization for all that lies irretrievably
|
|
buried with the ancient Barsoomians, beneath the countless
|
|
intervening ages.
|
|
|
|
These ancient Martians had been a highly cultivated and
|
|
literary race, but during the vicissitudes of those trying
|
|
centuries of readjustment to new conditions, not only did their
|
|
advancement and production cease entirely, but practically
|
|
all their archives, records, and literature were lost.
|
|
|
|
Dejah Thoris related many interesting facts and legends
|
|
concerning this lost race of noble and kindly people. She
|
|
said that the city in which we were camping was supposed
|
|
to have been a center of commerce and culture known as
|
|
Korad. It had been built upon a beautiful, natural harbor,
|
|
landlocked by magnificent hills. The little valley on the west
|
|
front of the city, she explained, was all that remained of the
|
|
harbor, while the pass through the hills to the old sea bottom
|
|
had been the channel through which the shipping passed up
|
|
to the city's gates.
|
|
|
|
The shores of the ancient seas were dotted with just such
|
|
cities, and lesser ones, in diminishing numbers, were to be
|
|
found converging toward the center of the oceans, as the
|
|
people had found it necessary to follow the receding waters
|
|
until necessity had forced upon them their ultimate salvation,
|
|
the so-called Martian canals.
|
|
|
|
We had been so engrossed in exploration of the building
|
|
and in our conversation that it was late in the afternoon
|
|
before we realized it. We were brought back to a realization
|
|
of our present conditions by a messenger bearing a summons
|
|
from Lorquas Ptomel directing me to appear before him
|
|
forthwith. Bidding Dejah Thoris and Sola farewell, and
|
|
commanding Woola to remain on guard, I hastened to the
|
|
audience chamber, where I found Lorquas Ptomel and Tars
|
|
Tarkas seated upon the rostrum.
|
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|
|
CHAPTER XII
|
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|
|
|
A PRISONER WITH POWER
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|
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As I entered and saluted, Lorquas Ptomel signaled me to advance,
|
|
and, fixing his great, hideous eyes upon me, addressed me thus:
|
|
|
|
"You have been with us a few days, yet during that time
|
|
you have by your prowess won a high position among us.
|
|
Be that as it may, you are not one of us; you owe us no
|
|
allegiance.
|
|
|
|
"Your position is a peculiar one," he continued; "you are
|
|
a prisoner and yet you give commands which must be obeyed;
|
|
you are an alien and yet you are a Tharkian chieftain; you
|
|
are a midget and yet you can kill a mighty warrior with one
|
|
blow of your fist. And now you are reported to have been
|
|
plotting to escape with another prisoner of another race; a
|
|
prisoner who, from her own admission, half believes you are
|
|
returned from the valley of Dor. Either one of these accusations,
|
|
if proved, would be sufficient grounds for your execution,
|
|
but we are a just people and you shall have a trial on our
|
|
return to Thark, if Tal Hajus so commands.
|
|
|
|
"But," he continued, in his fierce guttural tones, "if you
|
|
run off with the red girl it is I who shall have to account to
|
|
Tal Hajus; it is I who shall have to face Tars Tarkas, and
|
|
either demonstrate my right to command, or the metal from
|
|
my dead carcass will go to a better man, for such is the
|
|
custom of the Tharks.
|
|
|
|
"I have no quarrel with Tars Tarkas; together we rule
|
|
supreme the greatest of the lesser communities among the
|
|
green men; we do not wish to fight between ourselves; and so
|
|
if you were dead, John Carter, I should be glad. Under two
|
|
conditions only, however, may you be killed by us without
|
|
orders from Tal Hajus; in personal combat in self-defense,
|
|
should you attack one of us, or were you apprehended in an
|
|
attempt to escape.
|
|
|
|
"As a matter of justice I must warn you that we only
|
|
await one of these two excuses for ridding ourselves of so
|
|
great a responsibility. The safe delivery of the red girl to
|
|
Tal Hajus is of the greatest importance. Not in a thousand
|
|
years have the Tharks made such a capture; she is the
|
|
granddaughter of the greatest of the red jeddaks, who is also
|
|
our bitterest enemy. I have spoken. The red girl told us that
|
|
we were without the softer sentiments of humanity, but we
|
|
are a just and truthful race. You may go."
|
|
|
|
Turning, I left the audience chamber. So this was the
|
|
beginning of Sarkoja's persecution! I knew that none other
|
|
could be responsible for this report which had reached the
|
|
ears of Lorquas Ptomel so quickly, and now I recalled those
|
|
portions of our conversation which had touched upon escape
|
|
and upon my origin.
|
|
|
|
Sarkoja was at this time Tars Tarkas' oldest and most
|
|
trusted female. As such she was a mighty power behind the
|
|
throne, for no warrior had the confidence of Lorquas Ptomel
|
|
to such an extent as did his ablest lieutenant, Tars Tarkas.
|
|
|
|
However, instead of putting thoughts of possible escape
|
|
from my mind, my audience with Lorquas Ptomel only served
|
|
to center my every faculty on this subject. Now, more than
|
|
before, the absolute necessity for escape, in so far as Dejah
|
|
Thoris was concerned, was impressed upon me, for I was
|
|
convinced that some horrible fate awaited her at the
|
|
headquarters of Tal Hajus.
|
|
|
|
As described by Sola, this monster was the exaggerated
|
|
personification of all the ages of cruelty, ferocity, and
|
|
brutality from which he had descended. Cold, cunning,
|
|
calculating; he was, also, in marked contrast to most of his
|
|
fellows, a slave to that brute passion which the waning
|
|
demands for procreation upon their dying planet has almost
|
|
stilled in the Martian breast.
|
|
|
|
The thought that the divine Dejah Thoris might fall into
|
|
the clutches of such an abysmal atavism started the cold
|
|
sweat upon me. Far better that we save friendly bullets for
|
|
ourselves at the last moment, as did those brave frontier
|
|
women of my lost land, who took their own lives rather than
|
|
fall into the hands of the Indian braves.
|
|
|
|
As I wandered about the plaza lost in my gloomy forebodings
|
|
Tars Tarkas approached me on his way from the audience
|
|
chamber. His demeanor toward me was unchanged, and he
|
|
greeted me as though we had not just parted a few
|
|
moments before.
|
|
|
|
"Where are your quarters, John Carter?" he asked.
|
|
|
|
"I have selected none," I replied. "It seemed best that I
|
|
quartered either by myself or among the other warriors, and
|
|
I was awaiting an opportunity to ask your advice. As you
|
|
know," and I smiled, "I am not yet familiar with all the
|
|
customs of the Tharks."
|
|
|
|
"Come with me," he directed, and together we moved off
|
|
across the plaza to a building which I was glad to see
|
|
adjoined that occupied by Sola and her charges.
|
|
|
|
"My quarters are on the first floor of this building," he
|
|
said, "and the second floor also is fully occupied by warriors,
|
|
but the third floor and the floors above are vacant; you may
|
|
take your choice of these.
|
|
|
|
"I understand," he continued, "that you have given up
|
|
your woman to the red prisoner. Well, as you have said,
|
|
your ways are not our ways, but you can fight well enough
|
|
to do about as you please, and so, if you wish to give your
|
|
woman to a captive, it is your own affair; but as a chieftain
|
|
you should have those to serve you, and in accordance with
|
|
our customs you may select any or all the females from the
|
|
retinues of the chieftains whose metal you now wear."
|
|
|
|
I thanked him, but assured him that I could get alone
|
|
very nicely without assistance except in the matter of
|
|
preparing food, and so he promised to send women to me for
|
|
this purpose and also for the care of my arms and the
|
|
manufacture of my ammunition, which he said would be
|
|
necessary. I suggested that they might also bring some of
|
|
the sleeping silks and furs which belonged to me as spoils of
|
|
combat, for the nights were cold and I had none of my own.
|
|
|
|
He promised to do so, and departed. Left alone, I ascended
|
|
the winding corridor to the upper floors in search of
|
|
suitable quarters. The beauties of the other buildings were
|
|
repeated in this, and, as usual, I was soon lost in a tour of
|
|
investigation and discovery.
|
|
|
|
I finally chose a front room on the third floor, because
|
|
this brought me nearer to Dejah Thoris, whose apartment
|
|
was on the second floor of the adjoining building, and it
|
|
flashed upon me that I could rig up some means of communication
|
|
whereby she might signal me in case she needed either my
|
|
services or my protection.
|
|
|
|
Adjoining my sleeping apartment were baths, dressing
|
|
rooms, and other sleeping and living apartments, in all some
|
|
ten rooms on this floor. The windows of the back rooms
|
|
overlooked an enormous court, which formed the center of
|
|
the square made by the buildings which faced the four
|
|
contiguous streets, and which was now given over to the
|
|
quartering of the various animals belonging to the warriors
|
|
occupying the adjoining buildings.
|
|
|
|
While the court was entirely overgrown with the yellow,
|
|
moss-like vegetation which blankets practically the entire
|
|
surface of Mars, yet numerous fountains, statuary, benches,
|
|
and pergola-like contraptions bore witness to the beauty
|
|
which the court must have presented in bygone times, when
|
|
graced by the fair-haired, laughing people whom stern and
|
|
unalterable cosmic laws had driven not only from their homes,
|
|
but from all except the vague legends of their descendants.
|
|
|
|
One could easily picture the gorgeous foliage of the luxuriant
|
|
Martian vegetation which once filled this scene with life
|
|
and color; the graceful figures of the beautiful women, the
|
|
straight and handsome men; the happy frolicking children--
|
|
all sunlight, happiness and peace. It was difficult to realize
|
|
that they had gone; down through ages of darkness, cruelty,
|
|
and ignorance, until their hereditary instincts of culture and
|
|
humanitarianism had risen ascendant once more in the final
|
|
composite race which now is dominant upon Mars.
|
|
|
|
My thoughts were cut short by the advent of several
|
|
young females bearing loads of weapons, silks, furs, jewels,
|
|
cooking utensils, and casks of food and drink, including
|
|
considerable loot from the air craft. All this, it seemed, had
|
|
been the property of the two chieftains I had slain, and now,
|
|
by the customs of the Tharks, it had become mine. At my
|
|
direction they placed the stuff in one of the back rooms, and
|
|
then departed, only to return with a second load, which
|
|
they advised me constituted the balance of my goods. On the
|
|
second trip they were accompanied by ten or fifteen other
|
|
women and youths, who, it seemed, formed the retinues of
|
|
the two chieftains.
|
|
|
|
They were not their families, nor their wives, nor their
|
|
servants; the relationship was peculiar, and so unlike
|
|
anything known to us that it is most difficult to describe.
|
|
All property among the green Martians is owned in common by
|
|
the community, except the personal weapons, ornaments and
|
|
sleeping silks and furs of the individuals. These alone can
|
|
one claim undisputed right to, nor may he accumulate more
|
|
of these than are required for his actual needs. The surplus
|
|
he holds merely as custodian, and it is passed on to the
|
|
younger members of the community as necessity demands.
|
|
|
|
The women and children of a man's retinue may be likened
|
|
to a military unit for which he is responsible in various
|
|
ways, as in matters of instruction, discipline, sustenance, and
|
|
the exigencies of their continual roamings and their unending
|
|
strife with other communities and with the red Martians.
|
|
His women are in no sense wives. The green Martians use no
|
|
word corresponding in meaning with this earthly word. Their
|
|
mating is a matter of community interest solely, and is
|
|
directed without reference to natural selection. The council
|
|
of chieftains of each community control the matter as surely as
|
|
the owner of a Kentucky racing stud directs the scientific
|
|
breeding of his stock for the improvement of the whole.
|
|
|
|
In theory it may sound well, as is often the case with
|
|
theories, but the results of ages of this unnatural practice,
|
|
coupled with the community interest in the offspring being
|
|
held paramount to that of the mother, is shown in the cold,
|
|
cruel creatures, and their gloomy, loveless, mirthless existence.
|
|
|
|
It is true that the green Martians are absolutely virtuous,
|
|
both men and women, with the exception of such degenerates
|
|
as Tal Hajus; but better far a finer balance of human
|
|
characteristics even at the expense of a slight and
|
|
occasional loss of chastity.
|
|
|
|
Finding that I must assume responsibility for these creatures,
|
|
whether I would or not, I made the best of it and directed
|
|
them to find quarters on the upper floors, leaving the
|
|
third floor to me. One of the girls I charged with the duties
|
|
of my simple cuisine, and directed the others to take up
|
|
the various activities which had formerly constituted their
|
|
vocations. Thereafter I saw little of them, nor did I care to.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIII
|
|
|
|
|
|
LOVE-MAKING ON MARS
|
|
|
|
|
|
Following the battle with the air ships, the community
|
|
remained within the city for several days, abandoning the
|
|
homeward march until they could feel reasonably assured
|
|
that the ships would not return; for to be caught on the
|
|
open plains with a cavalcade of chariots and children was
|
|
far from the desire of even so warlike a people as the green
|
|
Martians.
|
|
|
|
During our period of inactivity, Tars Tarkas had instructed
|
|
me in many of the customs and arts of war familiar to the
|
|
Tharks, including lessons in riding and guiding the great
|
|
beasts which bore the warriors. These creatures, which are
|
|
known as thoats, are as dangerous and vicious as their masters,
|
|
but when once subdued are sufficiently tractable for the
|
|
purposes of the green Martians.
|
|
|
|
Two of these animals had fallen to me from the warriors
|
|
whose metal I wore, and in a short time I could handle them
|
|
quite as well as the native warriors. The method was not at
|
|
all complicated. If the thoats did not respond with sufficient
|
|
celerity to the telepathic instructions of their riders they
|
|
were dealt a terrific blow between the ears with the butt of a
|
|
pistol, and if they showed fight this treatment was continued
|
|
until the brutes either were subdued, or had unseated their
|
|
riders.
|
|
|
|
In the latter case it became a life and death struggle
|
|
between the man and the beast. If the former were quick
|
|
enough with his pistol he might live to ride again, though
|
|
upon some other beast; if not, his torn and mangled body
|
|
was gathered up by his women and burned in accordance
|
|
with Tharkian custom.
|
|
|
|
My experience with Woola determined me to attempt the
|
|
experiment of kindness in my treatment of my thoats. First I
|
|
taught them that they could not unseat me, and even rapped
|
|
them sharply between the ears to impress upon them my
|
|
authority and mastery. Then, by degrees, I won their
|
|
confidence in much the same manner as I had adopted countless
|
|
times with my many mundane mounts. I was ever a good hand
|
|
with animals, and by inclination, as well as because
|
|
it brought more lasting and satisfactory results, I was
|
|
always kind and humane in my dealings with the lower orders.
|
|
I could take a human life, if necessary, with far less compunction
|
|
than that of a poor, unreasoning, irresponsible brute.
|
|
|
|
In the course of a few days my thoats were the wonder
|
|
of the entire community. They would follow me like dogs,
|
|
rubbing their great snouts against my body in awkward evidence
|
|
of affection, and respond to my every command with an alacrity
|
|
and docility which caused the Martian warriors to ascribe to me
|
|
the possession of some earthly power unknown on Mars.
|
|
|
|
"How have you bewitched them?" asked Tars Tarkas one
|
|
afternoon, when he had seen me run my arm far between
|
|
the great jaws of one of my thoats which had wedged a
|
|
piece of stone between two of his teeth while feeding upon
|
|
the moss-like vegetation within our court yard.
|
|
|
|
"By kindness," I replied. "You see, Tars Tarkas, the softer
|
|
sentiments have their value, even to a warrior. In the height
|
|
of battle as well as upon the march I know that my thoats
|
|
will obey my every command, and therefore my fighting
|
|
efficiency is enhanced, and I am a better warrior for the
|
|
reason that I am a kind master. Your other warriors would find
|
|
it to the advantage of themselves as well as of the community
|
|
to adopt my methods in this respect. Only a few days since you,
|
|
yourself, told me that these great brutes, by the uncertainty
|
|
of their tempers, often were the means of turning victory
|
|
into defeat, since, at a crucial moment, they might elect
|
|
to unseat and rend their riders."
|
|
|
|
"Show me how you accomplish these results," was Tars Tarkas'
|
|
only rejoinder.
|
|
|
|
And so I explained as carefully as I could the entire
|
|
method of training I had adopted with my beasts, and later
|
|
he had me repeat it before Lorquas Ptomel and the assembled
|
|
warriors. That moment marked the beginning of a new existence
|
|
for the poor thoats, and before I left the community of
|
|
Lorquas Ptomel I had the satisfaction of observing a regiment
|
|
of as tractable and docile mounts as one might care to
|
|
see. The effect on the precision and celerity of the military
|
|
movements was so remarkable that Lorquas Ptomel presented
|
|
me with a massive anklet of gold from his own leg, as a sign
|
|
of his appreciation of my service to the horde.
|
|
|
|
On the seventh day following the battle with the air craft
|
|
we again took up the march toward Thark, all probability of
|
|
another attack being deemed remote by Lorquas Ptomel.
|
|
|
|
During the days just preceding our departure I had seen
|
|
but little of Dejah Thoris, as I had been kept very busy by
|
|
Tars Tarkas with my lessons in the art of Martian warfare,
|
|
as well as in the training of my thoats. The few times I had
|
|
visited her quarters she had been absent, walking upon the
|
|
streets with Sola, or investigating the buildings in the near
|
|
vicinity of the plaza. I had warned them against venturing
|
|
far from the plaza for fear of the great white apes, whose
|
|
ferocity I was only too well acquainted with. However, since
|
|
Woola accompanied them on all their excursions, and as
|
|
Sola was well armed, there was comparatively little cause for
|
|
fear.
|
|
|
|
On the evening before our departure I saw them approaching
|
|
along one of the great avenues which lead into the
|
|
plaza from the east. I advanced to meet them, and telling
|
|
Sola that I would take the responsibility for Dejah Thoris'
|
|
safekeeping, I directed her to return to her quarters on some
|
|
trivial errand. I liked and trusted Sola, but for some reason I
|
|
desired to be alone with Dejah Thoris, who represented to
|
|
me all that I had left behind upon Earth in agreeable and
|
|
congenial companionship. There seemed bonds of mutual
|
|
interest between us as powerful as though we had been born
|
|
under the same roof rather than upon different planets,
|
|
hurtling through space some forty-eight million miles apart.
|
|
|
|
That she shared my sentiments in this respect I was positive,
|
|
for on my approach the look of pitiful hopelessness left
|
|
her sweet countenance to be replaced by a smile of joyful
|
|
welcome, as she placed her little right hand upon my left
|
|
shoulder in true red Martian salute.
|
|
|
|
"Sarkoja told Sola that you had become a true Thark," she
|
|
said, "and that I would now see no more of you than of any
|
|
of the other warriors."
|
|
|
|
"Sarkoja is a liar of the first magnitude," I replied,
|
|
"notwithstanding the proud claim of the Tharks to
|
|
absolute verity."
|
|
|
|
Dejah Thoris laughed.
|
|
|
|
"I knew that even though you became a member of the
|
|
community you would not cease to be my friend; 'A warrior
|
|
may change his metal, but not his heart,' as the saying
|
|
is upon Barsoom."
|
|
|
|
"I think they have been trying to keep us apart," she
|
|
continued, "for whenever you have been off duty one of the
|
|
older women of Tars Tarkas' retinue has always arranged to
|
|
trump up some excuse to get Sola and me out of sight.
|
|
They have had me down in the pits below the buildings
|
|
helping them mix their awful radium powder, and make their
|
|
terrible projectiles. You know that these have to be
|
|
manufactured by artificial light, as exposure to sunlight always
|
|
results in an explosion. You have noticed that their bullets
|
|
explode when they strike an object? Well, the opaque, outer
|
|
coating is broken by the impact, exposing a glass cylinder,
|
|
almost solid, in the forward end of which is a minute particle
|
|
of radium powder. The moment the sunlight, even though
|
|
diffused, strikes this powder it explodes with a violence which
|
|
nothing can withstand. If you ever witness a night battle
|
|
you will note the absence of these explosions, while the
|
|
morning following the battle will be filled at sunrise with the
|
|
sharp detonations of exploding missiles fired the preceding
|
|
night. As a rule, however, non-exploding projectiles are used
|
|
at night."1
|
|
|
|
While I was much interested in Dejah Thoris' explanation
|
|
of this wonderful adjunct to Martian warfare, I was more
|
|
concerned by the immediate problem of their treatment of
|
|
her. That they were keeping her away from me was not a
|
|
matter for surprise, but that they should subject her to
|
|
dangerous and arduous labor filled me with rage.
|
|
|
|
"Have they ever subjected you to cruelty and ignominy,
|
|
Dejah Thoris?" I asked, feeling the hot blood of my fighting
|
|
ancestors leap in my veins as I awaited her reply.
|
|
|
|
"Only in little ways, John Carter," she answered. "Nothing
|
|
that can harm me outside my pride. They know that I am
|
|
the daughter of ten thousand jeddaks, that I trace my
|
|
ancestry straight back without a break to the builder of
|
|
the first great waterway, and they, who do not even know
|
|
their own mothers, are jealous of me. At heart they hate
|
|
their horrid fates, and so wreak their poor spite on me who
|
|
stand for everything they have not, and for all they most
|
|
crave and never can attain. Let us pity them, my chieftain,
|
|
for even though we die at their hands we can afford them
|
|
pity, since we are greater than they and they know it."
|
|
|
|
Had I known the significance of those words "my chieftain,"
|
|
as applied by a red Martian woman to a man, I should have
|
|
had the surprise of my life, but I did not know at that time,
|
|
nor for many months thereafter. Yes, I still had much to
|
|
learn upon Barsoom.
|
|
|
|
"I presume it is the better part of wisdom that we bow to
|
|
our fate with as good grace as possible, Dejah Thoris; but I
|
|
hope, nevertheless, that I may be present the next time that
|
|
any Martian, green, red, pink, or violet, has the temerity to
|
|
even so much as frown on you, my princess."
|
|
|
|
Dejah Thoris caught her breath at my last words, and
|
|
|
|
|
|
I have used the word radium in describing this powder because in
|
|
the light of recent discoveries on Earth I believe it to be a mixture of
|
|
which radium is the base. In Captain Carter's manuscript it is mentioned
|
|
always by the name used in the written language of Helium and is
|
|
spelled in hieroglyphics which it would be difficult and useless to
|
|
reproduce.
|
|
|
|
gazed upon me with dilated eyes and quickening breath, and
|
|
then, with an odd little laugh, which brought roguish dimples
|
|
to the corners of her mouth, she shook her head and cried:
|
|
|
|
"What a child! A great warrior and yet a stumbling little
|
|
child."
|
|
|
|
"What have I done now?" I asked, in sore perplexity.
|
|
|
|
"Some day you shall know, John Carter, if we live; but
|
|
I may not tell you. And I, the daughter of Mors Kajak, son of
|
|
Tardos Mors, have listened without anger," she soliloquized
|
|
in conclusion.
|
|
|
|
Then she broke out again into one of her gay, happy, laughing moods;
|
|
joking with me on my prowess as a Thark warrior as contrasted with
|
|
my soft heart and natural kindliness.
|
|
|
|
"I presume that should you accidentally wound an enemy
|
|
you would take him home and nurse him back to health,"
|
|
she laughed.
|
|
|
|
"That is precisely what we do on Earth," I answered.
|
|
"At least among civilized men."
|
|
|
|
This made her laugh again. She could not understand it,
|
|
for, with all her tenderness and womanly sweetness, she was
|
|
still a Martian, and to a Martian the only good enemy is a
|
|
dead enemy; for every dead foeman means so much more to
|
|
divide between those who live.
|
|
|
|
I was very curious to know what I had said or done to
|
|
cause her so much perturbation a moment before and so I
|
|
continued to importune her to enlighten me.
|
|
|
|
"No," she exclaimed, "it is enough that you have said it
|
|
and that I have listened. And when you learn, John Carter,
|
|
and if I be dead, as likely I shall be ere the further
|
|
moon has circled Barsoom another twelve times, remember
|
|
that I listened and that I--smiled."
|
|
|
|
It was all Greek to me, but the more I begged her to
|
|
explain the more positive became her denials of my request,
|
|
and, so, in very hopelessness, I desisted.
|
|
|
|
Day had now given away to night and as we wandered
|
|
along the great avenue lighted by the two moons of
|
|
Barsoom, and with Earth looking down upon us out of her
|
|
luminous green eye, it seemed that we were alone in the
|
|
universe, and I, at least, was content that it should be so.
|
|
|
|
The chill of the Martian night was upon us, and removing
|
|
my silks I threw them across the shoulders of Dejah
|
|
Thoris. As my arm rested for an instant upon her I felt a
|
|
thrill pass through every fiber of my being such as contact
|
|
with no other mortal had even produced; and it seemed to
|
|
me that she had leaned slightly toward me, but of that I
|
|
was not sure. Only I knew that as my arm rested there
|
|
across her shoulders longer than the act of adjusting the
|
|
silk required she did not draw away, nor did she speak.
|
|
And so, in silence, we walked the surface of a dying world,
|
|
but in the breast of one of us at least had been born that
|
|
which is ever oldest, yet ever new.
|
|
|
|
I loved Dejah Thoris. The touch of my arm upon her naked
|
|
shoulder had spoken to me in words I would not mistake,
|
|
and I knew that I had loved her since the first moment
|
|
that my eyes had met hers that first time in the plaza
|
|
of the dead city of Korad.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIV
|
|
|
|
|
|
A DUEL TO THE DEATH
|
|
|
|
|
|
My first impulse was to tell her of my love, and then I
|
|
thought of the helplessness of her position wherein I alone
|
|
could lighten the burdens of her captivity, and protect her in
|
|
my poor way against the thousands of hereditary enemies
|
|
she must face upon our arrival at Thark. I could not chance
|
|
causing her additional pain or sorrow by declaring a love
|
|
which, in all probability she did not return. Should I be so
|
|
indiscreet, her position would be even more unbearable than
|
|
now, and the thought that she might feel that I was taking
|
|
advantage of her helplessness, to influence her decision was
|
|
the final argument which sealed my lips.
|
|
|
|
"Why are you so quiet, Dejah Thoris?" I asked. "Possibly
|
|
you would rather return to Sola and your quarters."
|
|
|
|
"No," she murmured, "I am happy here. I do not know
|
|
why it is that I should always be happy and contented
|
|
when you, John Carter, a stranger, are with me; yet at such
|
|
times it seems that I am safe and that, with you, I shall soon
|
|
return to my father's court and feel his strong arms about me
|
|
and my mother's tears and kisses on my cheek."
|
|
|
|
"Do people kiss, then, upon Barsoom?" I asked, when she
|
|
had explained the word she used, in answer to my inquiry as
|
|
to its meaning.
|
|
|
|
"Parents, brothers, and sisters, yes; and," she added in a
|
|
low, thoughtful tone, "lovers."
|
|
|
|
"And you, Dejah Thoris, have parents and brothers and
|
|
sisters?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes."
|
|
|
|
"And a--lover?"
|
|
|
|
She was silent, nor could I venture to repeat the question.
|
|
|
|
"The man of Barsoom," she finally ventured, "does not
|
|
ask personal questions of women, except his mother, and the
|
|
woman he has fought for and won."
|
|
|
|
"But I have fought--" I started, and then I wished my
|
|
tongue had been cut from my mouth; for she turned even as
|
|
I caught myself and ceased, and drawing my silks from her
|
|
shoulder she held them out to me, and without a word, and
|
|
with head held high, she moved with the carriage of the
|
|
queen she was toward the plaza and the doorway of her
|
|
quarters.
|
|
|
|
I did not attempt to follow her, other than to see that she
|
|
reached the building in safety, but, directing Woola to
|
|
accompany her, I turned disconsolately and entered my own house.
|
|
I sat for hours cross-legged, and cross-tempered, upon my silks
|
|
meditating upon the queer freaks chance plays upon us poor
|
|
devils of mortals.
|
|
|
|
So this was love! I had escaped it for all the years I had
|
|
roamed the five continents and their encircling seas; in spite
|
|
of beautiful women and urging opportunity; in spite of a half-
|
|
desire for love and a constant search for my ideal, it had
|
|
remained for me to fall furiously and hopelessly in love with a
|
|
creature from another world, of a species similar possibly,
|
|
yet not identical with mine. A woman who was hatched from
|
|
an egg, and whose span of life might cover a thousand years;
|
|
whose people had strange customs and ideas; a woman whose
|
|
hopes, whose pleasures, whose standards of virtue and of
|
|
right and wrong might vary as greatly from mine as did those
|
|
of the green Martians.
|
|
|
|
Yes, I was a fool, but I was in love, and though I was
|
|
suffering the greatest misery I had ever known I would not
|
|
have had it otherwise for all the riches of Barsoom. Such is
|
|
love, and such are lovers wherever love is known.
|
|
|
|
To me, Dejah Thoris was all that was perfect; all that was
|
|
virtuous and beautiful and noble and good. I believed that
|
|
from the bottom of my heart, from the depth of my soul on
|
|
that night in Korad as I sat cross-legged upon my silks while
|
|
the nearer moon of Barsoom raced through the western sky
|
|
toward the horizon, and lighted up the gold and marble, and
|
|
jeweled mosaics of my world-old chamber, and I believe it
|
|
today as I sit at my desk in the little study overlooking the
|
|
Hudson. Twenty years have intervened; for ten of them I
|
|
lived and fought for Dejah Thoris and her people, and for
|
|
ten I have lived upon her memory.
|
|
|
|
The morning of our departure for Thark dawned clear
|
|
and hot, as do all Martian mornings except for the six weeks
|
|
when the snow melts at the poles.
|
|
|
|
I sought out Dejah Thoris in the throng of departing chariots,
|
|
but she turned her shoulder to me, and I could see the red blood
|
|
mount to her cheek. With the foolish inconsistency
|
|
of love I held my peace when I might have plead ignorance
|
|
of the nature of my offense, or at least the gravity of it,
|
|
and so have effected, at worst, a half conciliation.
|
|
|
|
My duty dictated that I must see that she was comfortable,
|
|
and so I glanced into her chariot and rearranged her silks
|
|
and furs. In doing so I noted with horror that she was
|
|
heavily chained by one ankle to the side of the vehicle.
|
|
|
|
"What does this mean?" I cried, turning to Sola.
|
|
|
|
"Sarkoja thought it best," she answered, her face betokening
|
|
her disapproval of the procedure.
|
|
|
|
Examining the manacles I saw that they fastened with a
|
|
massive spring lock.
|
|
|
|
"Where is the key, Sola? Let me have it."
|
|
|
|
"Sarkoja wears it, John Carter," she answered.
|
|
|
|
I turned without further word and sought out Tars Tarkas,
|
|
to whom I vehemently objected to the unnecessary humiliations
|
|
and cruelties, as they seemed to my lover's eyes, that were
|
|
being heaped upon Dejah Thoris.
|
|
|
|
"John Carter," he answered, "if ever you and Dejah Thoris
|
|
escape the Tharks it will be upon this journey. We know that
|
|
you will not go without her. You have shown yourself a
|
|
mighty fighter, and we do not wish to manacle you, so we
|
|
hold you both in the easiest way that will yet ensure security.
|
|
I have spoken."
|
|
|
|
I saw the strength of his reasoning at a flash, and knew
|
|
that it were futile to appeal from his decision, but I asked
|
|
that the key be taken from Sarkoja and that she be directed
|
|
to leave the prisoner alone in future.
|
|
|
|
"This much, Tars Tarkas, you may do for me in return for
|
|
the friendship that, I must confess, I feel for you."
|
|
|
|
"Friendship?" he replied. "There is no such thing, John
|
|
Carter; but have your will. I shall direct that Sarkoja cease
|
|
to annoy the girl, and I myself will take the custody of the
|
|
key."
|
|
|
|
"Unless you wish me to assume the responsibility," I said,
|
|
smiling.
|
|
|
|
He looked at me long and earnestly before he spoke.
|
|
|
|
"Were you to give me your word that neither you nor
|
|
Dejah Thoris would attempt to escape until after we have
|
|
safely reached the court of Tal Hajus you might have the
|
|
key and throw the chains into the river Iss."
|
|
|
|
"It were better that you held the key, Tars Tarkas," I replied
|
|
|
|
He smiled, and said no more, but that night as we were
|
|
making camp I saw him unfasten Dejah Thoris' fetters himself.
|
|
|
|
With all his cruel ferocity and coldness there was an
|
|
undercurrent of something in Tars Tarkas which he seemed
|
|
ever battling to subdue. Could it be a vestige of some human
|
|
instinct come back from an ancient forbear to haunt him
|
|
with the horror of his people's ways!
|
|
|
|
As I was approaching Dejah Thoris' chariot I passed Sarkoja,
|
|
and the black, venomous look she accorded me was the sweetest
|
|
balm I had felt for many hours. Lord, how she hated me!
|
|
It bristled from her so palpably that one might almost
|
|
have cut it with a sword.
|
|
|
|
A few moments later I saw her deep in conversation with
|
|
a warrior named Zad; a big, hulking, powerful brute, but
|
|
one who had never made a kill among his own chieftains, and
|
|
a second name only with the metal of some chieftain. It was
|
|
this custom which entitled me to the names of either of the
|
|
chieftains I had killed; in fact, some of the warriors
|
|
addressed me as Dotar Sojat, a combination of the surnames
|
|
of the two warrior chieftains whose metal I had taken, or, in
|
|
other words, whom I had slain in fair fight.
|
|
|
|
As Sarkoja talked with Zad he cast occasional glances in
|
|
my direction, while she seemed to be urging him very strongly
|
|
to some action. I paid little attention to it at the time, but
|
|
the next day I had good reason to recall the circumstances,
|
|
and at the same time gain a slight insight into the depths of
|
|
Sarkoja's hatred and the lengths to which she was capable of
|
|
going to wreak her horrid vengeance on me.
|
|
|
|
Dejah Thoris would have none of me again on this evening,
|
|
and though I spoke her name she neither replied, nor conceded
|
|
by so much as the flutter of an eyelid that she realized
|
|
my existence. In my extremity I did what most other lovers
|
|
would have done; I sought word from her through an intimate.
|
|
In this instance it was Sola whom I intercepted in another
|
|
part of camp.
|
|
|
|
"What is the matter with Dejah Thoris?" I blurted out at her.
|
|
"Why will she not speak to me?"
|
|
|
|
Sola seemed puzzled herself, as though such strange actions
|
|
on the part of two humans were quite beyond her, as indeed
|
|
they were, poor child.
|
|
|
|
"She says you have angered her, and that is all she will
|
|
say, except that she is the daughter of a jed and the grand-
|
|
daughter of a jeddak and she has been humiliated by a
|
|
creature who could not polish the teeth of her grandmother's
|
|
sorak."
|
|
|
|
I pondered over this report for some time, finally asking,
|
|
"What might a sorak be, Sola?"
|
|
|
|
"A little animal about as big as my hand, which the red
|
|
Martian women keep to play with," explained Sola.
|
|
|
|
Not fit to polish the teeth of her grandmother's cat! I must
|
|
rank pretty low in the consideration of Dejah Thoris, I
|
|
thought; but I could not help laughing at the strange figure
|
|
of speech, so homely and in this respect so earthly. It made
|
|
me homesick, for it sounded very much like "not fit to polish
|
|
her shoes." And then commenced a train of thought quite
|
|
new to me. I began to wonder what my people at home were doing.
|
|
I had not seen them for years. There was a family of
|
|
Carters in Virginia who claimed close relationship with me;
|
|
I was supposed to be a great uncle, or something of the
|
|
kind equally foolish. I could pass anywhere for twenty-five
|
|
to thirty years of age, and to be a great uncle always seemed
|
|
the height of incongruity, for my thoughts and feelings were
|
|
those of a boy. There was two little kiddies in the Carter
|
|
family whom I had loved and who had thought there was
|
|
no one on Earth like Uncle Jack; I could see them just as
|
|
plainly, as I stood there under the moonlit skies of Barsoom,
|
|
and I longed for them as I had never longed for any mortals
|
|
before. By nature a wanderer, I had never known the
|
|
true meaning of the word home, but the great hall of the
|
|
Carters had always stood for all that the word did mean to
|
|
me, and now my heart turned toward it from the cold and
|
|
unfriendly peoples I had been thrown amongst. For did not
|
|
even Dejah Thoris despise me! I was a low creature, so low
|
|
in fact that I was not even fit to polish the teeth of her
|
|
grandmother's cat; and then my saving sense of humor came
|
|
to my rescue, and laughing I turned into my silks and furs
|
|
and slept upon the moon-haunted ground the sleep of a tired
|
|
and healthy fighting man.
|
|
|
|
We broke camp the next day at an early hour and marched
|
|
with only a single halt until just before dark. Two incidents
|
|
broke the tediousness of the march. About noon we espied
|
|
far to our right what was evidently an incubator, and Lorquas
|
|
Ptomel directed Tars Tarkas to investigate it. The latter
|
|
took a dozen warriors, including myself, and we raced across
|
|
the velvety carpeting of moss to the little enclosure.
|
|
|
|
It was indeed an incubator, but the eggs were very small
|
|
in comparison with those I had seen hatching in ours at the
|
|
time of my arrival on Mars.
|
|
|
|
Tars Tarkas dismounted and examined the enclosure minutely,
|
|
finally announcing that it belonged to the green men
|
|
of Warhoon and that the cement was scarcely dry where it
|
|
had been walled up.
|
|
|
|
"They cannot be a day's march ahead of us," he exclaimed,
|
|
the light of battle leaping to his fierce face.
|
|
|
|
The work at the incubator was short indeed. The warriors
|
|
tore open the entrance and a couple of them, crawling
|
|
in, soon demolished all the eggs with their short-swords.
|
|
Then remounting we dashed back to join the cavalcade.
|
|
During the ride I took occasion to ask Tars Tarkas if these
|
|
Warhoons whose eggs we had destroyed were a smaller people
|
|
than his Tharks.
|
|
|
|
"I noticed that their eggs were so much smaller than those
|
|
I saw hatching in your incubator," I added.
|
|
|
|
He explained that the eggs had just been placed there; but,
|
|
like all green Martian eggs, they would grow during the
|
|
five-year period of incubation until they obtained the size of
|
|
those I had seen hatching on the day of my arrival on Barsoom.
|
|
This was indeed an interesting piece of information,
|
|
for it had always seemed remarkable to me that the green
|
|
Martian women, large as they were, could bring forth such
|
|
enormous eggs as I had seen the four-foot infants emerging
|
|
from. As a matter of fact, the new-laid egg is but little larger
|
|
than an ordinary goose egg, and as it does not commence to
|
|
grow until subjected to the light of the sun the chieftains
|
|
have little difficulty in transporting several hundreds of them
|
|
at one time from the storage vaults to the incubators.
|
|
|
|
Shortly after the incident of the Warhoon eggs we halted
|
|
to rest the animals, and it was during this halt that the
|
|
second of the day's interesting episodes occurred. I was
|
|
engaged in changing my riding cloths from one of my thoats
|
|
to the other, for I divided the day's work between them,
|
|
when Zad approached me, and without a word struck my
|
|
animal a terrific blow with his long-sword.
|
|
|
|
I did not need a manual of green Martian etiquette to know
|
|
what reply to make, for, in fact, I was so wild with anger
|
|
that I could scarcely refrain from drawing my pistol and
|
|
shooting him down for the brute he was; but he stood waiting
|
|
with drawn long-sword, and my only choice was to draw my own
|
|
and meet him in fair fight with his choice of weapons or
|
|
a lesser one.
|
|
|
|
This latter alternative is always permissible, therefore I
|
|
could have used my short-sword, my dagger, my hatchet, or
|
|
my fists had I wished, and been entirely within my rights,
|
|
but I could not use firearms or a spear while he held only
|
|
his long-sword.
|
|
|
|
I chose the same weapon he had drawn because I knew he
|
|
prided himself upon his ability with it, and I wished, if I
|
|
worsted him at all, to do it with his own weapon. The fight
|
|
that followed was a long one and delayed the resumption of
|
|
the march for an hour. The entire community surrounded
|
|
us, leaving a clear space about one hundred feet in diameter
|
|
for our battle.
|
|
|
|
Zad first attempted to rush me down as a bull might a
|
|
wolf, but I was much too quick for him, and each time I
|
|
side-stepped his rushes he would go lunging past me, only
|
|
to receive a nick from my sword upon his arm or back. He
|
|
was soon streaming blood from a half dozen minor wounds,
|
|
but I could not obtain an opening to deliver an effective
|
|
thrust. Then he changed his tactics, and fighting warily and
|
|
with extreme dexterity, he tried to do by science what he
|
|
was unable to do by brute strength. I must admit that he was
|
|
a magnificent swordsman, and had it not been for my greater
|
|
endurance and the remarkable agility the lesser gravitation
|
|
of Mars lent me I might not have been able to put up the
|
|
creditable fight I did against him.
|
|
|
|
We circled for some time without doing much damage on
|
|
either side; the long, straight, needle-like swords flashing in
|
|
the sunlight, and ringing out upon the stillness as they
|
|
crashed together with each effective parry. Finally Zad,
|
|
realizing that he was tiring more than I, evidently decided to
|
|
close in and end the battle in a final blaze of glory for himself;
|
|
just as he rushed me a blinding flash of light struck full
|
|
in my eyes, so that I could not see his approach and could
|
|
only leap blindly to one side in an effort to escape the
|
|
mighty blade that it seemed I could already feel in my vitals.
|
|
I was only partially successful, as a sharp pain in my left
|
|
shoulder attested, but in the sweep of my glance as I sought
|
|
to again locate my adversary, a sight met my astonished
|
|
gaze which paid me well for the wound the temporary blindness
|
|
had caused me. There, upon Dejah Thoris' chariot
|
|
stood three figures, for the purpose evidently of witnessing
|
|
the encounter above the heads of the intervening Tharks.
|
|
There were Dejah Thoris, Sola, and Sarkoja, and as my
|
|
fleeting glance swept over them a little tableau was presented
|
|
which will stand graven in my memory to the day of my death.
|
|
|
|
As I looked, Dejah Thoris turned upon Sarkoja with the
|
|
fury of a young tigress and struck something from her
|
|
upraised hand; something which flashed in the sunlight as
|
|
it spun to the ground. Then I knew what had blinded me at
|
|
that crucial moment of the fight, and how Sarkoja had found
|
|
a way to kill me without herself delivering the final thrust.
|
|
Another thing I saw, too, which almost lost my life for me
|
|
then and there, for it took my mind for the fraction of an
|
|
instant entirely from my antagonist; for, as Dejah Thoris
|
|
struck the tiny mirror from her hand, Sarkoja, her face livid
|
|
with hatred and baffled rage, whipped out her dagger and
|
|
aimed a terrific blow at Dejah Thoris; and then Sola, our dear
|
|
and faithful Sola, sprang between them; the last I saw was
|
|
the great knife descending upon her shielding breast.
|
|
|
|
My enemy had recovered from his thrust and was making it
|
|
extremely interesting for me, so I reluctantly gave my
|
|
attention to the work in hand, but my mind was not upon the
|
|
battle.
|
|
|
|
We rushed each other furiously time after time, 'til suddenly,
|
|
feeling the sharp point of his sword at my breast in a thrust
|
|
I could neither parry nor escape, I threw myself upon him
|
|
with outstretched sword and with all the weight of my
|
|
body, determined that I would not die alone if I could
|
|
prevent it. I felt the steel tear into my chest, all went
|
|
black before me, my head whirled in dizziness, and I felt my
|
|
knees giving beneath me.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XV
|
|
|
|
|
|
SOLA TELLS ME HER STORY
|
|
|
|
|
|
When consciousness returned, and, as I soon learned, I was
|
|
down but a moment, I sprang quickly to my feet searching
|
|
for my sword, and there I found it, buried to the hilt in the
|
|
green breast of Zad, who lay stone dead upon the ochre
|
|
moss of the ancient sea bottom. As I regained my full senses
|
|
I found his weapon piercing my left breast, but only through
|
|
the flesh and muscles which cover my ribs, entering near
|
|
the center of my chest and coming out below the shoulder.
|
|
As I had lunged I had turned so that his sword merely
|
|
passed beneath the muscles, inflicting a painful but not
|
|
dangerous wound.
|
|
|
|
Removing the blade from my body I also regained my
|
|
own, and turning my back upon his ugly carcass, I moved,
|
|
sick, sore, and disgusted, toward the chariots which bore my
|
|
retinue and my belongings. A murmur of Martian applause
|
|
greeted me, but I cared not for it.
|
|
|
|
Bleeding and weak I reached my women, who, accustomed to
|
|
such happenings, dressed my wounds, applying the wonderful
|
|
healing and remedial agents which make only the most
|
|
instantaneous of death blows fatal. Give a Martian woman
|
|
a chance and death must take a back seat. They soon had
|
|
me patched up so that, except for weakness from loss of
|
|
blood and a little soreness around the wound, I suffered no
|
|
great distress from this thrust which, under earthly treatment,
|
|
undoubtedly would have put me flat on my back for days.
|
|
|
|
As soon as they were through with me I hastened to the
|
|
chariot of Dejah Thoris, where I found my poor Sola with
|
|
her chest swathed in bandages, but apparently little the
|
|
worse for her encounter with Sarkoja, whose dagger it seemed
|
|
had struck the edge of one of Sola's metal breast ornaments
|
|
and, thus deflected, had inflicted but a slight flesh wound.
|
|
|
|
As I approached I found Dejah Thoris lying prone upon
|
|
her silks and furs, her lithe form wracked with sobs. She did
|
|
not notice my presence, nor did she hear me speaking with
|
|
Sola, who was standing a short distance from the vehicle.
|
|
|
|
"Is she injured?" I asked of sola, indicating Dejah Thoris
|
|
by an inclination of my head.
|
|
|
|
"No," she answered, "she thinks that you are dead."
|
|
|
|
"And that her grandmother's cat may now have no one to
|
|
polish its teeth?" I queried, smiling.
|
|
|
|
"I think you wrong her, John Carter," said Sola. "I do not
|
|
understand either her ways or yours, but I am sure the
|
|
granddaughter of ten thousand jeddaks would never grieve
|
|
like this over any who held but the highest claim upon her
|
|
affections. They are a proud race, but they are just, as are
|
|
all Barsoomians, and you must have hurt or wronged her
|
|
grievously that she will not admit your existence living,
|
|
though she mourns you dead.
|
|
|
|
"Tears are a strange sight upon Barsoom," she continued,
|
|
"and so it is difficult for me to interpret them. I have seen
|
|
but two people weep in all my life, other than Dejah Thoris;
|
|
one wept from sorrow, the other from baffled rage. The first
|
|
was my mother, years ago before they killed her; the other
|
|
was Sarkoja, when they dragged her from me today."
|
|
|
|
"Your mother!" I exclaimed, "but, Sola, you could not
|
|
have known your mother, child."
|
|
|
|
"But I did. And my father also," she added. "If you
|
|
would like to hear the strange and un-Barsoomian story
|
|
come to the chariot tonight, John Carter, and I will tell you
|
|
that of which I have never spoken in all my life before. And
|
|
now the signal has been given to resume the march, you
|
|
must go."
|
|
|
|
"I will come tonight, Sola," I promised. "Be sure to tell
|
|
Dejah Thoris I am alive and well. I shall not force myself
|
|
upon her, and be sure that you do not let her know I saw her tears.
|
|
If she would speak with me I but await her command.
|
|
|
|
Sola mounted the chariot, which was swinging into its place
|
|
in line, and I hastened to my waiting thoat and galloped
|
|
to my station beside Tars Tarkas at the rear of the column.
|
|
|
|
We made a most imposing and awe-inspiring spectacle as
|
|
we strung out across the yellow landscape; the two hundred
|
|
and fifty ornate and brightly colored chariots, preceded by
|
|
an advance guard of some two hundred mounted warriors
|
|
and chieftains riding five abreast and one hundred yards
|
|
apart, and followed by a like number in the same formation,
|
|
with a score or more of flankers on either side; the fifty extra
|
|
mastodons, or heavy draught animals, known as zitidars,
|
|
and the five or six hundred extra thoats of the warriors
|
|
running loose within the hollow square formed by the
|
|
surrounding warriors. The gleaming metal and jewels of
|
|
the gorgeous ornaments of the men and women, duplicated in
|
|
the trappings of the zitidars and thoats, and interspersed
|
|
with the flashing colors of magnificent silks and furs and
|
|
feathers, lent a barbaric splendor to the caravan which would
|
|
have turned an East Indian potentate green with envy.
|
|
|
|
The enormous broad tires of the chariots and the padded
|
|
feet of the animals brought forth no sound from the moss-
|
|
covered sea bottom; and so we moved in utter silence, like
|
|
some huge phantasmagoria, except when the stillness was
|
|
broken by the guttural growling of a goaded zitidar, or the
|
|
squealing of fighting thoats. The green Martians converse
|
|
but little, and then usually in monosyllables, low and like
|
|
the faint rumbling of distant thunder.
|
|
|
|
We traversed a trackless waste of moss which, bending to
|
|
the pressure of broad tire or padded foot, rose up again
|
|
behind us, leaving no sign that we had passed. We might
|
|
indeed have been the wraiths of the departed dead upon the
|
|
dead sea of that dying planet for all the sound or sign we
|
|
made in passing. It was the first march of a large body of
|
|
men and animals I had ever witnessed which raised no dust
|
|
and left no spoor; for there is no dust upon Mars except in
|
|
the cultivated districts during the winter months, and even
|
|
then the absence of high winds renders it almost unnoticeable.
|
|
|
|
We camped that night at the foot of the hills we had been
|
|
approaching for two days and which marked the southern
|
|
boundary of this particular sea. Our animals had been two
|
|
days without drink, nor had they had water for nearly two
|
|
months, not since shortly after leaving Thark; but, as Tars
|
|
Tarkas explained to me, they require but little and can live
|
|
almost indefinitely upon the moss which covers Barsoom, and
|
|
which, he told me, holds in its tiny stems sufficient moisture
|
|
to meet the limited demands of the animals.
|
|
After partaking of my evening meal of cheese-like food
|
|
and vegetable milk I sought out Sola, whom I found working
|
|
by the light of a torch upon some of Tars Tarkas' trappings.
|
|
She looked up at my approach, her face lighting with pleasure
|
|
and with welcome.
|
|
|
|
"I am glad you came," she said; "Dejah Thoris sleeps and
|
|
I am lonely. Mine own people do not care for me, John Carter;
|
|
I am too unlike them. It is a sad fate, since I must live
|
|
my life amongst them, and I often wish that I were a true
|
|
green Martian woman, without love and without hope; but I
|
|
have known love and so I am lost.
|
|
|
|
"I promised to tell you my story, or rather the story of
|
|
my parents. From what I have learned of you and the ways
|
|
of your people I am sure that the tale will not seem strange
|
|
to you, but among green Martians it has no parallel within
|
|
the memory of the oldest living Thark, nor do our legends
|
|
hold many similar tales.
|
|
|
|
"My mother was rather small, in fact too small to be allowed
|
|
the responsibilities of maternity, as our chieftains breed
|
|
principally for size. She was also less cold and cruel
|
|
than most green Martian women, and caring little for their
|
|
society, she often roamed the deserted avenues of Thark
|
|
alone, or went and sat among the wild flowers that deck
|
|
the nearby hills, thinking thoughts and wishing wishes
|
|
which I believe I alone among Tharkian women today may
|
|
understand, for am I not the child of my mother?
|
|
|
|
"And there among the hills she met a young warrior, whose
|
|
duty it was to guard the feeding zitidars and thoats and see
|
|
that they roamed not beyond the hills. They spoke at first
|
|
only of such things as interest a community of Tharks, but
|
|
gradually, as they came to meet more often, and, as was
|
|
now quite evident to both, no longer by chance, they talked
|
|
about themselves, their likes, their ambitions and their hopes.
|
|
She trusted him and told him of the awful repugnance she
|
|
felt for the cruelties of their kind, for the hideous, loveless
|
|
lives they must ever lead, and then she waited for the storm
|
|
of denunciation to break from his cold, hard lips; but instead
|
|
he took her in his arms and kissed her.
|
|
|
|
"They kept their love a secret for six long years. She, my
|
|
mother, was of the retinue of the great Tal Hajus, while her
|
|
lover was a simple warrior, wearing only his own metal.
|
|
Had their defection from the traditions of the Tharks been
|
|
discovered both would have paid the penalty in the great
|
|
arena before Tal Hajus and the assembled hordes.
|
|
|
|
"The egg from which I came was hidden beneath a great
|
|
glass vessel upon the highest and most inaccessible of the
|
|
partially ruined towers of ancient Thark. Once each year my
|
|
mother visited it for the five long years it lay there in the
|
|
process of incubation. She dared not come oftener, for in the
|
|
mighty guilt of her conscience she feared that her every
|
|
move was watched. During this period my father gained great
|
|
distinction as a warrior and had taken the metal from several
|
|
chieftains. His love for my mother had never diminished,
|
|
and his own ambition in life was to reach a point where
|
|
he might wrest the metal from Tal Hajus himself, and thus,
|
|
as ruler of the Tharks, be free to claim her as his own,
|
|
as well as, by the might of his power, protect the child
|
|
which otherwise would be quickly dispatched should the
|
|
truth become known.
|
|
|
|
"It was a wild dream, that of wresting the metal from Tal
|
|
Hajus in five short years, but his advance was rapid, and he
|
|
soon stood high in the councils of Thark. But one day the
|
|
chance was lost forever, in so far as it could come in time
|
|
to save his loved ones, for he was ordered away upon a long
|
|
expedition to the ice-clad south, to make war upon the
|
|
natives there and despoil them of their furs, for such is
|
|
the manner of the green Barsoomian; he does not labor for
|
|
what he can wrest in battle from others.
|
|
|
|
"He was gone for four years, and when he returned all
|
|
had been over for three; for about a year after his departure,
|
|
and shortly before the time for the return of an expedition
|
|
which had gone forth to fetch the fruits of a community
|
|
incubator, the egg had hatched. Thereafter my mother
|
|
continued to keep me in the old tower, visiting me nightly
|
|
and lavishing upon me the love the community life would
|
|
have robbed us both of. She hoped, upon the return of the
|
|
expedition from the incubator, to mix me with the other young
|
|
assigned to the quarters of Tal Hajus, and thus escape the
|
|
fate which would surely follow discovery of her sin against
|
|
the ancient traditions of the green men.
|
|
|
|
"She taught me rapidly the language and customs of my kind,
|
|
and one night she told me the story I have told to you up to
|
|
this point, impressing upon me the necessity for absolute
|
|
secrecy and the great caution I must exercise after she had
|
|
placed me with the other young Tharks to permit no one to
|
|
guess that I was further advanced in education than they,
|
|
nor by any sign to divulge in the presence of others my
|
|
affection for her, or my knowledge of my parentage; and
|
|
then drawing me close to her she whispered in my ear the
|
|
name of my father.
|
|
|
|
"And then a light flashed out upon the darkness of the
|
|
tower chamber, and there stood Sarkoja, her gleaming,
|
|
baleful eyes fixed in a frenzy of loathing and contempt
|
|
upon my mother. The torrent of hatred and abuse she
|
|
poured out upon her turned my young heart cold in terror.
|
|
That she had heard the entire story was apparent, and that
|
|
she had suspected something wrong from my mother's long nightly
|
|
absences from her quarters accounted for her presence there
|
|
on that fateful night.
|
|
|
|
"One thing she had not heard, nor did she know, the
|
|
whispered name of my father. This was apparent from her
|
|
repeated demands upon my mother to disclose the name of
|
|
her partner in sin, but no amount of abuse or threats could
|
|
wring this from her, and to save me from needless torture
|
|
she lied, for she told Sarkoja that she alone knew nor would
|
|
she even tell her child.
|
|
|
|
"With final imprecations, Sarkoja hastened away to Tal
|
|
Hajus to report her discovery, and while she was gone my
|
|
mother, wrapping me in the silks and furs of her night coverings,
|
|
so that I was scarcely noticeable, descended to the streets
|
|
and ran wildly away toward the outskirts of the city,
|
|
in the direction which led to the far south, out toward the
|
|
man whose protection she might not claim, but on whose
|
|
face she wished to look once more before she died.
|
|
|
|
"As we neared the city's southern extremity a sound came
|
|
to us from across the mossy flat, from the direction of the
|
|
only pass through the hills which led to the gates, the pass
|
|
by which caravans from either north or south or east or
|
|
west would enter the city. The sounds we heard were the
|
|
squealing of thoats and the grumbling of zitidars, with the
|
|
occasional clank of arms which announced the approach of
|
|
a body of warriors. The thought uppermost in her mind was
|
|
that it was my father returned from his expedition, but the
|
|
cunning of the Thark held her from headlong and precipitate
|
|
flight to greet him.
|
|
|
|
"Retreating into the shadows of a doorway she awaited the
|
|
coming of the cavalcade which shortly entered the avenue,
|
|
breaking its formation and thronging the thoroughfare
|
|
from wall to wall. As the head of the procession passed us
|
|
the lesser moon swung clear of the overhanging roofs and lit
|
|
up the scene with all the brilliancy of her wondrous light.
|
|
My mother shrank further back into the friendly shadows,
|
|
and from her hiding place saw that the expedition was not
|
|
that of my father, but the returning caravan bearing the
|
|
young Tharks. Instantly her plan was formed, and as a great
|
|
chariot swung close to our hiding place she slipped stealthily
|
|
in upon the trailing tailboard, crouching low in the shadow
|
|
of the high side, straining me to her bosom in a frenzy of
|
|
love.
|
|
|
|
"She knew, what I did not, that never again after that
|
|
night would she hold me to her breast, nor was it likely we
|
|
would ever look upon each other's face again. In the
|
|
confusion of the plaza she mixed me with the other children,
|
|
whose guardians during the journey were now free to relinquish
|
|
their responsibility. We were herded together into a great room,
|
|
fed by women who had not accompanied the expedition, and the next
|
|
day we were parceled out among the retinues of the chieftains.
|
|
|
|
"I never saw my mother after that night. She was imprisoned
|
|
by Tal Hajus, and every effort, including the most horrible
|
|
and shameful torture, was brought to bear upon her to wring
|
|
from her lips the name of my father; but she remained
|
|
steadfast and loyal, dying at last amidst the laughter of
|
|
Tal Hajus and his chieftains during some awful torture
|
|
she was undergoing.
|
|
|
|
"I learned afterwards that she told them that she had
|
|
killed me to save me from a like fate at their hands, and
|
|
that she had thrown my body to the white apes. Sarkoja
|
|
alone disbelieved her, and I feel to this day that she suspects
|
|
my true origin, but does not dare expose me, at the present,
|
|
at all events, because she also guesses, I am sure, the identity
|
|
of my father.
|
|
|
|
"When he returned from his expedition and learned the story
|
|
of my mother's fate I was present as Tal Hajus told him;
|
|
but never by the quiver of a muscle did he betray the slightest
|
|
emotion; only he did not laugh as Tal Hajus gleefully
|
|
described her death struggles. From that moment on he was
|
|
the cruelest of the cruel, and I am awaiting the day when
|
|
he shall win the goal of his ambition, and feel the carcass of
|
|
Tal Hajus beneath his foot, for I am as sure that he but
|
|
waits the opportunity to wreak a terrible vengeance, and that
|
|
his great love is as strong in his breast as when it first
|
|
transfigured him nearly forty years ago, as I am that we sit
|
|
here upon the edge of a world-old ocean while sensible people
|
|
sleep, John Carter."
|
|
|
|
"And your father, Sola, is he with us now?" I asked.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," she replied, "but he does not know me for what I
|
|
am, nor does he know who betrayed my mother to Tal Hajus.
|
|
I alone know my father's name, and only I and Tal Hajus
|
|
and Sarkoja know that it was she who carried the tale that
|
|
brought death and torture upon her he loved."
|
|
|
|
We sat silent for a few moments, she wrapped in the
|
|
gloomy thoughts of her terrible past, and I in pity for the
|
|
poor creatures whom the heartless, senseless customs of their
|
|
race had doomed to loveless lives of cruelty and of hate.
|
|
Presently she spoke.
|
|
|
|
"John Carter, if ever a real man walked the cold, dead
|
|
bosom of Barsoom you are one. I know that I can trust you,
|
|
and because the knowledge may someday help you or him
|
|
or Dejah Thoris or myself, I am going to tell you the name
|
|
of my father, nor place any restrictions or conditions upon
|
|
your tongue. When the time comes, speak the truth if it
|
|
seems best to you. I trust you because I know that you are
|
|
not cursed with the terrible trait of absolute and unswerving
|
|
truthfulness, that you could lie like one of your own Virginia
|
|
gentlemen if a lie would save others from sorrow or suffering.
|
|
My father's name is Tars Tarkas."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XVI
|
|
|
|
|
|
WE PLAN ESCAPE
|
|
|
|
|
|
The remainder of our journey to Thark was uneventful.
|
|
We were twenty days upon the road, crossing two sea bottoms
|
|
and passing through or around a number of ruined cities,
|
|
mostly smaller than Korad. Twice we crossed the famous
|
|
Martian waterways, or canals, so-called by our earthly
|
|
astronomers. When we approached these points a warrior
|
|
would be sent far ahead with a powerful field glass, and if
|
|
no great body of red Martian troops was in sight we would
|
|
advance as close as possible without chance of being seen and
|
|
then camp until dark, when we would slowly approach the
|
|
cultivated tract, and, locating one of the numerous, broad
|
|
highways which cross these areas at regular intervals, creep
|
|
silently and stealthily across to the arid lands upon the other
|
|
side. It required five hours to make one of these crossings
|
|
without a single halt, and the other consumed the entire night,
|
|
so that we were just leaving the confines of the high-walled
|
|
fields when the sun broke out upon us.
|
|
|
|
Crossing in the darkness, as we did, I was unable to see
|
|
but little, except as the nearer moon, in her wild and
|
|
ceaseless hurtling through the Barsoomian heavens, lit up
|
|
little patches of the landscape from time to time, disclosing
|
|
walled fields and low, rambling buildings, presenting much
|
|
the appearance of earthly farms. There were many trees,
|
|
methodically arranged, and some of them were of enormous height;
|
|
there were animals in some of the enclosures, and they announced
|
|
their presence by terrified squealings and snortings as they
|
|
scented our queer, wild beasts and wilder human beings.
|
|
|
|
Only once did I perceive a human being, and that was
|
|
at the intersection of our crossroad with the wide, white
|
|
turnpike which cuts each cultivated district longitudinally
|
|
at its exact center. The fellow must have been sleeping
|
|
beside the road, for, as I came abreast of him, he raised upon
|
|
one elbow and after a single glance at the approaching caravan
|
|
leaped shrieking to his feet and fled madly down the road,
|
|
scaling a nearby wall with the agility of a scared cat.
|
|
The Tharks paid him not the slightest attention; they were
|
|
not out upon the warpath, and the only sign that I had
|
|
that they had seen him was a quickening of the pace of the
|
|
caravan as we hastened toward the bordering desert which
|
|
marked our entrance into the realm of Tal Hajus.
|
|
|
|
Not once did I have speech with Dejah Thoris, as she
|
|
sent no word to me that I would be welcome at her chariot,
|
|
and my foolish pride kept me from making any advances.
|
|
I verily believe that a man's way with women is in inverse
|
|
ratio to his prowess among men. The weakling and the saphead
|
|
have often great ability to charm the fair sex, while the
|
|
fighting man who can face a thousand real dangers unafraid,
|
|
sits hiding in the shadows like some frightened child.
|
|
|
|
Just thirty days after my advent upon Barsoom we entered
|
|
the ancient city of Thark, from whose long-forgotten
|
|
people this horde of green men have stolen even their name.
|
|
The hordes of Thark number some thirty thousand souls,
|
|
and are divided into twenty-five communities. Each community
|
|
has its own jed and lesser chieftains, but all are under
|
|
the rule of Tal Hajus, Jeddak of Thark. Five communities
|
|
make their headquarters at the city of Thark, and the
|
|
balance are scattered among other deserted cities of
|
|
ancient Mars throughout the district claimed by Tal Hajus.
|
|
|
|
We made our entry into the great central plaza early in
|
|
the afternoon. There were no enthusiastic friendly greetings
|
|
for the returned expedition. Those who chanced to be in
|
|
sight spoke the names of warriors or women with whom
|
|
they came in direct contact, in the formal greeting of their
|
|
kind, but when it was discovered that they brought two
|
|
captives a greater interest was aroused, and Dejah Thoris
|
|
and I were the centers of inquiring groups.
|
|
|
|
We were soon assigned to new quarters, and the balance
|
|
of the day was devoted to settling ourselves to the changed
|
|
conditions. My home now was upon an avenue leading into
|
|
the plaza from the south, the main artery down which we
|
|
had marched from the gates of the city. I was at the far
|
|
end of the square and had an entire building to myself. The
|
|
same grandeur of architecture which was so noticeable
|
|
a characteristic of Korad was in evidence here, only, if
|
|
that were possible, on a larger and richer scale. My quarters
|
|
would have been suitable for housing the greatest of earthly
|
|
emperors, but to these queer creatures nothing about a building
|
|
appealed to them but its size and the enormity of its chambers;
|
|
the larger the building, the more desirable; and so Tal Hajus
|
|
occupied what must have been an enormous public building, the
|
|
largest in the city, but entirely unfitted for residence purposes;
|
|
the next largest was reserved for Lorquas Ptomel, the next for the
|
|
jed of a lesser rank, and so on to the bottom of the list of five jeds.
|
|
The warriors occupied the buildings with the chieftains to whose
|
|
retinues they belonged; or, if they preferred, sought shelter
|
|
among any of the thousands of untenanted buildings in their own
|
|
quarter of town; each community being assigned a certain
|
|
section of the city. The selection of building had to be made
|
|
in accordance with these divisions, except in so far as the
|
|
jeds were concerned, they all occupying edifices which
|
|
fronted upon the plaza.
|
|
|
|
When I had finally put my house in order, or rather seen
|
|
that I had been done, it was nearing sunset, and I hastened
|
|
out with the intention of locating Sola and her charges, as
|
|
I had determined upon having speech with Dejah Thoris
|
|
and trying to impress on her the necessity of our at least
|
|
patching up a truce until I could find some way of aiding
|
|
her to escape. I searched in vain until the upper rim of the
|
|
great red sun was just disappearing behind the horizon and
|
|
then I spied the ugly head of Woola peering from a second-
|
|
story window on the opposite side of the very street where
|
|
I was quartered, but nearer the plaza.
|
|
|
|
Without waiting for a further invitation I bolted up the
|
|
winding runway which led to the second floor, and entering
|
|
a great chamber at the front of the building was greeted
|
|
by the frenzied Woola, who threw his great carcass upon
|
|
me, nearly hurling me to the floor; the poor old fellow was
|
|
so glad to see me that I thought he would devour me, his
|
|
head split from ear to ear, showing his three rows of tusks
|
|
in his hobgoblin smile.
|
|
|
|
Quieting him with a word of command and a caress, I
|
|
looked hurriedly through the approaching gloom for a sign
|
|
of Dejah Thoris, and then, not seeing her, I called her name.
|
|
There was an answering murmur from the far corner of the
|
|
apartment, and with a couple of quick strides I was standing
|
|
beside her where she crouched among the furs and silks
|
|
upon an ancient carved wooden seat. As I waited she rose
|
|
to her full height and looking me straight in the eye said:
|
|
|
|
"What would Dotar Sojat, Thark, of Dejah Thoris his captive?"
|
|
|
|
"Dejah Thoris, I do not know how I have angered you.
|
|
It was furtherest from my desire to hurt or offend you,
|
|
whom I had hoped to protect and comfort. Have none of
|
|
me if it is your will, but that you must aid me in effecting
|
|
your escape, if such a thing be possible, is not my request,
|
|
but my command. When you are safe once more at your
|
|
father's court you may do with me as you please, but from
|
|
now on until that day I am your master, and you must
|
|
obey and aid me."
|
|
|
|
She looked at me long and earnestly and I thought that
|
|
she was softening toward me.
|
|
|
|
"I understand your words, Dotar Sojat," she replied, "but
|
|
you I do not understand. You are a queer mixture of child
|
|
and man, of brute and noble. I only wish that I might read
|
|
your heart."
|
|
|
|
"Look down at your feet, Dejah Thoris; it lies there now
|
|
where it has lain since that other night at Korad, and where
|
|
it will ever lie beating alone for you until death stills it
|
|
forever."
|
|
|
|
She took a little step toward me, her beautiful hands
|
|
outstretched in a strange, groping gesture.
|
|
|
|
"What do you mean, John Carter?" she whispered.
|
|
"What are you saying to me?"
|
|
|
|
"I am saying what I had promised myself that I would
|
|
not say to you, at least until you were no longer a captive
|
|
among the green men; what from your attitude toward me
|
|
for the past twenty days I had thought never to say to you;
|
|
I am saying, Dejah Thoris, that I am yours, body and soul,
|
|
to serve you, to fight for you, and to die for you. Only
|
|
one thing I ask of you in return, and that is that you make
|
|
no sign, either of condemnation or of approbation of my
|
|
words until you are safe among your own people, and that
|
|
whatever sentiments you harbor toward me they be not
|
|
influenced or colored by gratitude; whatever I may do to
|
|
serve you will be prompted solely from selfish motives,
|
|
since it gives me more pleasure to serve you than not."
|
|
|
|
"I will respect your wishes, John Carter, because I
|
|
understand the motives which prompt them, and I accept
|
|
your service no more willingly than I bow to your authority;
|
|
your word shall be my law. I have twice wronged you
|
|
in my thoughts and again I ask your forgiveness."
|
|
|
|
Further conversation of a personal nature was prevented
|
|
by the entrance of Sola, who was much agitated and wholly
|
|
unlike her usual calm and possessed self.
|
|
|
|
"That horrible Sarkoja has been before Tal Hajus," she
|
|
cried, "and from what I heard upon the plaza there is
|
|
little hope for either of you."
|
|
|
|
"What do they say?" inquired Dejah Thoris.
|
|
|
|
"That you will be thrown to the wild calots [dogs
|
|
|
|
in
|
|
the great arena as soon as the hordes have assembled for
|
|
the yearly games."
|
|
|
|
"Sola," I said, "you are a Thark, but you hate and loathe
|
|
the customs of your people as much as we do. Will you
|
|
not accompany us in one supreme effort to escape? I am
|
|
sure that Dejah Thoris can offer you a home and protection
|
|
among her people, and your fate can be no worse among
|
|
them than it must ever be here."
|
|
|
|
"Yes," cried Dejah Thoris, "come with us, Sola, you will
|
|
be better off among the red men of Helium than you are
|
|
here, and I can promise you not only a home with us, but
|
|
the love and affection your nature craves and which must
|
|
always be denied you by the customs of your own race.
|
|
Come with us, Sola; we might go without you, but your
|
|
fate would be terrible if they thought you had connived to
|
|
aid us. I know that even that fear would not tempt you to
|
|
interfere in our escape, but we want you with us, we want
|
|
you to come to a land of sunshine and happiness, amongst
|
|
a people who know the meaning of love, of sympathy, and
|
|
of gratitude. Say that you will, Sola; tell me that you will."
|
|
|
|
"The great waterway which leads to Helium is but fifty
|
|
miles to the south," murmured Sola, half to herself; "a
|
|
swift thoat might make it in three hours; and then to
|
|
Helium it is five hundred miles, most of the way through
|
|
thinly settled districts. They would know and they would
|
|
follow us. We might hide among the great trees for a time,
|
|
but the chances are small indeed for escape. They would
|
|
follow us to the very gates of Helium, and they would take
|
|
toll of life at every step; you do not know them."
|
|
|
|
"Is there no other way we might reach Helium?" I asked.
|
|
"Can you not draw me a rough map of the country we
|
|
must traverse, Dejah Thoris?"
|
|
|
|
"Yes," she replied, and taking a great diamond from
|
|
her hair she drew upon the marble floor the first map of
|
|
Barsoomian territory I had ever seen. It was crisscrossed in
|
|
every direction with long straight lines, sometimes running
|
|
parallel and sometimes converging toward some great circle.
|
|
The lines, she said, were waterways; the circles, cities; and
|
|
one far to the northwest of us she pointed out as Helium.
|
|
There were other cities closer, but she said she feared to
|
|
enter many of them, as they were not all friendly toward Helium.
|
|
|
|
Finally, after studying the map carefully in the moonlight
|
|
which now flooded the room, I pointed out a waterway far
|
|
to the north of us which also seemed to lead to Helium.
|
|
|
|
"Does not this pierce your grandfather's territory?" I
|
|
asked.
|
|
|
|
"Yes," she answered, "but it is two hundred miles north
|
|
of us; it is one of the waterways we crossed on the trip
|
|
to Thark."
|
|
|
|
"They would never suspect that we would try for that
|
|
distant waterway," I answered, "and that is why I think
|
|
that it is the best route for our escape."
|
|
|
|
Sola agreed with me, and it was decided that we should
|
|
leave Thark this same night; just as quickly, in fact, as I
|
|
could find and saddle my thoats. Sola was to ride one and
|
|
Dejah Thoris and I the other; each of us carrying sufficient
|
|
food and drink to last us for two days, since the animals
|
|
could not be urged too rapidly for so long a distance.
|
|
|
|
I directed Sola to proceed with Dejah Thoris along one
|
|
of the less frequented avenues to the southern boundary of
|
|
the city, where I would overtake them with the thoats as
|
|
quickly as possible; then, leaving them to gather what food,
|
|
silks, and furs we were to need, I slipped quietly to the
|
|
rear of the first floor, and entered the courtyard, where
|
|
our animals were moving restlessly about, as was their habit,
|
|
before settling down for the night.
|
|
|
|
In the shadows of the buildings and out beneath the radiance
|
|
of the Martian moons moved the great herd of thoats and
|
|
zitidars, the latter grunting their low gutturals and
|
|
the former occasionally emitting the sharp squeal which
|
|
denotes the almost habitual state of rage in which these
|
|
creatures passed their existence. They were quieter now,
|
|
owing to the absence of man, but as they scented me they became
|
|
more restless and their hideous noise increased. It was risky
|
|
business, this entering a paddock of thoats alone and at night;
|
|
first, because their increasing noisiness might warn the nearby
|
|
warriors that something was amiss, and also because for the
|
|
slightest cause, or for no cause at all some great bull thoat
|
|
might take it upon himself to lead a charge upon me.
|
|
|
|
Having no desire to awaken their nasty tempers upon such
|
|
a night as this, where so much depended upon secrecy and
|
|
dispatch, I hugged the shadows of the buildings, ready at
|
|
an instant's warning to leap into the safety of a nearby
|
|
door or window. Thus I moved silently to the great gates
|
|
which opened upon the street at the back of the court, and
|
|
as I neared the exit I called softly to my two animals. How
|
|
I thanked the kind providence which had given me the foresight
|
|
to win the love and confidence of these wild dumb brutes, for
|
|
presently from the far side of the court I saw two huge bulks
|
|
forcing their way toward me through the surging mountains of flesh.
|
|
|
|
They came quite close to me, rubbing their muzzles
|
|
against my body and nosing for the bits of food it was
|
|
always my practice to reward them with. Opening the gates
|
|
I ordered the two great beasts to pass out, and then
|
|
slipping quietly after them I closed the portals behind me.
|
|
|
|
I did not saddle or mount the animals there, but instead
|
|
walked quietly in the shadows of the buildings toward an
|
|
unfrequented avenue which led toward the point I had arranged
|
|
to meet Dejah Thoris and Sola. With the noiselessness
|
|
of disembodied spirits we moved stealthily along the
|
|
deserted streets, but not until we were within sight of
|
|
the plain beyond the city did I commence to breathe freely.
|
|
I was sure that Sola and Dejah Thoris would find no difficulty
|
|
in reaching our rendezvous undetected, but with my great thoats
|
|
I was not so sure for myself, as it was quite unusual for warriors
|
|
to leave the city after dark; in fact there was no place for them
|
|
to go within any but a long ride.
|
|
|
|
I reached the appointed meeting place safely, but as Dejah
|
|
Thoris and Sola were not there I led my animals into the
|
|
entrance hall of one of the large buildings. Presuming that
|
|
one of the other women of the same household may have
|
|
come in to speak to Sola, and so delayed their departure,
|
|
I did not feel any undue apprehension until nearly an hour
|
|
had passed without a sign of them, and by the time another
|
|
half hour had crawled away I was becoming filled with grave
|
|
anxiety. Then there broke upon the stillness of the night
|
|
the sound of an approaching party, which, from the noise, I
|
|
knew could be no fugitives creeping stealthily toward liberty.
|
|
Soon the party was near me, and from the black shadows of my
|
|
entranceway I perceived a score of mounted warriors, who,
|
|
in passing, dropped a dozen words that fetched my heart clean
|
|
into the top of my head.
|
|
|
|
"He would likely have arranged to meet them just without
|
|
the city, and so--" I heard no more, they had passed on;
|
|
but it was enough. Our plan had been discovered, and
|
|
the chances for escape from now on to the fearful end
|
|
would be small indeed. My one hope now was to return
|
|
undetected to the quarters of Dejah Thoris and learn what
|
|
fate had overtaken her, but how to do it with these great
|
|
monstrous thoats upon my hands, now that the city probably
|
|
was aroused by the knowledge of my escape was a problem
|
|
of no mean proportions.
|
|
|
|
Suddenly an idea occurred to me, and acting on my knowledge
|
|
of the construction of the buildings of these ancient
|
|
Martian cities with a hollow court within the center of each
|
|
square, I groped my way blindly through the dark chambers,
|
|
calling the great thoats after me. They had difficulty in
|
|
negotiating some of the doorways, but as the buildings fronting
|
|
the city's principal exposures were all designed upon a
|
|
magnificent scale, they were able to wriggle through without
|
|
sticking fast; and thus we finally made the inner court where
|
|
I found, as I had expected, the usual carpet of moss-like
|
|
vegetation which would prove their food and drink until I
|
|
could return them to their own enclosure. That they would
|
|
be as quiet and contented here as elsewhere I was confident,
|
|
nor was there but the remotest possibility that they would
|
|
be discovered, as the green men had no great desire to enter
|
|
these outlying buildings, which were frequented by the
|
|
only thing, I believe, which caused them the sensation of
|
|
fear--the great white apes of Barsoom.
|
|
|
|
Removing the saddle trappings, I hid them just within
|
|
the rear doorway of the building through which we had
|
|
entered the court, and, turning the beasts loose, quickly
|
|
made my way across the court to the rear of the buildings
|
|
upon the further side, and thence to the avenue beyond.
|
|
Waiting in the doorway of the building until I was assured
|
|
that no one was approaching, I hurried across to the opposite
|
|
side and through the first doorway to the court beyond;
|
|
thus, crossing through court after court with only the slight
|
|
chance of detection which the necessary crossing of the
|
|
avenues entailed, I made my way in safety to the courtyard
|
|
in the rear of Dejah Thoris' quarters.
|
|
|
|
Here, of course, I found the beasts of the warriors who
|
|
quartered in the adjacent buildings, and the warriors
|
|
themselves I might expect to meet within if I entered; but,
|
|
fortunately for me, I had another and safer method of reaching
|
|
the upper story where Dejah Thoris should be found, and,
|
|
after first determining as nearly as possible which of the
|
|
buildings she occupied, for I had never observed them before
|
|
from the court side, I took advantage of my relatively great
|
|
strength and agility and sprang upward until I grasped the
|
|
sill of a second-story window which I thought to be in the
|
|
rear of her apartment. Drawing myself inside the room I
|
|
moved stealthily toward the front of the building, and not
|
|
until I had quite reached the doorway of her room was I
|
|
made aware by voices that it was occupied.
|
|
|
|
I did not rush headlong in, but listened without to assure
|
|
myself that it was Dejah Thoris and that it was safe to
|
|
venture within. It was well indeed that I took this precaution,
|
|
for the conversation I heard was in the low gutturals of men,
|
|
and the words which finally came to me proved a most timely warning.
|
|
The speaker was a chieftain and he was giving orders to four of
|
|
his warriors.
|
|
|
|
"And when he returns to this chamber," he was saying, "as he
|
|
surely will when he finds she does not meet him at the city's edge,
|
|
you four are to spring upon him and disarm him. It will require
|
|
the combined strength of all of you to do it if the reports they
|
|
bring back from Korad are correct. When you have him fast bound
|
|
bear him to the vaults beneath the jeddak's quarters and chain
|
|
him securely where he may be found when Tal Hajus wishes him.
|
|
Allow him to speak with none, nor permit any other to enter
|
|
this apartment before he comes. There will be no danger of
|
|
the girl returning, for by this time she is safe in the arms
|
|
of Tal Hajus, and may all her ancestors have pity upon her,
|
|
for Tal Hajus will have none; the great Sarkoja has done a
|
|
noble night's work. I go, and if you fail to capture him when
|
|
he comes, I commend your carcasses to the cold bosom of Iss."
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XVII
|
|
|
|
|
|
A COSTLY RECAPTURE
|
|
|
|
|
|
As the speaker ceased he turned to leave the apartment by
|
|
the door where I was standing, but I needed to wait no
|
|
longer; I had heard enough to fill my soul with dread, and
|
|
stealing quietly away I returned to the courtyard by the
|
|
way I had come. My plan of action was formed upon the
|
|
instant, and crossing the square and the bordering avenue
|
|
upon the opposite side I soon stood within the courtyard
|
|
of Tal Hajus.
|
|
|
|
The brilliantly lighted apartments of the first floor told
|
|
me where first to seek, and advancing to the windows I
|
|
peered within. I soon discovered that my approach was not
|
|
to be the easy thing I had hoped, for the rear rooms bordering
|
|
the court were filled with warriors and women. I then
|
|
glanced up at the stories above, discovering that the third
|
|
was apparently unlighted, and so decided to make my entrance
|
|
to the building from that point. It was the work of
|
|
but a moment for me to reach the windows above, and
|
|
soon I had drawn myself within the sheltering shadows of
|
|
the unlighted third floor.
|
|
|
|
Fortunately the room I had selected was untenanted, and
|
|
creeping noiselessly to the corridor beyond I discovered
|
|
a light in the apartments ahead of me. Reaching what
|
|
appeared to be a doorway I discovered that it was but an
|
|
opening upon an immense inner chamber which towered from
|
|
the first floor, two stories below me, to the dome-like roof
|
|
of the building, high above my head. The floor of this
|
|
great circular hall was thronged with chieftains, warriors
|
|
and women, and at one end was a great raised platform
|
|
upon which squatted the most hideous beast I had ever put
|
|
my eyes upon. He had all the cold, hard, cruel, terrible
|
|
features of the green warriors, but accentuated and debased
|
|
by the animal passions to which he had given himself over
|
|
for many years. There was not a mark of dignity or pride
|
|
upon his bestial countenance, while his enormous bulk spread
|
|
itself out upon the platform where he squatted like some
|
|
huge devil fish, his six limbs accentuating the similarity in
|
|
a horrible and startling manner.
|
|
|
|
But the sight that froze me with apprehension was that
|
|
of Dejah Thoris and Sola standing there before him, and
|
|
the fiendish leer of him as he let his great protruding eyes
|
|
gloat upon the lines of her beautiful figure. She was
|
|
speaking, but I could not hear what she said, nor could I make
|
|
out the low grumbling of his reply. She stood there erect
|
|
before him, her head high held, and even at the distance I
|
|
was from them I could read the scorn and disgust upon
|
|
her face as she let her haughty glance rest without sign of
|
|
fear upon him. She was indeed the proud daughter of a
|
|
thousand jeddaks, every inch of her dear, precious little body;
|
|
so small, so frail beside the towering warriors around her,
|
|
but in her majesty dwarfing them into insignificance; she
|
|
was the mightiest figure among them and I verily believe
|
|
that they felt it.
|
|
|
|
Presently Tal Hajus made a sign that the chamber be
|
|
cleared, and that the prisoners be left alone before him.
|
|
Slowly the chieftains, the warriors and the women melted
|
|
away into the shadows of the surrounding chambers, and
|
|
Dejah Thoris and Sola stood alone before the jeddak of the
|
|
Tharks.
|
|
|
|
One chieftain alone had hesitated before departing; I
|
|
saw him standing in the shadows of a mighty column, his
|
|
fingers nervously toying with the hilt of his great-sword and
|
|
his cruel eyes bent in implacable hatred upon Tal Hajus.
|
|
It was Tars Tarkas, and I could read his thoughts as they
|
|
were an open book for the undisguised loathing upon his
|
|
face. He was thinking of that other woman who, forty years
|
|
ago, had stood before this beast, and could I have spoken
|
|
a word into his ear at that moment the reign of Tal Hajus
|
|
would have been over; but finally he also strode from the
|
|
room, not knowing that he left his own daughter at the
|
|
mercy of the creature he most loathed.
|
|
|
|
Tal Hajus arose, and I, half fearing, half anticipating his
|
|
intentions, hurried to the winding runway which led to the
|
|
floors below. No one was near to intercept me, and I reached
|
|
the main floor of the chamber unobserved, taking my station
|
|
in the shadow of the same column that Tars Tarkas had but
|
|
just deserted. As I reached the floor Tal Hajus was speaking.
|
|
|
|
"Princess of Helium, I might wring a mighty ransom from
|
|
your people would I but return you to them unharmed, but a
|
|
thousand times rather would I watch that beautiful face
|
|
writhe in the agony of torture; it shall be long drawn out,
|
|
that I promise you; ten days of pleasure were all too short to
|
|
show the love I harbor for your race. The terrors of your
|
|
death shall haunt the slumbers of the red men through all
|
|
the ages to come; they will shudder in the shadows of the
|
|
night as their fathers tell them of the awful vengeance of
|
|
the green men; of the power and might and hate and cruelty
|
|
of Tal Hajus. But before the torture you shall be mine for
|
|
one short hour, and word of that too shall go forth to
|
|
Tardos Mors, Jeddak of Helium, your grandfather, that he
|
|
may grovel upon the ground in the agony of his sorrow.
|
|
Tomorrow the torture will commence; tonight thou art Tal
|
|
Hajus'; come!"
|
|
|
|
He sprang down from the platform and grasped her roughly
|
|
by the arm, but scarcely had he touched her than I leaped
|
|
between them. My short-sword, sharp and gleaming was in
|
|
my right hand; I could have plunged it into his putrid heart
|
|
before he realized that I was upon him; but as I raised my
|
|
arm to strike I thought of Tars Tarkas, and, with all my rage,
|
|
with all my hatred, I could not rob him of that sweet
|
|
moment for which he had lived and hoped all these long,
|
|
weary years, and so, instead, I swung my good right fist full
|
|
upon the point of his jaw. Without a sound he slipped to the
|
|
floor as one dead.
|
|
|
|
In the same deathly silence I grasped Dejah Thoris by the
|
|
hand, and motioning Sola to follow we sped noiselessly
|
|
from the chamber and to the floor above. Unseen we reached
|
|
a rear window and with the straps and leather of my trappings
|
|
I lowered, first Sola and then Dejah Thoris to the ground below.
|
|
Dropping lightly after them I drew them rapidly around the court
|
|
in the shadows of the buildings, and thus we returned over the
|
|
same course I had so recently followed from the distant boundary
|
|
of the city.
|
|
|
|
We finally came upon my thoats in the courtyard where
|
|
I had left them, and placing the trappings upon them we
|
|
hastened through the building to the avenue beyond.
|
|
Mounting, Sola upon one beast, and Dejah Thoris behind me
|
|
upon the other, we rode from the city of Thark through the
|
|
hills to the south.
|
|
|
|
Instead of circling back around the city to the northwest
|
|
and toward the nearest waterway which lay so short a distance
|
|
from us, we turned to the northeast and struck out upon the mossy
|
|
waste across which, for two hundred dangerous and weary miles,
|
|
lay another main artery leading to Helium.
|
|
|
|
No word was spoken until we had left the city far behind,
|
|
but I could hear the quiet sobbing of Dejah Thoris as she
|
|
clung to me with her dear head resting against my shoulder.
|
|
|
|
"If we make it, my chieftain, the debt of Helium will be
|
|
a mighty one; greater than she can ever pay you; and should
|
|
we not make it," she continued, "the debt is no less, though
|
|
Helium will never know, for you have saved the last of our
|
|
line from worse than death."
|
|
|
|
I did not answer, but instead reached to my side and
|
|
pressed the little fingers of her I loved where they clung to
|
|
me for support, and then, in unbroken silence, we sped over
|
|
the yellow, moonlit moss; each of us occupied with his own
|
|
thoughts. For my part I could not be other than joyful had I
|
|
tried, with Dejah Thoris' warm body pressed close to mine,
|
|
and with all our unpassed danger my heart was singing as
|
|
gaily as though we were already entering the gates of Helium.
|
|
|
|
Our earlier plans had been so sadly upset that we now
|
|
found ourselves without food or drink, and I alone was
|
|
armed. We therefore urged our beasts to a speed that must
|
|
tell on them sorely before we could hope to sight the ending
|
|
of the first stage of our journey.
|
|
|
|
We rode all night and all the following day with only a
|
|
few short rests. On the second night both we and our animals
|
|
were completely fagged, and so we lay down upon the moss
|
|
and slept for some five or six hours, taking up the journey
|
|
once more before daylight. All the following day we rode,
|
|
and when, late in the afternoon we had sighted no distant
|
|
trees, the mark of the great waterways throughout all Barsoom,
|
|
the terrible truth flashed upon us--we were lost.
|
|
|
|
Evidently we had circled, but which way it was difficult
|
|
to say, nor did it seem possible with the sun to guide us by
|
|
day and the moons and stars by night. At any rate no waterway
|
|
was in sight, and the entire party was almost ready to
|
|
drop from hunger, thirst and fatigue. Far ahead of us and
|
|
a trifle to the right we could distinguish the outlines of low
|
|
mountains. These we decided to attempt to reach in the hope
|
|
that from some ridge we might discern the missing waterway.
|
|
Night fell upon us before we reached our goal, and, almost
|
|
fainting from weariness and weakness, we lay down and slept.
|
|
|
|
I was awakened early in the morning by some huge body
|
|
pressing close to mine, and opening my eyes with a start I
|
|
beheld my blessed old Woola snuggling close to me; the faithful
|
|
brute had followed us across that trackless waste to share
|
|
our fate, whatever it might be. Putting my arms about his
|
|
neck I pressed my cheek close to his, nor am I ashamed
|
|
that I did it, nor of the tears that came to my eyes as I
|
|
thought of his love for me. Shortly after this Dejah Thoris
|
|
and Sola awakened, and it was decided that we push on at
|
|
once in an effort to gain the hills.
|
|
|
|
We had gone scarcely a mile when I noticed that my
|
|
thoat was commencing to stumble and stagger in a most
|
|
pitiful manner, although we had not attempted to force
|
|
them out of a walk since about noon of the preceding day.
|
|
Suddenly he lurched wildly to one side and pitched violently to
|
|
the ground. Dejah Thoris and I were thrown clear of him
|
|
and fell upon the soft moss with scarcely a jar; but the poor
|
|
beast was in a pitiable condition, not even being able to rise,
|
|
although relieved of our weight. Sola told me that the coolness
|
|
of the night, when it fell, together with the rest would
|
|
doubtless revive him, and so I decided not to kill him, as
|
|
was my first intention, as I had thought it cruel to leave him
|
|
alone there to die of hunger and thirst. Relieving him of his
|
|
trappings, which I flung down beside him, we left the poor
|
|
fellow to his fate, and pushed on with the one thoat as best
|
|
we could. Sola and I walked, making Dejah Thoris ride, much
|
|
against her will. In this way we had progressed to within
|
|
about a mile of the hills we were endeavoring to reach when
|
|
Dejah Thoris, from her point of vantage upon the thoat,
|
|
cried out that she saw a great party of mounted men filing
|
|
down from a pass in the hills several miles away. Sola and I
|
|
both looked in the direction she indicated, and there, plainly
|
|
discernible, were several hundred mounted warriors. They
|
|
seemed to be headed in a southwesterly direction, which
|
|
would take them away from us.
|
|
|
|
They doubtless were Thark warriors who had been sent
|
|
out to capture us, and we breathed a great sigh of relief that
|
|
they were traveling in the opposite direction. Quickly lifting
|
|
Dejah Thoris from the thoat, I commanded the animal to lie
|
|
down and we three did the same, presenting as small an object
|
|
as possible for fear of attracting the attention of the
|
|
warriors toward us.
|
|
|
|
We could see them as they filed out of the pass, just for
|
|
an instant, before they were lost to view behind a friendly
|
|
ridge; to us a most providential ridge; since, had they
|
|
been in view for any great length of time, they scarcely
|
|
could have failed to discover us. As what proved to be the
|
|
last warrior came into view from the pass, he halted and, to our
|
|
consternation, threw his small but powerful fieldglass to his
|
|
eye and scanned the sea bottom in all directions. Evidently
|
|
he was a chieftain, for in certain marching formations among the
|
|
green men a chieftain brings up the extreme rear of the column.
|
|
As his glass swung toward us our hearts stopped in our breasts,
|
|
and I could feel the cold sweat start from every pore in my body.
|
|
|
|
Presently it swung full upon us and--stopped. The tension
|
|
on our nerves was near the breaking point, and I doubt if
|
|
any of us breathed for the few moments he held us covered
|
|
by his glass; and then he lowered it and we could see him
|
|
shout a command to the warriors who had passed from our
|
|
sight behind the ridge. He did not wait for them to join
|
|
him, however, instead he wheeled his thoat and came tearing
|
|
madly in our direction.
|
|
|
|
There was but one slight chance and that we must take
|
|
quickly. Raising my strange Martian rifle to my shoulder I
|
|
sighted and touched the button which controlled the trigger;
|
|
there was a sharp explosion as the missile reached its goal, and
|
|
the charging chieftain pitched backward from his flying
|
|
mount.
|
|
|
|
Springing to my feet I urged the thoat to rise, and directed
|
|
Sola to take Dejah Thoris with her upon him and make a
|
|
mighty effort to reach the hills before the green warriors were
|
|
upon us. I knew that in the ravines and gullies they might
|
|
find a temporary hiding place, and even though they died
|
|
there of hunger and thirst it would be better so than that
|
|
they fell into the hands of the Tharks. Forcing my two
|
|
revolvers upon them as a slight means of protection, and,
|
|
as a last resort, as an escape for themselves from the horrid
|
|
death which recapture would surely mean, I lifted Dejah
|
|
Thoris in my arms and placed her upon the thoat behind
|
|
Sola, who had already mounted at my command.
|
|
|
|
"Good-bye, my princess," I whispered, "we may meet in
|
|
Helium yet. I have escaped from worse plights than this,"
|
|
and I tried to smile as I lied.
|
|
|
|
"What," she cried, "are you not coming with us?"
|
|
|
|
"How may I, Dejah Thoris? Someone must hold these
|
|
fellows off for a while, and I can better escape them alone
|
|
than could the three of us together."
|
|
|
|
She sprang quickly from the thoat and, throwing her dear
|
|
arms about my neck, turned to Sola, saying with quiet dignity:
|
|
"Fly, Sola! Dejah Thoris remains to die with the man she
|
|
loves."
|
|
|
|
Those words are engraved upon my heart. Ah, gladly
|
|
would I give up my life a thousand times could I only hear
|
|
them once again; but I could not then give even a second to
|
|
the rapture of her sweet embrace, and pressing my lips to
|
|
hers for the first time, I picked her up bodily and tossed
|
|
her to her seat behind Sola again, commanding the latter
|
|
in peremptory tones to hold her there by force, and then,
|
|
slapping the thoat upon the flank, I saw them borne away;
|
|
Dejah Thoris struggling to the last to free herself from
|
|
Sola's grasp.
|
|
|
|
Turning, I beheld the green warriors mounting the ridge
|
|
and looking for their chieftain. In a moment they saw him,
|
|
and then me; but scarcely had they discovered me than I
|
|
commenced firing, lying flat upon my belly in the moss. I had
|
|
an even hundred rounds in the magazine of my rifle, and
|
|
another hundred in the belt at my back, and I kept up a
|
|
continuous stream of fire until I saw all of the warriors who
|
|
had been first to return from behind the ridge either dead or
|
|
scurrying to cover.
|
|
|
|
My respite was short-lived however, for soon the entire
|
|
party, numbering some thousand men, came charging into
|
|
view, racing madly toward me. I fired until my rifle was
|
|
empty and they were almost upon me, and then a glance
|
|
showing me that Dejah Thoris and Sola had disappeared
|
|
among the hills, I sprang up, throwing down my useless gun,
|
|
and started away in the direction opposite to that taken by
|
|
Sola and her charge.
|
|
|
|
If ever Martians had an exhibition of jumping, it was
|
|
granted those astonished warriors on that day long years ago,
|
|
but while it led them away from Dejah Thoris it did not distract
|
|
their attention from endeavoring to capture me.
|
|
|
|
They raced wildly after me until, finally, my foot struck a
|
|
projecting piece of quartz, and down I went sprawling upon
|
|
the moss. As I looked up they were upon me, and although
|
|
I drew my long-sword in an attempt to sell my life as
|
|
dearly as possible, it was soon over. I reeled beneath their
|
|
blows which fell upon me in perfect torrents; my head swam;
|
|
all was black, and I went down beneath them to oblivion.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XVIII
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAINED IN WARHOON
|
|
|
|
|
|
It must have been several hours before I regained consciousness
|
|
and I well remember the feeling of surprise which swept over me
|
|
as I realized that I was not dead.
|
|
|
|
I was lying among a pile of sleeping silks and furs in the
|
|
corner of a small room in which were several green warriors,
|
|
and bending over me was an ancient and ugly female.
|
|
|
|
As I opened my eyes she turned to one of the warriors, saying,
|
|
|
|
"He will live, O Jed."
|
|
|
|
"'Tis well," replied the one so addressed, rising and approaching
|
|
my couch, "he should render rare sport for the great games."
|
|
|
|
And now as my eyes fell upon him, I saw that he was no
|
|
Thark, for his ornaments and metal were not of that horde.
|
|
He was a huge fellow, terribly scarred about the face and
|
|
chest, and with one broken tusk and a missing ear. Strapped
|
|
on either breast were human skulls and depending from
|
|
these a number of dried human hands.
|
|
|
|
His reference to the great games of which I had heard so
|
|
much while among the Tharks convinced me that I had but
|
|
jumped from purgatory into gehenna.
|
|
|
|
After a few more words with the female, during which
|
|
she assured him that I was now fully fit to travel, the jed
|
|
ordered that we mount and ride after the main column.
|
|
|
|
I was strapped securely to as wild and unmanageable a
|
|
thoat as I had ever seen, and, with a mounted warrior on
|
|
either side to prevent the beast from bolting, we rode forth
|
|
at a furious pace in pursuit of the column. My wounds gave
|
|
me but little pain, so wonderfully and rapidly had the
|
|
applications and injections of the female exercised their
|
|
therapeutic powers, and so deftly had she bound and plastered
|
|
the injuries.
|
|
|
|
Just before dark we reached the main body of troops
|
|
shortly after they had made camp for the night. I was
|
|
immediately taken before the leader, who proved to be the
|
|
jeddak of the hordes of Warhoon.
|
|
|
|
Like the jed who had brought me, he was frightfully
|
|
scarred, and also decorated with the breastplate of human
|
|
skulls and dried dead hands which seemed to mark all the
|
|
greater warriors among the Warhoons, as well as to indicate
|
|
their awful ferocity, which greatly transcends even that of
|
|
the Tharks.
|
|
|
|
The jeddak, Bar Comas, who was comparatively young,
|
|
was the object of the fierce and jealous hatred of his old
|
|
lieutenant, Dak Kova, the jed who had captured me, and I
|
|
could not but note the almost studied efforts which the
|
|
latter made to affront his superior.
|
|
|
|
He entirely omitted the usual formal salutation as we entered
|
|
the presence of the jeddak, and as he pushed me roughly before
|
|
the ruler he exclaimed in a loud and menacing voice.
|
|
|
|
"I have brought a strange creature wearing the metal of a
|
|
Thark whom it is my pleasure to have battle with a wild
|
|
thoat at the great games."
|
|
|
|
"He will die as Bar Comas, your jeddak, sees fit, if at all,"
|
|
replied the young ruler, with emphasis and dignity.
|
|
|
|
"If at all?" roared Dak Kova. "By the dead hands at my
|
|
throat but he shall die, Bar Comas. No maudlin weakness
|
|
on your part shall save him. O, would that Warhoon were
|
|
ruled by a real jeddak rather than by a water-hearted
|
|
weakling from whom even old Dak Kova could tear the metal
|
|
with his bare hands!"
|
|
|
|
Bar Comas eyed the defiant and insubordinate chieftain for
|
|
an instant, his expression one of haughty, fearless contempt
|
|
and hate, and then without drawing a weapon and without
|
|
uttering a word he hurled himself at the throat of his defamer.
|
|
|
|
I never before had seen two green Martian warriors battle
|
|
with nature's weapons and the exhibition of animal ferocity
|
|
which ensued was as fearful a thing as the most disordered
|
|
imagination could picture. They tore at each others' eyes
|
|
and ears with their hands and with their gleaming tusks
|
|
repeatedly slashed and gored until both were cut fairly to
|
|
ribbons from head to foot.
|
|
|
|
Bar Comas had much the better of the battle as he was
|
|
stronger, quicker and more intelligent. It soon seemed that
|
|
the encounter was done saving only the final death thrust
|
|
when Bar Comas slipped in breaking away from a clinch. It
|
|
was the one little opening that Dak Kova needed, and hurling
|
|
himself at the body of his adversary he buried his single
|
|
mighty tusk in Bar Comas' groin and with a last powerful
|
|
effort ripped the young jeddak wide open the full length of
|
|
his body, the great tusk finally wedging in the bones of Bar
|
|
Comas' jaw. Victor and vanquished rolled limp and lifeless
|
|
upon the moss, a huge mass of torn and bloody flesh.
|
|
|
|
Bar Comas was stone dead, and only the most herculean efforts on
|
|
the part of Dak Kova's females saved him from the fate he deserved.
|
|
Three days later he walked without assistance to the body of Bar
|
|
Comas which, by custom, had not been moved from where it fell,
|
|
and placing his foot upon the neck of his erstwhile ruler he
|
|
assumed the title of Jeddak of Warhoon.
|
|
|
|
The dead jeddak's hands and head were removed to be added
|
|
to the ornaments of his conqueror, and then his women
|
|
cremated what remained, amid wild and terrible laughter.
|
|
|
|
The injuries to Dak Kova had delayed the march so
|
|
greatly that it was decided to give up the expedition, which
|
|
was a raid upon a small Thark community in retaliation for
|
|
the destruction of the incubator, until after the great games,
|
|
and the entire body of warriors, ten thousand in number,
|
|
turned back toward Warhoon.
|
|
|
|
My introduction to these cruel and bloodthirsty people
|
|
was but an index to the scenes I witnessed almost daily
|
|
while with them. They are a smaller horde than the Tharks
|
|
but much more ferocious. Not a day passed but that some
|
|
members of the various Warhoon communities met in deadly
|
|
combat. I have seen as high as eight mortal duels within a
|
|
single day.
|
|
|
|
We reached the city of Warhoon after some three days
|
|
march and I was immediately cast into a dungeon and heavily
|
|
chained to the floor and walls. Food was brought me at
|
|
intervals but owing to the utter darkness of the place I do not
|
|
know whether I lay there days, or weeks, or months. It was
|
|
the most horrible experience of all my life and that my
|
|
mind did not give way to the terrors of that inky blackness
|
|
has been a wonder to me ever since. The place was filled
|
|
with creeping, crawling things; cold, sinuous bodies passed
|
|
over me when I lay down, and in the darkness I occasionally
|
|
caught glimpses of gleaming, fiery eyes, fixed in horrible
|
|
intentness upon me. No sound reached me from the world
|
|
above and no word would my jailer vouchsafe when my
|
|
food was brought to me, although I at first bombarded him
|
|
with questions.
|
|
|
|
Finally all the hatred and maniacal loathing for these
|
|
awful creatures who had placed me in this horrible place was
|
|
centered by my tottering reason upon this single emissary
|
|
who represented to me the entire horde of Warhoons.
|
|
|
|
I had noticed that he always advanced with his dim
|
|
torch to where he could place the food within my reach and
|
|
as he stooped to place it upon the floor his head was about
|
|
on a level with my breast. So, with the cunning of a madman,
|
|
I backed into the far corner of my cell when next I heard
|
|
him approaching and gathering a little slack of the great
|
|
chain which held me in my hand I waited his coming,
|
|
crouching like some beast of prey. As he stooped to place
|
|
my food upon the ground I swung the chain above my head
|
|
and crashed the links with all my strength upon his skull.
|
|
Without a sound he slipped to the floor, stone dead.
|
|
|
|
Laughing and chattering like the idiot I was fast becoming
|
|
I fell upon his prostrate form my fingers feeling for his
|
|
dead throat. Presently they came in contact with a small
|
|
chain at the end of which dangled a number of keys. The
|
|
touch of my fingers on these keys brought back my reason
|
|
with the suddenness of thought. No longer was I a jibbering
|
|
idiot, but a sane, reasoning man with the means of escape
|
|
within my very hands.
|
|
|
|
As I was groping to remove the chain from about my victim's
|
|
neck I glanced up into the darkness to see six pairs of gleaming
|
|
eyes fixed, unwinking, upon me. Slowly they approached and slowly
|
|
I shrank back from the awful horror of them. Back into my corner
|
|
I crouched holding my hands palms out, before me, and stealthily
|
|
on came the awful eyes until they reached the dead body at my feet.
|
|
Then slowly they retreated but this time with a strange grating
|
|
sound and finally they disappeared in some black and distant recess
|
|
of my dungeon.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XIX
|
|
|
|
|
|
BATTLING IN THE ARENA
|
|
|
|
|
|
Slowly I regained my composure and finally essayed again
|
|
to attempt to remove the keys from the dead body of my
|
|
former jailer. But as I reached out into the darkness to locate
|
|
it I found to my horror that it was gone. Then the truth
|
|
flashed on me; the owners of those gleaming eyes had dragged
|
|
my prize away from me to be devoured in their neighboring lair;
|
|
as they had been waiting for days, for weeks, for months,
|
|
through all this awful eternity of my imprisonment to drag
|
|
my dead carcass to their feast.
|
|
|
|
For two days no food was brought me, but then a new
|
|
messenger appeared and my incarceration went on as before,
|
|
but not again did I allow my reason to be submerged by the
|
|
horror of my position.
|
|
|
|
Shortly after this episode another prisoner was brought in
|
|
and chained near me. By the dim torch light I saw that he
|
|
was a red Martian and I could scarcely await the departure
|
|
of his guards to address him. As their retreating footsteps
|
|
died away in the distance, I called out softly the Martian
|
|
word of greeting, kaor.
|
|
|
|
"Who are you who speaks out of the darkness?" he answered
|
|
|
|
"John Carter, a friend of the red men of Helium."
|
|
|
|
"I am of Helium," he said, "but I do not recall your name."
|
|
|
|
And then I told him my story as I have written it here,
|
|
omitting only any reference to my love for Dejah Thoris.
|
|
He was much excited by the news of Helium's princess and
|
|
seemed quite positive that she and Sola could easily have
|
|
reached a point of safety from where they left me. He said
|
|
that he knew the place well because the defile through which
|
|
the Warhoon warriors had passed when they discovered us was
|
|
the only one ever used by them when marching to the south.
|
|
|
|
"Dejah Thoris and sola entered the hills not five miles
|
|
from a great waterway and are now probably quite safe,"
|
|
he assured me.
|
|
|
|
My fellow prisoner was Kantos Kan, a padwar (lieutenant)
|
|
in the navy of Helium. He had been a member of the ill-
|
|
fated expedition which had fallen into the hands of the
|
|
Tharks at the time of Dejah Thoris' capture, and he briefly
|
|
related the events which followed the defeat of the battleships.
|
|
|
|
Badly injured and only partially manned they had limped
|
|
slowly toward Helium, but while passing near the city of
|
|
Zodanga, the capital of Helium's hereditary enemies among
|
|
the red men of Barsoom, they had been attacked by a great
|
|
body of war vessels and all but the craft to which Kantos Kan
|
|
belonged were either destroyed or captured. His vessel was
|
|
chased for days by three of the Zodangan war ships but
|
|
finally escaped during the darkness of a moonless night.
|
|
|
|
Thirty days after the capture of Dejah Thoris, or about
|
|
the time of our coming to Thark, his vessel had reached
|
|
Helium with about ten survivors of the original crew of seven
|
|
hundred officers and men. Immediately seven great fleets,
|
|
each of one hundred mighty war ships, had been dispatched
|
|
to search for Dejah Thoris, and from these vessels two
|
|
thousand smaller craft had been kept out continuously in
|
|
futile search for the missing princess.
|
|
|
|
Two green Martian communities had been wiped off the
|
|
face of Barsoom by the avenging fleets, but no trace of Dejah
|
|
Thoris had been found. They had been searching among the
|
|
northern hordes, and only within the past few days had
|
|
they extended their quest to the south.
|
|
|
|
Kantos Kan had been detailed to one of the small one-man
|
|
fliers and had had the misfortune to be discovered by the
|
|
Warhoons while exploring their city. The bravery and daring
|
|
of the man won my greatest respect and admiration. Alone he
|
|
had landed at the city's boundary and on foot had penetrated
|
|
to the buildings surrounding the plaza. For two days and
|
|
nights he had explored their quarters and their dungeons in
|
|
search of his beloved princess only to fall into the
|
|
hands of a party of Warhoons as he was about to leave, after
|
|
assuring himself that Dejah Thoris was not a captive there.
|
|
|
|
During the period of our incarceration Kantos Kan and I
|
|
became well acquainted, and formed a warm personal friendship.
|
|
A few days only elapsed, however, before we were dragged forth
|
|
from our dungeon for the great games. We were conducted early
|
|
one morning to an enormous amphitheater, which instead of having
|
|
been built upon the surface of the ground was excavated below
|
|
the surface. it had partially filled with debris so that how
|
|
large it had originally been was difficult to say. In its
|
|
present condition it held the entire twenty thousand Warhoons
|
|
of the assembled hordes.
|
|
|
|
The arena was immense but extremely uneven and unkempt.
|
|
Around it the Warhoons had piled building stone from
|
|
some of the ruined edifices of the ancient city to prevent
|
|
the animals and the captives from escaping into the
|
|
audience, and at each end had been constructed cages
|
|
to hold them until their turns came to meet some horrible
|
|
death upon the arena.
|
|
|
|
Kantos Kan and I were confined together in one of the cages.
|
|
In the others were wild calots, thoats, mad zitidars,
|
|
green warriors, and women of other hordes, and many
|
|
strange and ferocious wild beasts of Barsoom which I had
|
|
never before seen. The din of their roaring, growling and
|
|
squealing was deafening and the formidable appearance of
|
|
any one of them was enough to make the stoutest heart feel
|
|
grave forebodings.
|
|
|
|
Kantos Kan explained to me that at the end of the day one
|
|
of these prisoners would gain freedom and the others would
|
|
lie dead about the arena. The winners in the various contests
|
|
of the day would be pitted against each other until only two
|
|
remained alive; the victor in the last encounter being set free,
|
|
whether animal or man. The following morning the cages would
|
|
be filled with a new consignment of victims, and so on
|
|
throughout the ten days of the games.
|
|
|
|
Shortly after we had been caged the amphitheater began to fill
|
|
and within an hour every available part of the seating space
|
|
was occupied. Dak Kova, with his jeds and chieftains, sat at
|
|
the center of one side of the arena upon a large raised platform.
|
|
|
|
At a signal from Dak Kova the doors of two cages were
|
|
thrown open and a dozen green Martian females were
|
|
driven to the center of the arena. Each was given a
|
|
dagger and then, at the far end, a pack of twelve calots,
|
|
or wild dogs were loosed upon them.
|
|
|
|
As the brutes, growling and foaming, rushed upon the almost
|
|
defenseless women I turned my head that I might not see the
|
|
horrid sight. The yells and laughter of the green horde
|
|
bore witness to the excellent quality of the sport and
|
|
when I turned back to the arena, as Kantos Kan told me it
|
|
was over, I saw three victorious calots, snarling and growling
|
|
over the bodies of their prey. The women had given a good account
|
|
of themselves.
|
|
|
|
Next a mad zitidar was loosed among the remaining dogs,
|
|
and so it went throughout the long, hot, horrible day.
|
|
|
|
During the day I was pitted against first men and then
|
|
beasts, but as I was armed with a long-sword and always
|
|
outclassed my adversary in agility and generally in strength
|
|
as well, it proved but child's play to me. Time and time again
|
|
I won the applause of the bloodthirsty multitude, and toward
|
|
the end there were cries that I be taken from the arena
|
|
and be made a member of the hordes of Warhoon.
|
|
|
|
Finally there were but three of us left, a great green warrior
|
|
of some far northern horde, Kantos Kan, and myself.
|
|
|
|
The other two were to battle and then I to fight the conqueror
|
|
for the liberty which was accorded the final winner.
|
|
|
|
Kantos Kan had fought several times during the day and
|
|
like myself had always proven victorious, but occasionally
|
|
by the smallest of margins, especially when pitted against
|
|
the green warriors. I had little hope that he could best his
|
|
giant adversary who had mowed down all before him during
|
|
the day. The fellow towered nearly sixteen feet in height,
|
|
while Kantos Kan was some inches under six feet. As they
|
|
advanced to meet one another I saw for the first time a trick
|
|
of Martian swordsmanship which centered Kantos Kan's
|
|
every hope of victory and life on one cast of the dice, for,
|
|
as he came to within about twenty feet of the huge fellow
|
|
he threw his sword arm far behind him over his shoulder
|
|
and with a mighty sweep hurled his weapon point foremost
|
|
at the green warrior. It flew true as an arrow and piercing
|
|
the poor devil's heart laid him dead upon the arena.
|
|
|
|
Kantos Kan and I were now pitted against each other but
|
|
as we approached to the encounter I whispered to him to
|
|
prolong the battle until nearly dark in the hope that we
|
|
might find some means of escape. The horde evidently
|
|
guessed that we had no hearts to fight each other and so
|
|
they howled in rage as neither of us placed a fatal thrust.
|
|
Just as I saw the sudden coming of dark I whispered to
|
|
Kantos Kan to thrust his sword between my left arm and my
|
|
body. As he did so I staggered back clasping the sword
|
|
tightly with my arm and thus fell to the ground with his
|
|
weapon apparently protruding from my chest. Kantos Kan
|
|
perceived my coup and stepping quickly to my side he placed his
|
|
foot upon my neck and withdrawing his sword from my body
|
|
gave me the final death blow through the neck which is supposed
|
|
to sever the jugular vein, but in this instance the cold
|
|
blade slipped harmlessly into the sand of the arena. In the
|
|
darkness which had now fallen none could tell but that he
|
|
had really finished me. I whispered to him to go and claim
|
|
his freedom and then look for me in the hills east of the
|
|
city, and so he left me.
|
|
|
|
When the amphitheater had cleared I crept stealthily to
|
|
the top and as the great excavation lay far from the plaza
|
|
and in an untenanted portion of the great dead city I had
|
|
little trouble in reaching the hills beyond.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XX
|
|
|
|
|
|
IN THE ATMOSPHERE FACTORY
|
|
|
|
|
|
For two days I waited there for Kantos Kan, but as he did
|
|
not come I started off on foot in a northwesterly direction
|
|
toward a point where he had told me lay the nearest waterway.
|
|
My only food consisted of vegetable milk from the
|
|
plants which gave so bounteously of this priceless fluid.
|
|
|
|
Through two long weeks I wandered, stumbling through
|
|
the nights guided only by the stars and hiding during the
|
|
days behind some protruding rock or among the occasional
|
|
hills I traversed. Several times I was attacked by wild beasts;
|
|
strange, uncouth monstrosities that leaped upon me in the
|
|
dark, so that I had ever to grasp my long-sword in my hand
|
|
that I might be ready for them. Usually my strange, newly
|
|
acquired telepathic power warned me in ample time, but
|
|
once I was down with vicious fangs at my jugular and a
|
|
hairy face pressed close to mine before I knew that I was
|
|
even threatened.
|
|
|
|
What manner of thing was upon me I did not know, but
|
|
that it was large and heavy and many-legged I could feel.
|
|
My hands were at its throat before the fangs had a chance to
|
|
bury themselves in my neck, and slowly I forced the hairy face
|
|
from me and closed my fingers, vise-like, upon its windpipe.
|
|
|
|
Without sound we lay there, the beast exerting every effort
|
|
to reach me with those awful fangs, and I straining to
|
|
maintain my grip and choke the life from it as I kept it from
|
|
my throat. Slowly my arms gave to the unequal struggle,
|
|
and inch by inch the burning eyes and gleaming tusks of my
|
|
antagonist crept toward me, until, as the hairy face touched
|
|
mine again, I realized that all was over. And then a living
|
|
mass of destruction sprang from the surrounding darkness
|
|
full upon the creature that held me pinioned to the ground.
|
|
The two rolled growling upon the moss, tearing and rending
|
|
one another in a frightful manner, but it was soon over and
|
|
my preserver stood with lowered head above the throat of
|
|
the dead thing which would have killed me.
|
|
|
|
The nearer moon, hurtling suddenly above the horizon
|
|
and lighting up the Barsoomian scene, showed me that my
|
|
preserver was Woola, but from whence he had come, or how
|
|
found me, I was at a loss to know. That I was glad of his
|
|
companionship it is needless to say, but my pleasure at seeing
|
|
him was tempered by anxiety as to the reason of his leaving
|
|
Dejah Thoris. Only her death I felt sure, could account for
|
|
his absence from her, so faithful I knew him to be to my
|
|
commands.
|
|
|
|
By the light of the now brilliant moons I saw that he was
|
|
but a shadow of his former self, and as he turned from my
|
|
caress and commenced greedily to devour the dead carcass
|
|
at my feet I realized that the poor fellow was more than half
|
|
starved. I, myself, was in but little better plight but I could
|
|
not bring myself to eat the uncooked flesh and I had no
|
|
means of making a fire. When Woola had finished his meal
|
|
I again took up my weary and seemingly endless wandering
|
|
in quest of the elusive waterway.
|
|
|
|
At daybreak of the fifteenth day of my search I was overjoyed
|
|
to see the high trees that denoted the object of my search.
|
|
About noon I dragged myself wearily to the portals of a
|
|
huge building which covered perhaps four square miles
|
|
and towered two hundred feet in the air. It showed no
|
|
aperture in the mighty walls other than the tiny door at which
|
|
I sank exhausted, nor was there any sign of life about it.
|
|
|
|
I could find no bell or other method of making my presence
|
|
known to the inmates of the place, unless a small round
|
|
role in the wall near the door was for that purpose. It was
|
|
of about the bigness of a lead pencil and thinking that it
|
|
might be in the nature of a speaking tube I put my mouth to
|
|
it and was about to call into it when a voice issued from it
|
|
asking me whom I might be, where from, and the nature of
|
|
my errand.
|
|
|
|
I explained that I had escaped from the Warhoons and
|
|
was dying of starvation and exhaustion.
|
|
|
|
"You wear the metal of a green warrior and are followed
|
|
by a calot, yet you are of the figure of a red man. In color
|
|
you are neither green nor red. In the name of the ninth day,
|
|
what manner of creature are you?"
|
|
|
|
"I am a friend of the red men of Barsoom and I am starving.
|
|
In the name of humanity open to us," I replied.
|
|
|
|
Presently the door commenced to recede before me until it had
|
|
sunk into the wall fifty feet, then it stopped and slid easily
|
|
to the left, exposing a short, narrow corridor of concrete,
|
|
at the further end of which was another door, similar in
|
|
every respect to the one I had just passed. No one was in
|
|
sight, yet immediately we passed the first door it slid gently
|
|
into place behind us and receded rapidly to its original position
|
|
in the front wall of the building. As the door had slipped
|
|
aside I had noted its great thickness, fully twenty feet, and
|
|
as it reached its place once more after closing behind us,
|
|
great cylinders of steel had dropped from the ceiling behind
|
|
it and fitted their lower ends into apertures countersunk in
|
|
the floor.
|
|
|
|
A second and third door receded before me and slipped to one
|
|
side as the first, before I reached a large inner chamber
|
|
where I found food and drink set out upon a great stone table.
|
|
A voice directed me to satisfy my hunger and to feed
|
|
my calot, and while I was thus engaged my invisible host
|
|
put me through a severe and searching cross-examination.
|
|
|
|
"Your statements are most remarkable," said the voice, on
|
|
concluding its questioning, "but you are evidently speaking the
|
|
truth, and it is equally evident that you are not of Barsoom.
|
|
I can tell that by the conformation of your brain and the
|
|
strange location of your internal organs and the shape and
|
|
size of your heart."
|
|
|
|
"Can you see through me?" I exclaimed.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, I can see all but your thoughts, and were you a Barsoomian
|
|
I could read those."
|
|
|
|
Then a door opened at the far side of the chamber and a
|
|
strange, dried up, little mummy of a man came toward me.
|
|
He wore but a single article of clothing or adornment, a
|
|
small collar of gold from which depended upon his chest a
|
|
great ornament as large as a dinner plate set solid with huge
|
|
diamonds, except for the exact center which was occupied
|
|
by a strange stone, an inch in diameter, that scintillated nine
|
|
different and distinct rays; the seven colors of our earthly
|
|
prism and two beautiful rays which, to me, were new and
|
|
nameless. I cannot describe them any more than you could
|
|
describe red to a blind man. I only know that they were
|
|
beautiful in the extreme.
|
|
|
|
The old man sat and talked with me for hours, and the
|
|
strangest part of our intercourse was that I could read his
|
|
every thought while he could not fathom an iota from my
|
|
mind unless I spoke.
|
|
|
|
I did not apprise him of my ability to sense his mental
|
|
operations, and thus I learned a great deal which proved of
|
|
immense value to me later and which I would never have
|
|
known had he suspected my strange power, for the Martians
|
|
have such perfect control of their mental machinery that they
|
|
are able to direct their thoughts with absolute precision.
|
|
|
|
The building in which I found myself contained the machinery
|
|
which produces that artificial atmosphere which sustains
|
|
life on Mars. The secret of the entire process hinges on
|
|
the use of the ninth ray, one of the beautiful scintillations
|
|
which I had noted emanating from the great stone in my
|
|
host's diadem.
|
|
|
|
This ray is separated from the other rays of the sun by
|
|
means of finely adjusted instruments placed upon the roof
|
|
of the huge building, three-quarters of which is used for
|
|
reservoirs in which the ninth ray is stored. This product is
|
|
then treated electrically, or rather certain proportions of
|
|
refined electric vibrations are incorporated with it, and the
|
|
result is then pumped to the five principal air centers of the
|
|
planet where, as it is released, contact with the ether of
|
|
space transforms it into atmosphere.
|
|
|
|
There is always sufficient reserve of the ninth ray stored in
|
|
the great building to maintain the present Martian atmosphere for
|
|
a thousand years, and the only fear, as my new friend told me,
|
|
was that some accident might befall the pumping apparatus.
|
|
|
|
He led me to an inner chamber where I beheld a battery
|
|
of twenty radium pumps any one of which was equal to the
|
|
task of furnishing all Mars with the atmosphere compound.
|
|
For eight hundred years, he told me, he had watched these
|
|
pumps which are used alternately a day each at a stretch, or
|
|
a little over twenty-four and one-half Earth hours. He has one
|
|
assistant who divides the watch with him. Half a Martian
|
|
year, about three hundred and forty-four of our days, each
|
|
of these men spend alone in this huge, isolated plant.
|
|
|
|
Every red Martian is taught during earliest childhood the
|
|
principles of the manufacture of atmosphere, but only two
|
|
at one time ever hold the secret of ingress to the great building,
|
|
which, built as it is with walls a hundred and fifty feet
|
|
thick, is absolutely unassailable, even the roof being guarded
|
|
from assault by air craft by a glass covering five feet thick.
|
|
|
|
The only fear they entertain of attack is from the green
|
|
Martians or some demented red man, as all Barsoomians
|
|
realize that the very existence of every form of life of Mars
|
|
is dependent upon the uninterrupted working of this plant.
|
|
|
|
One curious fact I discovered as I watched his thoughts
|
|
was that the outer doors are manipulated by telepathic
|
|
means. The locks are so finely adjusted that the doors are
|
|
released by the action of a certain combination of thought
|
|
waves. To experiment with my new-found toy I thought to
|
|
surprise him into revealing this combination and so I asked
|
|
him in a casual manner how he had managed to unlock the
|
|
massive doors for me from the inner chambers of the building.
|
|
As quick as a flash there leaped to his mind nine Martian sounds,
|
|
but as quickly faded as he answered that this was a secret
|
|
he must not divulge.
|
|
|
|
From then on his manner toward me changed as though he feared
|
|
that he had been surprised into divulging his great secret,
|
|
and I read suspicion and fear in his looks and thoughts,
|
|
though his words were still fair.
|
|
|
|
Before I retired for the night he promised to give me a
|
|
letter to a nearby agricultural officer who would help me on
|
|
my way to Zodanga, which he said, was the nearest Martian city.
|
|
|
|
"But be sure that you do not let them know you are
|
|
bound for Helium as they are at war with that country.
|
|
My assistant and I are of no country, we belong to all Barsoom
|
|
and this talisman which we wear protects us in all lands,
|
|
even among the green men--though we do not trust ourselves
|
|
to their hands if we can avoid it," he added.
|
|
|
|
"And so good-night, my friend," he continued, "may you
|
|
have a long and restful sleep--yes, a long sleep."
|
|
|
|
And though he smiled pleasantly I saw in his thoughts the
|
|
wish that he had never admitted me, and then a picture of
|
|
him standing over me in the night, and the swift thrust of
|
|
a long dagger and the half formed words, "I am sorry, but it
|
|
is for the best good of Barsoom."
|
|
|
|
As he closed the door of my chamber behind him his
|
|
thoughts were cut off from me as was the sight of him, which
|
|
seemed strange to me in my little knowledge of thought
|
|
transference.
|
|
|
|
What was I to do? How could I escape through these
|
|
mighty walls? Easily could I kill him now that I was warned,
|
|
but once he was dead I could no more escape, and with the
|
|
stopping of the machinery of the great plant I should die
|
|
with all the other inhabitants of the planet--all, even Dejah
|
|
Thoris were she not already dead. For the others I did not
|
|
give the snap of my finger, but the thought of Dejah Thoris
|
|
drove from my mind all desire to kill my mistaken host.
|
|
|
|
Cautiously I opened the door of my apartment and, followed
|
|
by Woola, sought the inner of the great doors. A wild
|
|
scheme had come to me; I would attempt to force the great
|
|
locks by the nine thought waves I had read in my host's mind.
|
|
|
|
Creeping stealthily through corridor after corridor and
|
|
down winding runways which turned hither and thither I
|
|
finally reached the great hall in which I had broken my long
|
|
fast that morning. Nowhere had I seen my host, nor did I
|
|
know where he kept himself by night.
|
|
|
|
I was on the point of stepping boldly out into the room
|
|
when a slight noise behind me warned me back into the
|
|
shadows of a recess in the corridor. Dragging Woola after
|
|
me I crouched low in the darkness.
|
|
|
|
Presently the old man passed close by me, and as he entered
|
|
the dimly lighted chamber which I had been about to
|
|
pass through I saw that he held a long thin dagger in his
|
|
hand and that he was sharpening it upon a stone. In his mind
|
|
was the decision to inspect the radium pumps, which would
|
|
take about thirty minutes, and then return to my bed chamber
|
|
and finish me.
|
|
|
|
As he passed through the great hall and disappeared down
|
|
the runway which led to the pump-room, I stole stealthily
|
|
from my hiding place and crossed to the great door, the inner
|
|
of the three which stood between me and liberty.
|
|
|
|
Concentrating my mind upon the massive lock I hurled
|
|
the nine thought waves against it. In breathless expectancy
|
|
I waited, when finally the great door moved softly toward
|
|
me and slid quietly to one side. One after the other the
|
|
remaining mighty portals opened at my command and Woola
|
|
and I stepped forth into the darkness, free, but little better
|
|
off than we had been before, other than that we had full
|
|
stomachs.
|
|
|
|
Hastening away from the shadows of the formidable pile
|
|
I made for the first crossroad, intending to strike the central
|
|
turnpike as quickly as possible. This I reached about morning
|
|
and entering the first enclosure I came to I searched for
|
|
some evidences of a habitation.
|
|
|
|
There were low rambling buildings of concrete barred
|
|
with heavy impassable doors, and no amount of hammering
|
|
and hallooing brought any response. Weary and exhausted
|
|
from sleeplessness I threw myself upon the ground commanding
|
|
Woola to stand guard.
|
|
|
|
Some time later I was awakened by his frightful growlings
|
|
and opened my eyes to see three red Martians standing a
|
|
short distance from us and covering me with their rifles.
|
|
|
|
"I am unarmed and no enemy," I hastened to explain. "I
|
|
have been a prisoner among the green men and am on my
|
|
way to Zodanga. All I ask is food and rest for myself and
|
|
my calot and the proper directions for reaching my destination."
|
|
|
|
They lowered their rifles and advanced pleasantly toward
|
|
me placing their right hands upon my left shoulder, after the
|
|
manner of their custom of salute, and asking me many questions
|
|
about myself and my wanderings. They then took me to the
|
|
house of one of them which was only a short distance away.
|
|
|
|
The buildings I had been hammering at in the early
|
|
morning were occupied only by stock and farm produce,
|
|
the house proper standing among a grove of enormous trees,
|
|
and, like all red-Martian homes, had been raised at night
|
|
some forty or fifty feet from the ground on a large round
|
|
metal shaft which slid up or down within a sleeve sunk in
|
|
the ground, and was operated by a tiny radium engine in
|
|
the entrance hall of the building. Instead of bothering with
|
|
bolts and bars for their dwellings, the red Martians simply
|
|
run them up out of harm's way during the night. They also
|
|
have private means for lowering or raising them from the
|
|
ground without if they wish to go away and leave them.
|
|
|
|
These brothers, with their wives and children, occupied three
|
|
similar houses on this farm. They did no work themselves,
|
|
being government officers in charge. The labor was
|
|
performed by convicts, prisoners of war, delinquent debtors
|
|
and confirmed bachelors who were too poor to pay the high
|
|
celibate tax which all red-Martian governments impose.
|
|
|
|
They were the personification of cordiality and hospitality
|
|
and I spent several days with them, resting and recuperating
|
|
from my long and arduous experiences.
|
|
|
|
When they had heard my story--I omitted all reference
|
|
to Dejah Thoris and the old man of the atmosphere plant--
|
|
they advised me to color my body to more nearly resemble
|
|
their own race and then attempt to find employment in Zodanga,
|
|
either in the army or the navy.
|
|
|
|
"The chances are small that your tale will be believed
|
|
until after you have proven your trustworthiness and won
|
|
friends among the higher nobles of the court. This you can
|
|
most easily do through military service, as we are a warlike
|
|
people on Barsoom," explained one of them, "and save our
|
|
richest favors for the fighting man."
|
|
|
|
When I was ready to depart they furnished me with a
|
|
small domestic bull thoat, such as is used for saddle
|
|
purposes by all red Martians. The animal is about the size
|
|
of a horse and quite gentle, but in color and shape an exact
|
|
replica of his huge and fierce cousin of the wilds.
|
|
|
|
The brothers had supplied me with a reddish oil with which
|
|
I anointed my entire body and one of them cut my hair,
|
|
which had grown quite long, in the prevailing fashion of the
|
|
time, square at the back and banged in front, so that I could
|
|
have passed anywhere upon Barsoom as a full-fledged red
|
|
Martian. My metal and ornaments were also renewed in the
|
|
style of a Zodangan gentleman, attached to the house of
|
|
Ptor, which was the family name of my benefactors.
|
|
|
|
They filled a little sack at my side with Zodangan money.
|
|
The medium of exchange upon Mars is not dissimilar from
|
|
our own except that the coins are oval. Paper money is
|
|
issued by individuals as they require it and redeemed twice
|
|
yearly. If a man issues more than he can redeem, the
|
|
government pays his creditors in full and the debtor works out
|
|
the amount upon the farms or in mines, which are all owned
|
|
by the government. This suits everybody except the debtor as
|
|
it has been a difficult thing to obtain sufficient voluntary
|
|
labor to work the great isolated farm lands of Mars, stretching
|
|
as they do like narrow ribbons from pole to pole, through wild
|
|
stretches peopled by wild animals and wilder men.
|
|
|
|
When I mentioned my inability to repay them for their kindness
|
|
to me they assured me that I would have ample opportunity
|
|
if I lived long upon Barsoom, and bidding me farewell
|
|
they watched me until I was out of sight upon the broad
|
|
white turnpike.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXI
|
|
|
|
|
|
AN AIR SCOUT FOR ZODANGA
|
|
|
|
|
|
As I proceeded on my journey toward Zodanga many strange and
|
|
interesting sights arrested my attention, and at the several
|
|
farm houses where I stopped I learned a number of new and
|
|
instructive things concerning the methods and manners of Barsoom.
|
|
|
|
The water which supplies the farms of Mars is collected
|
|
in immense underground reservoirs at either pole from the
|
|
melting ice caps, and pumped through long conduits to the
|
|
various populated centers. Along either side of these conduits,
|
|
and extending their entire length, lie the cultivated districts.
|
|
These are divided into tracts of about the same size, each tract
|
|
being under the supervision of one or more government officers.
|
|
|
|
Instead of flooding the surface of the fields, and thus wasting
|
|
immense quantities of water by evaporation, the precious
|
|
liquid is carried underground through a vast network of
|
|
small pipes directly to the roots of the vegetation. The crops
|
|
upon Mars are always uniform, for there are no droughts, no
|
|
rains, no high winds, and no insects, or destroying birds.
|
|
|
|
On this trip I tasted the first meat I had eaten since
|
|
leaving Earth--large, juicy steaks and chops from the well-fed
|
|
domestic animals of the farms. Also I enjoyed luscious fruits
|
|
and vegetables, but not a single article of food which was
|
|
exactly similar to anything on Earth. Every plant and flower
|
|
and vegetable and animal has been so refined by ages of careful,
|
|
scientific cultivation and breeding that the like of them on
|
|
Earth dwindled into pale, gray, characterless nothingness
|
|
by comparison.
|
|
|
|
At a second stop I met some highly cultivated people of
|
|
the noble class and while in conversation we chanced to
|
|
speak of Helium. One of the older men had been there on
|
|
a diplomatic mission several years before and spoke with
|
|
regret of the conditions which seemed destined ever to keep
|
|
these two countries at war.
|
|
|
|
"Helium," he said, "rightly boasts the most beautiful
|
|
women of Barsoom, and of all her treasures the wondrous
|
|
daughter of Mors Kajak, Dejah Thoris, is the most exquisite
|
|
flower.
|
|
|
|
"Why," he added, "the people really worship the ground
|
|
she walks upon and since her loss on that ill-starred
|
|
expedition all Helium has been draped in mourning.
|
|
|
|
"That our ruler should have attacked the disabled fleet
|
|
as it was returning to Helium was but another of his awful
|
|
blunders which I fear will sooner or later compel Zodanga
|
|
to elevate a wiser man to his place."
|
|
|
|
"Even now, though our victorious armies are surrounding
|
|
Helium, the people of Zodanga are voicing their displeasure,
|
|
for the war is not a popular one, since it is not based on
|
|
right or justice. Our forces took advantage of the absence
|
|
of the principal fleet of Helium on their search for the
|
|
princess, and so we have been able easily to reduce the city
|
|
to a sorry plight. it is said she will fall within the next few
|
|
passages of the further moon."
|
|
|
|
"And what, think you, may have been the fate of the
|
|
princess, Dejah Thoris?" I asked as casually as possible.
|
|
|
|
"She is dead," he answered. "This much was learned
|
|
from a green warrior recently captured by our forces in
|
|
the south. She escaped from the hordes of Thark with a
|
|
strange creature of another world, only to fall into the hands
|
|
of the Warhoons. Their thoats were found wandering upon
|
|
the sea bottom and evidences of a bloody conflict were
|
|
discovered nearby."
|
|
|
|
While this information was in no way reassuring, neither
|
|
was it at all conclusive proof of the death of Dejah Thoris,
|
|
and so I determined to make every effort possible to reach
|
|
Helium as quickly as I could and carry to Tardos Mors
|
|
such news of his granddaughter's possible whereabouts as
|
|
lay in my power.
|
|
|
|
Ten days after leaving the three Ptor brothers I arrived
|
|
at Zodanga. From the moment that I had come in contact
|
|
with the red inhabitants of Mars I had noticed that Woola
|
|
drew a great amount of unwelcome attention to me, since
|
|
the huge brute belonged to a species which is never
|
|
domesticated by the red men. Were one to stroll down
|
|
Broadway with a Numidian lion at his heels the effect would
|
|
be somewhat similar to that which I should have produced
|
|
had I entered Zodanga with Woola.
|
|
|
|
The very thought of parting with the faithful fellow caused
|
|
me so great regret and genuine sorrow that I put it off until
|
|
just before we arrived at the city's gates; but then, finally,
|
|
it became imperative that we separate. Had nothing further
|
|
than my own safety or pleasure been at stake no argument
|
|
could have prevailed upon me to turn away the one creature
|
|
upon Barsoom that had never failed in a demonstration
|
|
of affection and loyalty; but as I would willingly have offered
|
|
my life in the service of her in search of whom I was about
|
|
to challenge the unknown dangers of this, to me, mysterious
|
|
city, I could not permit even Woola's life to threaten the
|
|
success of my venture, much less his momentary happiness,
|
|
for I doubted not he soon would forget me. And so I bade
|
|
the poor beast an affectionate farewell, promising him,
|
|
however, that if I came through my adventure in safety that
|
|
in some way I should find the means to search him out.
|
|
|
|
He seemed to understand me fully, and when I pointed
|
|
back in the direction of Thark he turned sorrowfully away,
|
|
nor could I bear to watch him go; but resolutely set my
|
|
face toward Zodanga and with a touch of heartsickness
|
|
approached her frowning walls.
|
|
|
|
The letter I bore from them gained me immediate entrance
|
|
to the vast, walled city. It was still very early in
|
|
the morning and the streets were practically deserted.
|
|
The residences, raised high upon their metal columns, resembled
|
|
huge rookeries, while the uprights themselves presented the
|
|
appearance of steel tree trunks. The shops as a rule were
|
|
not raised from the ground nor were their doors bolted or
|
|
barred, since thievery is practically unknown upon Barsoom.
|
|
Assassination is the ever-present fear of all Barsoomians,
|
|
and for this reason alone their homes are raised high above
|
|
the ground at night, or in times of danger.
|
|
|
|
The Ptor brothers had given me explicit directions for
|
|
reaching the point of the city where I could find living
|
|
accommodations and be near the offices of the government
|
|
agents to whom they had given me letters. My way led to
|
|
the central square or plaza, which is a characteristic of all
|
|
Martian cities.
|
|
|
|
The plaza of Zodanga covers a square mile and is bounded
|
|
by the palaces of the jeddak, the jeds, and other members
|
|
of the royalty and nobility of Zodanga, as well as by the
|
|
principal public buildings, cafes, and shops.
|
|
|
|
As I was crossing the great square lost in wonder and
|
|
admiration of the magnificent architecture and the gorgeous
|
|
scarlet vegetation which carpeted the broad lawns I
|
|
discovered a red Martian walking briskly toward me from one
|
|
of the avenues. He paid not the slightest attention to me,
|
|
but as he came abreast I recognized him, and turning I
|
|
placed my hand upon his shoulder, calling out:
|
|
|
|
"Kaor, Kantos Kan!"
|
|
|
|
Like lightning he wheeled and before I could so much
|
|
as lower my hand the point of his long-sword was at my
|
|
breast.
|
|
|
|
"Who are you?" he growled, and then as a backward leap
|
|
carried me fifty feet from his sword he dropped the point
|
|
to the ground and exclaimed, laughing,
|
|
|
|
"I do not need a better reply, there is but one man upon
|
|
all Barsoom who can bounce about like a rubber ball. By
|
|
the mother of the further moon, John Carter, how came
|
|
you here, and have you become a Darseen that you can
|
|
change your color at will?"
|
|
|
|
"You gave me a bad half minute my friend," he continued,
|
|
after I had briefly outlined my adventures since parting
|
|
with him in the arena at Warhoon. "Were my name
|
|
and city known to the Zodangans I would shortly be sitting
|
|
on the banks of the lost sea of Korus with my revered and
|
|
departed ancestors. I am here in the interest of Tardos
|
|
Mors, Jeddak of Helium, to discover the whereabouts of
|
|
Dejah Thoris, our princess. Sab Than, prince of Zodanga,
|
|
has her hidden in the city and has fallen madly in love
|
|
with her. His father, Than Kosis, Jeddak of Zodanga, has
|
|
made her voluntary marriage to his son the price of peace
|
|
between our countries, but Tardos Mors will not accede to
|
|
the demands and has sent word that he and his people
|
|
would rather look upon the dead face of their princess than
|
|
see her wed to any than her own choice, and that personally
|
|
he would prefer being engulfed in the ashes of a lost and
|
|
burning Helium to joining the metal of his house with that
|
|
of Than Kosis. His reply was the deadliest affront he could
|
|
have put upon Than Kosis and the Zodangans, but his people
|
|
love him the more for it and his strength in Helium is
|
|
greater today than ever.
|
|
|
|
"I have been here three days," continued Kantos Kan,
|
|
"but I have not yet found where Dejah Thoris is imprisoned.
|
|
Today I join the Zodangan navy as an air scout and I hope
|
|
in this way to win the confidence of Sab Than, the prince,
|
|
who is commander of this division of the navy, and thus
|
|
learn the whereabouts of Dejah Thoris. I am glad that you
|
|
are here, John Carter, for I know your loyalty to my princess
|
|
and two of us working together should be able to
|
|
accomplish much."
|
|
|
|
The plaza was now commencing to fill with people going
|
|
and coming upon the daily activities of their duties. The
|
|
shops were opening and the cafes filling with early morning
|
|
patrons. Kantos Kan led me to one of these gorgeous eating
|
|
places where we were served entirely by mechanical apparatus.
|
|
No hand touched the food from the time it entered the
|
|
building in its raw state until it emerged hot and delicious
|
|
upon the tables before the guests, in response to the touching
|
|
of tiny buttons to indicate their desires.
|
|
|
|
After our meal, Kantos Kan took me with him to the
|
|
headquarters of the air-scout squadron and introducing me
|
|
to his superior asked that I be enrolled as a member of the
|
|
corps. In accordance with custom an examination was necessary,
|
|
but Kantos Kan had told me to have no fear on this score as he
|
|
would attend to that part of the matter. He accomplished
|
|
this by taking my order for examination to the examining
|
|
officer and representing himself as John Carter.
|
|
|
|
"This ruse will be discovered later," he cheerfully
|
|
explained, "when they check up my weights, measurements,
|
|
and other personal identification data, but it will be
|
|
several months before this is done and our mission should
|
|
be accomplished or have failed long before that time."
|
|
|
|
The next few days were spent by Kantos Kan in teaching
|
|
me the intricacies of flying and of repairing the dainty
|
|
little contrivances which the Martians use for this purpose.
|
|
The body of the one-man air craft is about sixteen feet
|
|
long, two feet wide and three inches thick, tapering to a
|
|
point at each end. The driver sits on top of this plane upon
|
|
a seat constructed over the small, noiseless radium engine
|
|
which propels it. The medium of buoyancy is contained
|
|
within the thin metal walls of the body and consists of
|
|
the eighth Barsoomian ray, or ray of propulsion, as it may
|
|
be termed in view of its properties.
|
|
|
|
This ray, like the ninth ray, is unknown on Earth, but
|
|
the Martians have discovered that it is an inherent property
|
|
of all light no matter from what source it emanates. They
|
|
have learned that it is the solar eighth ray which propels
|
|
the light of the sun to the various planets, and that it is
|
|
the individual eighth ray of each planet which "reflects," or
|
|
propels the light thus obtained out into space once more.
|
|
The solar eighth ray would be absorbed by the surface of
|
|
Barsoom, but the Barsoomian eighth ray, which tends to
|
|
propel light from Mars into space, is constantly streaming
|
|
out from the planet constituting a force of repulsion of
|
|
gravity which when confined is able to life enormous weights
|
|
from the surface of the ground.
|
|
|
|
It is this ray which has enabled them to so perfect aviation
|
|
that battle ships far outweighing anything known upon
|
|
Earth sail as gracefully and lightly through the thin air of
|
|
Barsoom as a toy balloon in the heavy atmosphere of Earth.
|
|
|
|
During the early years of the discovery of this ray many
|
|
strange accidents occurred before the Martians learned to
|
|
measure and control the wonderful power they had found.
|
|
In one instance, some nine hundred years before, the first
|
|
great battle ship to be built with eighth ray reservoirs was
|
|
stored with too great a quantity of the rays and she had
|
|
sailed up from Helium with five hundred officers and men,
|
|
never to return.
|
|
|
|
Her power of repulsion for the planet was so great that
|
|
it had carried her far into space, where she can be seen
|
|
today, by the aid of powerful telescopes, hurtling through
|
|
the heavens ten thousand miles from Mars; a tiny satellite
|
|
that will thus encircle Barsoom to the end of time.
|
|
|
|
The fourth day after my arrival at Zodanga I made my
|
|
first flight, and as a result of it I won a promotion which
|
|
included quarters in the palace of Than Kosis.
|
|
|
|
As I rose above the city I circled several times, as I had
|
|
seen Kantos Kan do, and then throwing my engine into top
|
|
speed I raced at terrific velocity toward the south, following
|
|
one of the great waterways which enter Zodanga from that
|
|
direction.
|
|
|
|
I had traversed perhaps two hundred miles in a little less
|
|
than an hour when I descried far below me a party of
|
|
three green warriors racing madly toward a small figure on
|
|
foot which seemed to be trying to reach the confines of one
|
|
of the walled fields.
|
|
|
|
Dropping my machine rapidly toward them, and circling
|
|
to the rear of the warriors, I soon saw that the object of
|
|
their pursuit was a red Martian wearing the metal of the
|
|
scout squadron to which I was attached. A short distance
|
|
away lay his tiny flier, surrounded by the tools with which
|
|
he had evidently been occupied in repairing some damage
|
|
when surprised by the green warriors.
|
|
|
|
They were now almost upon him; their flying mounts
|
|
charging down on the relatively puny figure at terrific speed,
|
|
while the warriors leaned low to the right, with their great
|
|
metal-shod spears. Each seemed striving to be the first to
|
|
impale the poor Zodangan and in another moment his fate
|
|
would have been sealed had it not been for my timely arrival.
|
|
|
|
Driving my fleet air craft at high speed directly behind
|
|
the warriors I soon overtook them and without diminishing
|
|
my speed I rammed the prow of my little flier between the
|
|
shoulders of the nearest. The impact sufficient to have torn
|
|
through inches of solid steel, hurled the fellow's headless body
|
|
into the air over the head of his thoat, where it fell sprawling
|
|
upon the moss. The mounts of the other two warriors
|
|
turned squealing in terror, and bolted in opposite directions.
|
|
|
|
Reducing my speed I circled and came to the ground
|
|
at the feet of the astonished Zodangan. He was warm in
|
|
his thanks for my timely aid and promised that my day's
|
|
work would bring the reward it merited, for it was none
|
|
other than a cousin of the jeddak of Zodanga whose life I
|
|
had saved.
|
|
|
|
We wasted no time in talk as we knew that the warriors
|
|
would surely return as soon as they had gained control of
|
|
their mounts. Hastening to his damaged machine we were
|
|
bending every effort to finish the needed repairs and had
|
|
almost completed them when we saw the two green monsters
|
|
returning at top speed from opposite sides of us. When
|
|
they had approached within a hundred yards their thoats
|
|
again became unmanageable and absolutely refused to advance
|
|
further toward the air craft which had frightened them.
|
|
|
|
The warriors finally dismounted and hobbling their animals
|
|
advanced toward us on foot with drawn long-swords.
|
|
|
|
I advanced to meet the larger, telling the Zodangan to do
|
|
the best he could with the other. Finishing my man with
|
|
almost no effort, as had now from much practice become
|
|
habitual with me, I hastened to return to my new acquaintance
|
|
whom I found indeed in desperate straits.
|
|
|
|
He was wounded and down with the huge foot of his
|
|
antagonist upon his throat and the great long-sword raised
|
|
to deal the final thrust. With a bound I cleared the fifty
|
|
feet intervening between us, and with outstretched point
|
|
drove my sword completely through the body of the green
|
|
warrior. His sword fell, harmless, to the ground and he sank
|
|
limply upon the prostrate form of the Zodangan.
|
|
|
|
A cursory examination of the latter revealed no mortal
|
|
injuries and after a brief rest he asserted that he felt fit to
|
|
attempt the return voyage. He would have to pilot his
|
|
own craft, however, as these frail vessels are not intended
|
|
to convey but a single person.
|
|
|
|
Quickly completing the repairs we rose together into the
|
|
still, cloudless Martian sky, and at great speed and without
|
|
further mishap returned to Zodanga.
|
|
|
|
As we neared the city we discovered a mighty concourse
|
|
of civilians and troops assembled upon the plain before the
|
|
city. The sky was black with naval vessels and private and
|
|
public pleasure craft, flying long streamers of gay-colored
|
|
silks, and banners and flags of odd and picturesque design.
|
|
|
|
My companion signaled that I slow down, and running
|
|
his machine close beside mine suggested that we approach
|
|
and watch the ceremony, which, he said, was for the purpose
|
|
of conferring honors on individual officers and men for
|
|
bravery and other distinguished service. He then unfurled
|
|
a little ensign which denoted that his craft bore a member
|
|
of the royal family of Zodanga, and together we made our
|
|
way through the maze of low-lying air vessels until we hung
|
|
directly over the jeddak of Zodanga and his staff. All were
|
|
mounted upon the small domestic bull thoats of the red
|
|
Martians, and their trappings and ornamentation bore such
|
|
a quantity of gorgeously colored feathers that I could not but
|
|
be struck with the startling resemblance the concourse bore
|
|
to a band of the red Indians of my own Earth.
|
|
|
|
One of the staff called the attention of Than Kosis to the
|
|
presence of my companion above them and the ruler motioned
|
|
for him to descend. As they waited for the troops
|
|
to move into position facing the jeddak the two talked
|
|
earnestly together, the jeddak and his staff occasionally
|
|
glancing up at me. I could not hear their conversation and
|
|
presently it ceased and all dismounted, as the last body of
|
|
troops had wheeled into position before their emperor. A
|
|
member of the staff advanced toward the troops, and calling
|
|
the name of a soldier commanded him to advance. The
|
|
officer then recited the nature of the heroic act which had
|
|
won the approval of the jeddak, and the latter advanced
|
|
and placed a metal ornament upon the left arm of the
|
|
lucky man.
|
|
|
|
Ten men had been so decorated when the aide called out,
|
|
|
|
"John Carter, air scout!"
|
|
|
|
Never in my life had I been so surprised, but the habit
|
|
of military discipline is strong within me, and I dropped
|
|
my little machine lightly to the ground and advanced on
|
|
foot as I had seen the others do. As I halted before the
|
|
officer, he addressed me in a voice audible to the entire
|
|
assemblage of troops and spectators.
|
|
|
|
"In recognition, John Carter," he said, "of your remarkable
|
|
courage and skill in defending the person of the cousin
|
|
of the jeddak Than Kosis and, singlehanded, vanquishing
|
|
three green warriors, it is the pleasure of our jeddak to
|
|
confer on you the mark of his esteem."
|
|
|
|
Than Kosis then advanced toward me and placing an
|
|
ornament upon me, said:
|
|
|
|
"My cousin has narrated the details of your wonderful
|
|
achievement, which seems little short of miraculous, and if
|
|
you can so well defend a cousin of the jeddak how much
|
|
better could you defend the person of the jeddak himself.
|
|
You are therefore appointed a padwar of The Guards and
|
|
will be quartered in my palace hereafter."
|
|
|
|
I thanked him, and at his direction joined the members
|
|
of his staff. After the ceremony I returned my machine to
|
|
its quarters on the roof of the barracks of the air-scout
|
|
squadron, and with an orderly from the palace to guide me
|
|
I reported to the officer in charge of the palace.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXII
|
|
|
|
|
|
I FIND DEJAH
|
|
|
|
|
|
The major-domo to whom I reported had been given instructions
|
|
to station me near the person of the jeddak, who, in time
|
|
of war, is always in great danger of assassination, as the
|
|
rule that all is fair in war seems to constitute the entire
|
|
ethics of Martian conflict.
|
|
|
|
He therefore escorted me immediately to the apartment
|
|
in which Than Kosis then was. The ruler was engaged in
|
|
conversation with his son, Sab Than, and several courtiers
|
|
of his household, and did not perceive my entrance.
|
|
|
|
The walls of the apartment were completely hung with
|
|
splendid tapestries which hid any windows or doors which
|
|
may have pierced them. The room was lighted by imprisoned
|
|
rays of sunshine held between the ceiling proper and what
|
|
appeared to be a ground-glass false ceiling a few inches
|
|
below.
|
|
|
|
My guide drew aside one of the tapestries, disclosing a
|
|
passage which encircled the room, between the hangings and
|
|
the walls of the chamber. Within this passage I was to
|
|
remain, he said, so long as Than Kosis was in the apartment.
|
|
When he left I was to follow. My only duty was to guard
|
|
the ruler and keep out of sight as much as possible. I
|
|
would be relieved after a period of four hours. The major-
|
|
domo then left me.
|
|
|
|
The tapestries were of a strange weaving which gave the
|
|
appearance of heavy solidity from one side, but from my hiding
|
|
place I could perceive all that took place within the room as
|
|
readily as though there had been no curtain intervening.
|
|
|
|
Scarcely had I gained my post than the tapestry at the
|
|
opposite end of the chamber separated and four soldiers of
|
|
The Guard entered, surrounding a female figure. As they
|
|
approached Than Kosis the soldiers fell to either side and
|
|
there standing before the jeddak and not ten feet from me,
|
|
her beautiful face radiant with smiles, was Dejah Thoris.
|
|
|
|
Sab Than, Prince of Zodanga, advanced to meet her, and
|
|
hand in hand they approached close to the jeddak. Than
|
|
Kosis looked up in surprise, and, rising, saluted her.
|
|
|
|
"To what strange freak do I owe this visit from the Princess
|
|
of Helium, who, two days ago, with rare consideration
|
|
for my pride, assured me that she would prefer Tal Hajus,
|
|
the green Thark, to my son?"
|
|
|
|
Dejah Thoris only smiled the more and with the roguish dimples
|
|
playing at the corners of her mouth she made answer:
|
|
|
|
"From the beginning of time upon Barsoom it has been
|
|
the prerogative of woman to change her mind as she listed
|
|
and to dissemble in matters concerning her heart. That you
|
|
will forgive, Than Kosis, as has your son. Two days ago I
|
|
was not sure of his love for me, but now I am, and I have
|
|
come to beg of you to forget my rash words and to accept
|
|
the assurance of the Princess of Helium that when the time
|
|
comes she will wed Sab Than, Prince of Zodanga."
|
|
|
|
"I am glad that you have so decided," replied Than Kosis.
|
|
"It is far from my desire to push war further against the
|
|
people of Helium, and, your promise shall be recorded and
|
|
a proclamation to my people issued forthwith."
|
|
|
|
"It were better, Than Kosis," interrupted Dejah Thoris,
|
|
"that the proclamation wait the ending of this war. It would
|
|
look strange indeed to my people and to yours were the
|
|
Princess of Helium to give herself to her country's enemy
|
|
in the midst of hostilities."
|
|
|
|
"Cannot the war be ended at once?" spoke Sab Than.
|
|
"It requires but the word of Than Kosis to bring peace.
|
|
Say it, my father, say the word that will hasten my
|
|
happiness, and end this unpopular strife."
|
|
|
|
"We shall see," replied Than Kosis, "how the people of
|
|
Helium take to peace. I shall at least offer it to them."
|
|
|
|
Dejah Thoris, after a few words, turned and left the
|
|
apartment, still followed by her guards.
|
|
|
|
Thus was the edifice of my brief dream of happiness
|
|
dashed, broken, to the ground of reality. The woman for
|
|
whom I had offered my life, and from whose lips I had so
|
|
recently heard a declaration of love for me, had lightly
|
|
forgotten my very existence and smilingly given herself to
|
|
the son of her people's most hated enemy.
|
|
|
|
Although I had heard it with my own ears I could not
|
|
believe it. I must search out her apartments and force her
|
|
to repeat the cruel truth to me alone before I would be
|
|
convinced, and so I deserted my post and hastened through
|
|
the passage behind the tapestries toward the door by which
|
|
she had left the chamber. Slipping quietly through this
|
|
opening I discovered a maze of winding corridors, branching
|
|
and turning in every direction.
|
|
|
|
Running rapidly down first one and then another of them
|
|
I soon became hopelessly lost and was standing panting
|
|
against a side wall when I heard voices near me. Apparently
|
|
they were coming from the opposite side of the partition
|
|
against which I leaned and presently I made out the tones
|
|
of Dejah Thoris. I could not hear the words but I knew
|
|
that I could not possibly be mistaken in the voice.
|
|
|
|
Moving on a few steps I discovered another passageway
|
|
at the end of which lay a door. Walking boldly forward I
|
|
pushed into the room only to find myself in a small ante-
|
|
chamber in which were the four guards who had accompanied
|
|
her. One of them instantly arose and accosted me, asking
|
|
the nature of my business.
|
|
|
|
"I am from Than Kosis," I replied, "and wish to speak
|
|
privately with Dejah Thoris, Princess of Helium."
|
|
|
|
"And your order?" asked the fellow.
|
|
|
|
I did not know what he meant, but replied that I was a
|
|
member of The Guard, and without waiting for a reply
|
|
from him I strode toward the opposite door of the ante-
|
|
chamber, behind which I could hear Dejah Thoris conversing.
|
|
|
|
But my entrance was not to be so easily accomplished.
|
|
The guardsman stepped before me, saying,
|
|
|
|
"No one comes from Than Kosis without carrying an
|
|
order or the password. You must give me one or the other
|
|
before you may pass."
|
|
|
|
"The only order I require, my friend, to enter where I
|
|
will, hangs at my side," I answered, tapping my long-sword;
|
|
"will you let me pass in peace or no?"
|
|
|
|
For reply he whipped out his own sword, calling to the
|
|
others to join him, and thus the four stood, with drawn
|
|
weapons, barring my further progress.
|
|
|
|
"You are not here by the order of Than Kosis," cried
|
|
the one who had first addressed me, "and not only shall
|
|
you not enter the apartments of the Princess of Helium but
|
|
you shall go back to Than Kosis under guard to explain
|
|
this unwarranted temerity. Throw down your sword; you
|
|
cannot hope to overcome four of us," he added with a grim
|
|
smile.
|
|
|
|
My reply was a quick thrust which left me but three
|
|
antagonists and I can assure you that they were worthy of
|
|
my metal. They had me backed against the wall in no time,
|
|
fighting for my life. Slowly I worked my way to a corner
|
|
of the room where I could force them to come at me only
|
|
one at a time, and thus we fought upward of twenty minutes;
|
|
the clanging of steel on steel producing a veritable bedlam
|
|
in the little room.
|
|
|
|
The noise had brought Dejah Thoris to the door of her
|
|
apartment, and there she stood throughout the conflict with
|
|
Sola at her back peering over her shoulder. Her face was
|
|
set and emotionless and I knew that she did not recognize
|
|
me, nor did Sola.
|
|
|
|
Finally a lucky cut brought down a second guardsman
|
|
and then, with only two opposing me, I changed my tactics
|
|
and rushed them down after the fashion of my fighting
|
|
that had won me many a victory. The third fell within ten
|
|
seconds after the second, and the last lay dead upon the
|
|
bloody floor a few moments later. They were brave men
|
|
and noble fighters, and it grieved me that I had been forced
|
|
to kill them, but I would have willingly depopulated all
|
|
Barsoom could I have reached the side of my Dejah Thoris
|
|
in no other way.
|
|
|
|
Sheathing my bloody blade I advanced toward my Martian
|
|
Princess, who still stood mutely gazing at me without
|
|
sign of recognition.
|
|
|
|
"Who are you, Zodangan?" she whispered. "Another enemy
|
|
to harass me in my misery?"
|
|
|
|
"I am a friend," I answered, "a once cherished friend."
|
|
|
|
"No friend of Helium's princess wears that metal," she replied,
|
|
"and yet the voice! I have heard it before; it is not--it
|
|
cannot be--no, for he is dead."
|
|
|
|
"It is, though, my Princess, none other than John Carter,"
|
|
I said. "Do you not recognize, even through paint and
|
|
strange metal, the heart of your chieftain?"
|
|
|
|
As I came close to her she swayed toward me with outstretched
|
|
hands, but as I reached to take her in my arms she drew back
|
|
with a shudder and a little moan of misery.
|
|
|
|
"Too late, too late," she grieved. "O my chieftain that was,
|
|
and whom I thought dead, had you but returned one little
|
|
hour before--but now it is too late, too late."
|
|
|
|
"What do you mean, Dejah Thoris?" I cried. "That you
|
|
would not have promised yourself to the Zodangan prince
|
|
had you known that I lived?"
|
|
|
|
"Think you, John Carter, that I would give my heart to you
|
|
yesterday and today to another? I thought that it lay buried
|
|
with your ashes in the pits of Warhoon, and so today I have
|
|
promised my body to another to save my people from the
|
|
curse of a victorious Zodangan army."
|
|
|
|
"But I am not dead, my princess. I have come to claim
|
|
you, and all Zodanga cannot prevent it."
|
|
|
|
"It is too late, John Carter, my promise is given, and on
|
|
Barsoom that is final. The ceremonies which follow later are
|
|
but meaningless formalities. They make the fact of marriage
|
|
no more certain than does the funeral cortege of a jeddak
|
|
again place the seal of death upon him. I am as good as
|
|
married, John Carter. No longer may you call me your
|
|
princess. No longer are you my chieftain."
|
|
|
|
"I know but little of your customs here upon Barsoom,
|
|
Dejah Thoris, but I do know that I love you, and if you
|
|
meant the last words you spoke to me that day as the hordes
|
|
of Warhoon were charging down upon us, no other man shall
|
|
ever claim you as his bride. You meant them then, my
|
|
princess, and you mean them still! Say that it is true."
|
|
|
|
"I meant them, John Carter," she whispered. "I cannot
|
|
repeat them now for I have given myself to another. Ah,
|
|
if you had only known our ways, my friend," she continued,
|
|
half to herself, "the promise would have been yours long
|
|
months ago, and you could have claimed me before all others.
|
|
It might have meant the fall of Helium, but I would have
|
|
given my empire for my Tharkian chief."
|
|
|
|
Then aloud she said: "Do you remember the night when
|
|
you offended me? You called me your princess without having
|
|
asked my hand of me, and then you boasted that you had
|
|
fought for me. You did not know, and I should not have
|
|
been offended; I see that now. But there was no one to tell
|
|
you what I could not, that upon Barsoom there are two
|
|
kinds of women in the cities of the red men. The one they
|
|
fight for that they may ask them in marriage; the other kind
|
|
they fight for also, but never ask their hands. When a man
|
|
has won a woman he may address her as his princess, or in
|
|
any of the several terms which signify possession. You had
|
|
fought for me, but had never asked me in marriage, and so
|
|
when you called me your princess, you see," she faltered,
|
|
"I was hurt, but even then, John Carter, I did not repulse you,
|
|
as I should have done, until you made it doubly worse by
|
|
taunting me with having won me through combat."
|
|
|
|
"I do not need ask your forgiveness now, Dejah Thoris,"
|
|
I cried. "You must know that my fault was of ignorance of
|
|
your Barsoomian customs. What I failed to do, through
|
|
implicit belief that my petition would be presumptuous and
|
|
unwelcome, I do now, Dejah Thoris; I ask you to be my wife,
|
|
and by all the Virginian fighting blood that flows in my
|
|
veins you shall be."
|
|
|
|
"No, John Carter, it is useless," she cried, hopelessly,
|
|
"I may never be yours while Sab Than lives."
|
|
|
|
"You have sealed his death warrant, my princess--Sab Than dies."
|
|
|
|
"Nor that either," she hastened to explain. "I may not
|
|
wed the man who slays my husband, even in self-defense.
|
|
It is custom. We are ruled by custom upon Barsoom. It is
|
|
useless, my friend. You must bear the sorrow with me. That
|
|
at least we may share in common. That, and the memory of
|
|
the brief days among the Tharks. You must go now, nor ever
|
|
see me again. Good-bye, my chieftain that was."
|
|
|
|
Disheartened and dejected, I withdrew from the room,
|
|
but I was not entirely discouraged, nor would I admit that
|
|
Dejah Thoris was lost to me until the ceremony had actually
|
|
been performed.
|
|
|
|
As I wandered along the corridors, I was as absolutely
|
|
lost in the mazes of winding passageways as I had been
|
|
before I discovered Dejah Thoris' apartments.
|
|
|
|
I knew that my only hope lay in escape from the city of
|
|
Zodanga, for the matter of the four dead guardsmen would
|
|
have to be explained, and as I could never reach my original
|
|
post without a guide, suspicion would surely rest on me so
|
|
soon as I was discovered wandering aimlessly through the
|
|
palace.
|
|
|
|
Presently I came upon a spiral runway leading to a lower
|
|
floor, and this I followed downward for several stories until
|
|
I reached the doorway of a large apartment in which were a
|
|
number of guardsmen. The walls of this room were hung with
|
|
transparent tapestries behind which I secreted myself without
|
|
being apprehended.
|
|
|
|
The conversation of the guardsmen was general, and
|
|
awakened no interest in me until an officer entered the room
|
|
and ordered four of the men to relieve the detail who were
|
|
guarding the Princess of Helium. Now, I knew, my troubles
|
|
would commence in earnest and indeed they were upon
|
|
me all too soon, for it seemed that the squad had scarcely
|
|
left the guardroom before one of their number burst in
|
|
again breathlessly, crying that they had found their four
|
|
comrades butchered in the antechamber.
|
|
|
|
In a moment the entire palace was alive with people.
|
|
Guardsmen, officers, courtiers, servants, and slaves ran
|
|
helter-skelter through the corridors and apartments carrying
|
|
messages and orders, and searching for signs of the assassin.
|
|
|
|
This was my opportunity and slim as it appeared I grasped it,
|
|
for as a number of soldiers came hurrying past my hiding place
|
|
I fell in behind them and followed through the mazes of the
|
|
palace until, in passing through a great hall, I saw the blessed
|
|
light of day coming in through a series of larger windows.
|
|
|
|
Here I left my guides, and, slipping to the nearest window,
|
|
sought for an avenue of escape. The windows opened
|
|
upon a great balcony which overlooked one of the broad
|
|
avenues of Zodanga. The ground was about thirty feet below,
|
|
and at a like distance from the building was a wall fully
|
|
twenty feet high, constructed of polished glass about a foot
|
|
in thickness. To a red Martian escape by this path would have
|
|
appeared impossible, but to me, with my earthly strength
|
|
and agility, it seemed already accomplished. My only fear
|
|
was in being detected before darkness fell, for I could not
|
|
make the leap in broad daylight while the court below and
|
|
the avenue beyond were crowded with Zodangans.
|
|
|
|
Accordingly I searched for a hiding place and finally found
|
|
one by accident, inside a huge hanging ornament which
|
|
swung from the ceiling of the hall, and about ten feet from
|
|
the floor. Into the capacious bowl-like vase I sprang with
|
|
ease, and scarcely had I settled down within it than I heard
|
|
a number of people enter the apartment. The group stopped
|
|
beneath my hiding place and I could plainly overhear their
|
|
every word.
|
|
|
|
"It is the work of Heliumites," said one of the men.
|
|
|
|
"Yes, O Jeddak, but how had they access to the palace? I
|
|
could believe that even with the diligent care of your
|
|
guardsmen a single enemy might reach the inner chambers,
|
|
but how a force of six or eight fighting men could have
|
|
done so unobserved is beyond me. We shall soon know, however,
|
|
for here comes the royal psychologist."
|
|
|
|
Another man now joined the group, and, after making his
|
|
formal greetings to his ruler, said:
|
|
|
|
"O mighty Jeddak, it is a strange tale I read in the dead
|
|
minds of your faithful guardsmen. They were felled not by a
|
|
number of fighting men, but by a single opponent."
|
|
|
|
He paused to let the full weight of this announcement
|
|
impress his hearers, and that his statement was scarcely
|
|
credited was evidenced by the impatient exclamation of
|
|
incredulity which escaped the lips of Than Kosis.
|
|
|
|
"What manner of weird tale are you bringing me, Notan?" he cried.
|
|
|
|
"It is the truth, my Jeddak," replied the psychologist.
|
|
"In fact the impressions were strongly marked on the brain
|
|
of each of the four guardsmen. Their antagonist was a very
|
|
tall man, wearing the metal of one of your own guardsmen,
|
|
and his fighting ability was little short of marvelous for he
|
|
fought fair against the entire four and vanquished them by
|
|
his surpassing skill and superhuman strength and endurance.
|
|
Though he wore the metal of Zodanga, my Jeddak, such a
|
|
man was never seen before in this or any other country upon
|
|
Barsoom.
|
|
|
|
"The mind of the Princess of Helium whom I have examined
|
|
and questioned was a blank to me, she has perfect
|
|
control, and I could not read one iota of it. She said that
|
|
she witnessed a portion of the encounter, and that when she
|
|
looked there was but one man engaged with the guardsmen;
|
|
a man whom she did not recognize as ever having seen."
|
|
|
|
"Where is my erstwhile savior?" spoke another of the
|
|
party, and I recognized the voice of the cousin of Than Kosis,
|
|
whom I had rescued from the green warriors. "By the metal
|
|
of my first ancestor," he went on, "but the description fits
|
|
him to perfection, especially as to his fighting ability."
|
|
|
|
"Where is this man?" cried Than Kosis. "Have him brought
|
|
to me at once. What know you of him, cousin? It seemed
|
|
strange to me now that I think upon it that there should
|
|
have been such a fighting man in Zodanga, of whose name,
|
|
even, we were ignorant before today. And his name too,
|
|
John Carter, who ever heard of such a name upon Barsoom!"
|
|
|
|
Word was soon brought that I was nowhere to be found,
|
|
either in the palace or at my former quarters in the
|
|
barracks of the air-scout squadron. Kantos Kan, they had
|
|
found and questioned, but he knew nothing of my whereabouts,
|
|
and as to my past, he had told them he knew as little, since he
|
|
had but recently met me during our captivity among the Warhoons.
|
|
|
|
"Keep your eyes on this other one," commanded Than Kosis.
|
|
"He also is a stranger and likely as not they both hail
|
|
from Helium, and where one is we shall sooner or later
|
|
find the other. Quadruple the air patrol, and let every man
|
|
who leaves the city by air or ground be subjected to the
|
|
closest scrutiny."
|
|
|
|
Another messenger now entered with word that I was still
|
|
within the palace walls.
|
|
|
|
"The likeness of every person who has entered or left the
|
|
palace grounds today has been carefully examined," concluded
|
|
the fellow, "and not one approaches the likeness of this new
|
|
padwar of the guards, other than that which was recorded of
|
|
him at the time he entered."
|
|
|
|
"Then we will have him shortly," commented Than Kosis
|
|
contentedly, "and in the meanwhile we will repair to the
|
|
apartments of the Princess of Helium and question her in
|
|
regard to the affair. She may know more than she cared to
|
|
divulge to you, Notan. Come."
|
|
|
|
They left the hall, and, as darkness had fallen without, I
|
|
slipped lightly from my hiding place and hastened to the
|
|
balcony. Few were in sight, and choosing a moment when
|
|
none seemed near I sprang quickly to the top of the glass
|
|
wall and from there to the avenue beyond the palace grounds.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXIII
|
|
|
|
|
|
LOST IN THE SKY
|
|
|
|
|
|
Without effort at concealment I hastened to the vicinity of
|
|
our quarters, where I felt sure I should find Kantos Kan. As
|
|
I neared the building I became more careful, as I judged,
|
|
and rightly, that the place would be guarded. Several men in
|
|
civilian metal loitered near the front entrance and in the
|
|
rear were others. My only means of reaching, unseen, the
|
|
upper story where our apartments were situated was through
|
|
an adjoining building, and after considerable maneuvering I
|
|
managed to attain the roof of a shop several doors away.
|
|
|
|
Leaping from roof to roof, I soon reached an open window
|
|
in the building where I hoped to find the Heliumite, and in
|
|
another moment I stood in the room before him. He was
|
|
alone and showed no surprise at my coming, saying he had
|
|
expected me much earlier, as my tour of duty must have
|
|
ended some time since.
|
|
|
|
I saw that he knew nothing of the events of the day at
|
|
the palace, and when I had enlightened him he was all
|
|
excitement. The news that Dejah Thoris had promised her
|
|
hand to Sab Than filled him with dismay.
|
|
|
|
"It cannot be," he exclaimed. "It is impossible! Why no
|
|
man in all Helium but would prefer death to the selling of
|
|
our loved princess to the ruling house of Zodanga. She must
|
|
have lost her mind to have assented to such an atrocious
|
|
bargain. You, who do not know how we of Helium love
|
|
the members of our ruling house, cannot appreciate the
|
|
horror with which I contemplate such an unholy alliance."
|
|
|
|
"What can be done, John Carter?" he continued. "You are
|
|
a resourceful man. Can you not think of some way to save
|
|
Helium from this disgrace?"
|
|
|
|
"If I can come within sword's reach of Sab Than," I answered,
|
|
"I can solve the difficulty in so far as Helium is concerned,
|
|
but for personal reasons I would prefer that another struck
|
|
the blow that frees Dejah Thoris."
|
|
|
|
Kantos Kan eyed me narrowly before he spoke.
|
|
|
|
"You love her!" he said. "Does she know it?"
|
|
|
|
"She knows it, Kantos Kan, and repulses me only because
|
|
she is promised to Sab Than."
|
|
|
|
The splendid fellow sprang to his feet, and grasping me
|
|
by the shoulder raised his sword on high, exclaiming:
|
|
|
|
"And had the choice been left to me I could not have
|
|
chosen a more fitting mate for the first princess of Barsoom.
|
|
Here is my hand upon your shoulder, John Carter, and my
|
|
word that Sab Than shall go out at the point of my sword
|
|
for the sake of my love for Helium, for Dejah Thoris, and for
|
|
you. This very night I shall try to reach his quarters in the
|
|
palace."
|
|
|
|
"How?" I asked. "You are strongly guarded and a quadruple
|
|
force patrols the sky."
|
|
|
|
He bent his head in thought a moment, then raised it
|
|
with an air of confidence.
|
|
|
|
"I only need to pass these guards and I can do it," he said
|
|
at last. "I know a secret entrance to the palace through
|
|
the pinnacle of the highest tower. I fell upon it by chance
|
|
one day as I was passing above the palace on patrol duty.
|
|
In this work it is required that we investigate any unusual
|
|
occurrence we may witness, and a face peering from the pinnacle
|
|
of the high tower of the palace was, to me, most unusual.
|
|
I therefore drew near and discovered that the possessor of
|
|
the peering face was none other than Sab Than. He was slightly
|
|
put out at being detected and commanded me to keep the
|
|
matter to myself, explaining that the passage from the tower
|
|
led directly to his apartments, and was known only to him.
|
|
If I can reach the roof of the barracks and get my machine
|
|
I can be in Sab Than's quarters in five minutes; but how am
|
|
I to escape from this building, guarded as you say it is?"
|
|
|
|
"How well are the machine sheds at the barracks guarded?" I asked.
|
|
|
|
"There is usually but one man on duty there at night upon
|
|
the roof."
|
|
|
|
"Go to the roof of this building, Kantos Kan, and wait
|
|
me there."
|
|
|
|
Without stopping to explain my plans I retraced my way to
|
|
the street and hastened to the barracks. I did not dare to enter
|
|
the building, filled as it was with members of the air-scout
|
|
squadron, who, in common with all Zodanga, were on the
|
|
lookout for me.
|
|
|
|
The building was an enormous one, rearing its lofty head
|
|
fully a thousand feet into the air. But few buildings in
|
|
Zodanga were higher than these barracks, though several topped
|
|
it by a few hundred feet; the docks of the great battleships
|
|
of the line standing some fifteen hundred feet from the
|
|
ground, while the freight and passenger stations of the
|
|
merchant squadrons rose nearly as high.
|
|
|
|
It was a long climb up the face of the building, and one
|
|
fraught with much danger, but there was no other way, and
|
|
so I essayed the task. The fact that Barsoomian architecture
|
|
is extremely ornate made the feat much simpler than I had
|
|
anticipated, since I found ornamental ledges and projections
|
|
which fairly formed a perfect ladder for me all the way to the
|
|
eaves of the building. Here I met my first real obstacle. The
|
|
eaves projected nearly twenty feet from the wall to which I
|
|
clung, and though I encircled the great building I could find
|
|
no opening through them.
|
|
|
|
The top floor was alight, and filled with soldiers engaged
|
|
in the pastimes of their kind; I could not, therefore, reach
|
|
the roof through the building.
|
|
|
|
There was one slight, desperate chance, and that I decided
|
|
I must take--it was for Dejah Thoris, and no man has lived
|
|
who would not risk a thousand deaths for such as she.
|
|
|
|
Clinging to the wall with my feet and one hand, I unloosened
|
|
one of the long leather straps of my trappings at the end
|
|
of which dangled a great hook by which air sailors are hung
|
|
to the sides and bottoms of their craft for various purposes
|
|
of repair, and by means of which landing parties are lowered
|
|
to the ground from the battleships.
|
|
|
|
I swung this hook cautiously to the roof several times
|
|
before it finally found lodgment; gently I pulled on it to
|
|
strengthen its hold, but whether it would bear the weight of
|
|
my body I did not know. It might be barely caught upon the
|
|
very outer verge of the roof, so that as my body swung out
|
|
at the end of the strap it would slip off and launch me to
|
|
the pavement a thousand feet below.
|
|
|
|
An instant I hesitated, and then, releasing my grasp upon
|
|
the supporting ornament, I swung out into space at the end
|
|
of the strap. Far below me lay the brilliantly lighted streets,
|
|
the hard pavements, and death. There was a little jerk at
|
|
the top of the supporting eaves, and a nasty slipping, grating
|
|
sound which turned me cold with apprehension; then the
|
|
hook caught and I was safe.
|
|
|
|
Clambering quickly aloft I grasped the edge of the eaves
|
|
and drew myself to the surface of the roof above. As I gained
|
|
my feet I was confronted by the sentry on duty, into the
|
|
muzzle of whose revolver I found myself looking.
|
|
|
|
"Who are you and whence came you?" he cried.
|
|
|
|
"I am an air scout, friend, and very near a dead one,
|
|
for just by the merest chance I escaped falling to the avenue
|
|
below," I replied.
|
|
|
|
"But how came you upon the roof, man? No one has
|
|
landed or come up from the building for the past hour.
|
|
Quick, explain yourself, or I call the guard."
|
|
|
|
"Look you here, sentry, and you shall see how I came and
|
|
how close a shave I had to not coming at all," I answered,
|
|
turning toward the edge of the roof, where, twenty feet
|
|
below, at the end of my strap, hung all my weapons.
|
|
|
|
The fellow, acting on impulse of curiosity, stepped to my
|
|
side and to his undoing, for as he leaned to peer over the
|
|
eaves I grasped him by his throat and his pistol arm and
|
|
threw him heavily to the roof. The weapon dropped from
|
|
his grasp, and my fingers choked off his attempted cry for
|
|
assistance. I gagged and bound him and then hung him
|
|
over the edge of the roof as I myself had hung a few
|
|
moments before. I knew it would be morning before he would
|
|
be discovered, and I needed all the time that I could gain.
|
|
|
|
Donning my trappings and weapons I hastened to the
|
|
sheds, and soon had out both my machine and Kantos Kan's.
|
|
Making his fast behind mine I started my engine, and skimming
|
|
over the edge of the roof I dove down into the streets of
|
|
the city far below the plane usually occupied by the air
|
|
patrol. In less than a minute I was settling safely upon
|
|
the roof of our apartment beside the astonished Kantos Kan.
|
|
|
|
I lost no time in explanation, but plunged immediately
|
|
into a discussion of our plans for the immediate future.
|
|
It was decided that I was to try to make Helium while Kantos
|
|
Kan was to enter the palace and dispatch Sab Than. If successful
|
|
he was then to follow me. He set my compass for me, a clever
|
|
little device which will remain steadfastly fixed upon any given
|
|
point on the surface of Barsoom, and bidding each other farewell
|
|
we rose together and sped in the direction of the palace which
|
|
lay in the route which I must take to reach Helium.
|
|
|
|
As we neared the high tower a patrol shot down from
|
|
above, throwing its piercing searchlight full upon my craft,
|
|
and a voice roared out a command to halt, following with a
|
|
shot as I paid no attention to his hail. Kantos Kan dropped
|
|
quickly into the darkness, while I rose steadily and at terrific
|
|
speed raced through the Martian sky followed by a dozen of
|
|
the air-scout craft which had joined the pursuit, and later
|
|
by a swift cruiser carrying a hundred men and a battery of
|
|
rapid-fire guns. By twisting and turning my little machine,
|
|
now rising and now falling, I managed to elude their search-
|
|
lights most of the time, but I was also losing ground by these
|
|
tactics, and so I decided to hazard everything on a straight-
|
|
away course and leave the result to fate and the speed of my
|
|
machine.
|
|
|
|
Kantos Kan had shown me a trick of gearing, which is known
|
|
only to the navy of Helium, that greatly increased the speed
|
|
of our machines, so that I felt sure I could distance
|
|
my pursuers if I could dodge their projectiles for a few moments.
|
|
|
|
As I sped through the air the screeching of the bullets
|
|
around me convinced me that only by a miracle could I escape,
|
|
but the die was cast, and throwing on full speed I raced
|
|
a straight course toward Helium. Gradually I left my
|
|
pursuers further and further behind, and I was just
|
|
congratulating myself on my lucky escape, when a well-directed
|
|
shot from the cruiser exploded at the prow of my little craft.
|
|
The concussion nearly capsized her, and with a sickening
|
|
plunge she hurtled downward through the dark night.
|
|
|
|
How far I fell before I regained control of the plane I do
|
|
not know, but I must have been very close to the ground
|
|
when I started to rise again, as I plainly heard the squealing
|
|
of animals below me. Rising again I scanned the heavens for
|
|
my pursuers, and finally making out their lights far behind me,
|
|
saw that they were landing, evidently in search of me.
|
|
|
|
Not until their lights were no longer discernible did I
|
|
venture to flash my little lamp upon my compass, and then
|
|
I found to my consternation that a fragment of the
|
|
projectile had utterly destroyed my only guide, as well as my
|
|
speedometer. It was true I could follow the stars in the
|
|
general direction of Helium, but without knowing the exact
|
|
location of the city or the speed at which I was traveling
|
|
my chances for finding it were slim.
|
|
|
|
Helium lies a thousand miles southwest of Zodanga, and
|
|
with my compass intact I should have made the trip, barring
|
|
accidents, in between four and five hours. As it turned
|
|
out, however, morning found me speeding over a vast expanse
|
|
of dead sea bottom after nearly six hours of continuous
|
|
flight at high speed. Presently a great city showed
|
|
below me, but it was not Helium, as that alone of all
|
|
Barsoomian metropolises consists in two immense circular
|
|
walled cities about seventy-five miles apart and would
|
|
have been easily distinguishable from the altitude at
|
|
which I was flying.
|
|
|
|
Believing that I had come too far to the north and west,
|
|
I turned back in a southeasterly direction, passing during
|
|
the forenoon several other large cities, but none resembling
|
|
the description which Kantos Kan had given me of Helium.
|
|
In addition to the twin-city formation of Helium, another
|
|
distinguishing feature is the two immense towers, one of
|
|
vivid scarlet rising nearly a mile into the air from the
|
|
center of one of the cities, while the other, of bright yellow
|
|
and of the same height, marks her sister.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXIV
|
|
|
|
|
|
TARS TARKAS FINDS A FRIEND
|
|
|
|
|
|
About noon I passed low over a great dead city of ancient
|
|
Mars, and as I skimmed out across the plain beyond I
|
|
came full upon several thousand green warriors engaged in
|
|
a terrific battle. Scarcely had I seen them than a volley of
|
|
shots was directed at me, and with the almost unfailing
|
|
accuracy of their aim my little craft was instantly a ruined
|
|
wreck, sinking erratically to the ground.
|
|
|
|
I fell almost directly in the center of the fierce combat,
|
|
among warriors who had not seen my approach so busily
|
|
were they engaged in life and death struggles. The men
|
|
were fighting on foot with long-swords, while an occasional
|
|
shot from a sharpshooter on the outskirts of the conflict
|
|
would bring down a warrior who might for an instant separate
|
|
himself from the entangled mass.
|
|
|
|
As my machine sank among them I realized that it was fight
|
|
or die, with good chances of dying in any event, and so I
|
|
struck the ground with drawn long-sword ready to defend
|
|
myself as I could.
|
|
|
|
I fell beside a huge monster who was engaged with three
|
|
antagonists, and as I glanced at his fierce face, filled with
|
|
the light of battle, I recognized Tars Tarkas the Thark. He
|
|
did not see me, as I was a trifle behind him, and just then
|
|
the three warriors opposing him, and whom I recognized
|
|
as Warhoons, charged simultaneously. The mighty fellow
|
|
made quick work of one of them, but in stepping back for
|
|
another thrust he fell over a dead body behind him and
|
|
was down and at the mercy of his foes in an instant. Quick
|
|
as lightning they were upon him, and Tars Tarkas would
|
|
have been gathered to his fathers in short order had I not
|
|
sprung before his prostrate form and engaged his adversaries.
|
|
I had accounted for one of them when the mighty Thark
|
|
regained his feet and quickly settled the other.
|
|
|
|
He gave me one look, and a slight smile touched his grim
|
|
lip as, touching my shoulder, he said,
|
|
|
|
"I would scarcely recognize you, John Carter, but there
|
|
is no other mortal upon Barsoom who would have done
|
|
what you have for me. I think I have learned that there is
|
|
such a thing as friendship, my friend."
|
|
|
|
He said no more, nor was there opportunity, for the
|
|
Warhoons were closing in about us, and together we fought,
|
|
shoulder to shoulder, during all that long, hot afternoon,
|
|
until the tide of battle turned and the remnant of the fierce
|
|
Warhoon horde fell back upon their thoats, and fled into
|
|
the gathering darkness.
|
|
|
|
Ten thousand men had been engaged in that titanic struggle,
|
|
and upon the field of battle lay three thousand dead.
|
|
Neither side asked or gave quarter, nor did they attempt
|
|
to take prisoners.
|
|
|
|
On our return to the city after the battle we had gone
|
|
directly to Tars Tarkas' quarters, where I was left alone
|
|
while the chieftain attended the customary council which
|
|
immediately follows an engagement.
|
|
|
|
As I sat awaiting the return of the green warrior I heard
|
|
something move in an adjoining apartment, and as I glanced
|
|
up there rushed suddenly upon me a huge and hideous
|
|
creature which bore me backward upon the pile of silks and
|
|
furs upon which I had been reclining. It was Woola--faithful,
|
|
loving Woola. He had found his way back to Thark and,
|
|
as Tars Tarkas later told me, had gone immediately to my
|
|
former quarters where he had taken up his pathetic and
|
|
seemingly hopeless watch for my return.
|
|
|
|
"Tal Hajus knows that you are here, John Carter," said
|
|
Tars Tarkas, on his return from the jeddak's quarters;
|
|
"Sarkoja saw and recognized you as we were returning. Tal
|
|
Hajus has ordered me to bring you before him tonight. I
|
|
have ten thoats, John Carter; you may take your choice
|
|
from among them, and I will accompany you to the nearest
|
|
waterway that leads to Helium. Tars Tarkas may be a cruel
|
|
green warrior, but he can be a friend as well. Come, we
|
|
must start."
|
|
|
|
"And when you return, Tars Tarkas?" I asked.
|
|
|
|
"The wild calots, possibly, or worse," he replied. "Unless
|
|
I should chance to have the opportunity I have so long
|
|
waited of battling with Tal Hajus."
|
|
|
|
"We will stay, Tars Tarkas, and see Tal Hajus tonight.
|
|
You shall not sacrifice yourself, and it may be that tonight
|
|
you can have the chance you wait."
|
|
|
|
He objected strenuously, saying that Tal Hajus often flew
|
|
into wild fits of passion at the mere thought of the blow I
|
|
had dealt him, and that if ever he laid his hands upon me
|
|
I would be subjected to the most horrible tortures.
|
|
|
|
While we were eating I repeated to Tars Tarkas the story
|
|
which Sola had told me that night upon the sea bottom
|
|
during the march to Thark.
|
|
|
|
He said but little, but the great muscles of his face
|
|
worked in passion and in agony at recollection of the
|
|
horrors which had been heaped upon the only thing he had
|
|
ever loved in all his cold, cruel, terrible existence.
|
|
|
|
He no longer demurred when I suggested that we go before
|
|
Tal Hajus, only saying that he would like to speak to
|
|
Sarkoja first. At his request I accompanied him to her
|
|
quarters, and the look of venomous hatred she cast upon
|
|
me was almost adequate recompense for any future misfortunes
|
|
this accidental return to Thark might bring me.
|
|
|
|
"Sarkoja," said Tars Tarkas, "forty years ago you were
|
|
instrumental in bringing about the torture and death of a
|
|
woman named Gozava. I have just discovered that the warrior
|
|
who loved that woman has learned of your part in the transaction.
|
|
He may not kill you, Sarkoja, it is not our custom, but there is
|
|
nothing to prevent him tying one end of a strap about your neck
|
|
and the other end to a wild thoat, merely to test your fitness
|
|
to survive and help perpetuate our race. Having heard that he
|
|
would do this on the morrow, I thought it only right to warn you,
|
|
for I am a just man. The river Iss is but a short pilgrimage,
|
|
Sarkoja. Come, John Carter."
|
|
|
|
The next morning Sarkoja was gone, nor was she ever seen after.
|
|
|
|
In silence we hastened to the jeddak's palace, where we were
|
|
immediately admitted to his presence; in fact, he could
|
|
scarcely wait to see me and was standing erect upon his
|
|
platform glowering at the entrance as I came in.
|
|
|
|
"Strap him to that pillar," he shrieked. "We shall see who
|
|
it is dares strike the mighty Tal Hajus. Heat the irons; with
|
|
my own hands I shall burn the eyes from his head that he
|
|
may not pollute my person with his vile gaze."
|
|
|
|
"Chieftains of Thark," I cried, turning to the assembled
|
|
council and ignoring Tal Hajus, "I have been a chief among
|
|
you, and today I have fought for Thark shoulder to shoulder
|
|
with her greatest warrior. You owe me, at least, a hearing.
|
|
I have won that much today. You claim to be just people--"
|
|
|
|
"Silence," roared Tal Hajus. "Gag the creature and bind
|
|
him as I command."
|
|
|
|
"Justice, Tal Hajus," exclaimed Lorquas Ptomel. "Who are
|
|
you to set aside the customs of ages among the Tharks."
|
|
|
|
"Yes, justice!" echoed a dozen voices, and so, while Tal
|
|
Hajus fumed and frothed, I continued.
|
|
|
|
"You are a brave people and you love bravery, but where
|
|
was your mighty jeddak during the fighting today? I did
|
|
not see him in the thick of battle; he was not there. He
|
|
rends defenseless women and little children in his lair, but
|
|
how recently has one of you seen him fight with men? Why,
|
|
even I, a midget beside him, felled him with a single blow
|
|
of my fist. Is it of such that the Tharks fashion their jeddaks?
|
|
There stands beside me now a great Thark, a mighty warrior
|
|
and a noble man. Chieftains, how sounds, Tars Tarkas,
|
|
Jeddak of Thark?"
|
|
|
|
A roar of deep-toned applause greeted this suggestion.
|
|
|
|
"It but remains for this council to command, and Tal Hajus
|
|
must prove his fitness to rule. Were he a brave man he would
|
|
invite Tars Tarkas to combat, for he does not love him,
|
|
but Tal Hajus is afraid; Tal Hajus, your jeddak, is a coward.
|
|
With my bare hands I could kill him, and he knows it."
|
|
|
|
After I ceased there was tense silence, as all eyes were
|
|
riveted upon Tal Hajus. He did not speak or move, but the
|
|
blotchy green of his countenance turned livid, and the froth
|
|
froze upon his lips.
|
|
|
|
"Tal Hajus," said Lorquas Ptomel in a cold, hard voice,
|
|
"never in my long life have I seen a jeddak of the Tharks
|
|
so humiliated. There could be but one answer to this arraignment.
|
|
We wait it." And still Tal Hajus stood as though electrified.
|
|
|
|
"Chieftains," continued Lorquas Ptomel, "shall the jeddak,
|
|
Tal Hajus, prove his fitness to rule over Tars Tarkas?"
|
|
|
|
There were twenty chieftains about the rostrum, and
|
|
twenty swords flashed high in assent.
|
|
|
|
There was no alternative. That decree was final, and so
|
|
Tal Hajus drew his long-sword and advanced to meet Tars Tarkas.
|
|
|
|
The combat was soon over, and, with his foot upon the neck of
|
|
the dead monster, Tars Tarkas became jeddak among the Tharks.
|
|
|
|
His first act was to make me a full-fledged chieftain with
|
|
the rank I had won by my combats the first few weeks
|
|
of my captivity among them.
|
|
|
|
Seeing the favorable disposition of the warriors toward
|
|
Tars Tarkas, as well as toward me, I grasped the opportunity
|
|
to enlist them in my cause against Zodanga. I told Tars Tarkas
|
|
the story of my adventures, and in a few words had explained
|
|
to him the thought I had in mind.
|
|
|
|
"John Carter has made a proposal," he said, addressing
|
|
the council, "which meets with my sanction. I shall put it
|
|
to you briefly. Dejah Thoris, the Princess of Helium, who
|
|
was our prisoner, is now held by the jeddak of Zodanga,
|
|
whose son she must wed to save her country from devastation
|
|
at the hands of the Zodangan forces.
|
|
|
|
"John Carter suggests that we rescue her and return her
|
|
to Helium. The loot of Zodanga would be magnificent, and
|
|
I have often thought that had we an alliance with the people
|
|
of Helium we could obtain sufficient assurance of sustenance
|
|
to permit us to increase the size and frequency of our hatchings,
|
|
and thus become unquestionably supreme among the green men of
|
|
all Barsoom. What say you?"
|
|
|
|
It was a chance to fight, an opportunity to loot, and they
|
|
rose to the bait as a speckled trout to a fly.
|
|
|
|
For Tharks they were wildly enthusiastic, and before another half
|
|
hour had passed twenty mounted messengers were speeding across
|
|
dead sea bottoms to call the hordes together for the expedition.
|
|
|
|
In three days we were on the march toward Zodanga,
|
|
one hundred thousand strong, as Tars Tarkas had been able
|
|
to enlist the services of three smaller hordes on the promise
|
|
of the great loot of Zodanga.
|
|
|
|
At the head of the column I rode beside the great Thark
|
|
while at the heels of my mount trotted my beloved Woola.
|
|
|
|
We traveled entirely by night, timing our marches so that
|
|
we camped during the day at deserted cities where, even
|
|
to the beasts, we were all kept indoors during the daylight
|
|
hours. On the march Tars Tarkas, through his remarkable
|
|
ability and statesmanship, enlisted fifty thousand more warriors
|
|
from various hordes, so that, ten days after we set out we halted
|
|
at midnight outside the great walled city of Zodanga, one hundred
|
|
and fifty thousand strong.
|
|
|
|
The fighting strength and efficiency of this horde of
|
|
ferocious green monsters was equivalent to ten times
|
|
their number of red men. Never in the history of Barsoom,
|
|
Tars Tarkas told me, had such a force of green warriors marched
|
|
to battle together. It was a monstrous task to keep even a
|
|
semblance of harmony among them, and it was a marvel to
|
|
me that he got them to the city without a mighty battle
|
|
among themselves.
|
|
|
|
But as we neared Zodanga their personal quarrels were
|
|
submerged by their greater hatred for the red men, and
|
|
especially for the Zodangans, who had for years waged a
|
|
ruthless campaign of extermination against the green men,
|
|
directing special attention toward despoiling their incubators.
|
|
|
|
Now that we were before Zodanga the task of obtaining
|
|
entry to the city devolved upon me, and directing Tars
|
|
Tarkas to hold his forces in two divisions out of earshot
|
|
of the city, with each division opposite a large gateway, I
|
|
took twenty dismounted warriors and approached one of
|
|
the small gates that pierced the walls at short intervals.
|
|
These gates have no regular guard, but are covered by
|
|
sentries, who patrol the avenue that encircles the city just
|
|
within the walls as our metropolitan police patrol their
|
|
beats.
|
|
|
|
The walls of Zodanga are seventy-five feet in height and
|
|
fifty feet thick. They are built of enormous blocks of
|
|
carborundum, and the task of entering the city seemed,
|
|
to my escort of green warriors, an impossibility.
|
|
The fellows who had been detailed to accompany me were
|
|
of one of the smaller hordes, and therefore did not know me.
|
|
|
|
Placing three of them with their faces to the wall and arms locked,
|
|
I commanded two more to mount to their shoulders, and a sixth I
|
|
ordered to climb upon the shoulders of the upper two. The head
|
|
of the topmost warrior towered over forty feet from the ground.
|
|
|
|
In this way, with ten warriors, I built a series of three
|
|
steps from the ground to the shoulders of the topmost man.
|
|
Then starting from a short distance behind them I ran
|
|
swiftly up from one tier to the next, and with a final bound
|
|
from the broad shoulders of the highest I clutched the top
|
|
of the great wall and quietly drew myself to its broad expanse.
|
|
After me I dragged six lengths of leather from an equal number
|
|
of my warriors. These lengths we had previously fastened together,
|
|
and passing one end to the topmost warrior I lowered the other end
|
|
cautiously over the opposite side of the wall toward the avenue below.
|
|
No one was in sight, so, lowering myself to the end of my leather strap,
|
|
I dropped the remaining thirty feet to the pavement below.
|
|
|
|
I had learned from Kantos Kan the secret of opening
|
|
these gates, and in another moment my twenty great fighting
|
|
men stood within the doomed city of Zodanga.
|
|
|
|
I found to my delight that I had entered at the lower
|
|
boundary of the enormous palace grounds. The building
|
|
itself showed in the distance a blaze of glorious light, and
|
|
on the instant I determined to lead a detachment of warriors
|
|
directly within the palace itself, while the balance of
|
|
the great horde was attacking the barracks of the soldiery.
|
|
|
|
Dispatching one of my men to Tars Tarkas for a detail
|
|
of fifty Tharks, with word of my intentions, I ordered ten
|
|
warriors to capture and open one of the great gates while
|
|
with the nine remaining I took the other. We were to do
|
|
our work quietly, no shots were to be fired and no general
|
|
advance made until I had reached the palace with my fifty
|
|
Tharks. Our plans worked to perfection. The two sentries
|
|
we met were dispatched to their fathers upon the banks of
|
|
the lost sea of Korus, and the guards at both gates followed
|
|
them in silence.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXV
|
|
|
|
|
|
THE LOOTING OF ZODANGA
|
|
|
|
|
|
As the great gate where I stood swung open my fifty Tharks,
|
|
headed by Tars Tarkas himself, rode in upon their mighty
|
|
thoats. I led them to the palace walls, which I negotiated
|
|
easily without assistance. Once inside, however, the gate
|
|
gave me considerable trouble, but I finally was rewarded
|
|
by seeing it swing upon its huge hinges, and soon my fierce
|
|
escort was riding across the gardens of the jeddak of Zodanga.
|
|
|
|
As we approached the palace I could see through the
|
|
great windows of the first floor into the brilliantly
|
|
illuminated audience chamber of Than Kosis. The immense hall
|
|
was crowded with nobles and their women, as though some
|
|
important function was in progress. There was not a guard
|
|
in sight without the palace, due, I presume, to the fact
|
|
that the city and palace walls were considered impregnable,
|
|
and so I came close and peered within.
|
|
|
|
At one end of the chamber, upon massive golden thrones
|
|
encrusted with diamonds, sat Than Kosis and his consort,
|
|
surrounded by officers and dignitaries of state. Before them
|
|
stretched a broad aisle lined on either side with soldiery,
|
|
and as I looked there entered this aisle at the far end of
|
|
the hall, the head of a procession which advanced to the
|
|
foot of the throne.
|
|
|
|
First there marched four officers of the jeddak's Guard
|
|
bearing a huge salver on which reposed, upon a cushion
|
|
of scarlet silk, a great golden chain with a collar and
|
|
padlock at each end. Directly behind these officers came
|
|
four others carrying a similar salver which supported the
|
|
magnificent ornaments of a prince and princess of the
|
|
reigning house of Zodanga.
|
|
|
|
At the foot of the throne these two parties separated
|
|
and halted, facing each other at opposite sides of the aisle.
|
|
Then came more dignitaries, and the officers of the palace
|
|
and of the army, and finally two figures entirely muffled in
|
|
scarlet silk, so that not a feature of either was discernible.
|
|
These two stopped at the foot of the throne, facing Than
|
|
Kosis. When the balance of the procession had entered and
|
|
assumed their stations Than Kosis addressed the couple
|
|
standing before him. I could not hear his words, but
|
|
presently two officers advanced and removed the scarlet robe
|
|
from one of the figures, and I saw that Kantos Kan had
|
|
failed in his mission, for it was Sab Than, Prince of Zodanga,
|
|
who stood revealed before me.
|
|
|
|
Than Kosis now took a set of the ornaments from one
|
|
of the salvers and placed one of the collars of gold about
|
|
his son's neck, springing the padlock fast. After a few more
|
|
words addressed to Sab Than he turned to the other figure,
|
|
from which the officers now removed the enshrouding silks,
|
|
disclosing to my now comprehending view Dejah Thoris,
|
|
Princess of Helium.
|
|
|
|
The object of the ceremony was clear to me; in another
|
|
moment Dejah Thoris would be joined forever to the Prince
|
|
of Zodanga. It was an impressive and beautiful ceremony,
|
|
I presume, but to me it seemed the most fiendish sight I
|
|
had ever witnessed, and as the ornaments were adjusted upon
|
|
her beautiful figure and her collar of gold swung open in
|
|
the hands of Than Kosis I raised my long-sword above my
|
|
head, and, with the heavy hilt, I shattered the glass of the
|
|
great window and sprang into the midst of the astonished
|
|
assemblage. With a bound I was on the steps of the platform
|
|
beside Than Kosis, and as he stood riveted with surprise
|
|
I brought my long-sword down upon the golden chain
|
|
that would have bound Dejah Thoris to another.
|
|
|
|
In an instant all was confusion; a thousand drawn swords
|
|
menaced me from every quarter, and Sab Than sprang upon
|
|
me with a jeweled dagger he had drawn from his nuptial
|
|
ornaments. I could have killed him as easily as I might a
|
|
fly, but the age-old custom of Barsoom stayed my hand,
|
|
and grasping his wrist as the dagger flew toward my heart
|
|
I held him as though in a vise and with my long-sword
|
|
pointed to the far end of the hall.
|
|
|
|
"Zodanga has fallen," I cried. "Look!"
|
|
|
|
All eyes turned in the direction I had indicated, and
|
|
there, forging through the portals of the entranceway rode
|
|
Tars Tarkas and his fifty warriors on their great thoats.
|
|
|
|
A cry of alarm and amazement broke from the assemblage,
|
|
but no word of fear, and in a moment the soldiers and nobles
|
|
of Zodanga were hurling themselves upon the advancing Tharks.
|
|
|
|
Thrusting Sab Than headlong from the platform, I drew
|
|
Dejah Thoris to my side. Behind the throne was a narrow
|
|
doorway and in this Than Kosis now stood facing me, with
|
|
drawn long-sword. In an instant we were engaged, and I
|
|
found no mean antagonist.
|
|
|
|
As we circled upon the broad platform I saw Sab Than
|
|
rushing up the steps to aid his father, but, as he raised his
|
|
hand to strike, Dejah Thoris sprang before him and then
|
|
my sword found the spot that made Sab Than jeddak of
|
|
Zodanga. As his father rolled dead upon the floor the new
|
|
jeddak tore himself free from Dejah Thoris' grasp, and again
|
|
we faced each other. He was soon joined by a quartet of
|
|
officers, and, with my back against a golden throne, I fought
|
|
once again for Dejah Thoris. I was hard pressed to defend
|
|
myself and yet not strike down Sab Than and, with him,
|
|
my last chance to win the woman I loved. My blade was
|
|
swinging with the rapidity of lightning as I sought to parry
|
|
the thrusts and cuts of my opponents. Two I had disarmed,
|
|
and one was down, when several more rushed to the aid of
|
|
their new ruler, and to avenge the death of the old.
|
|
|
|
As they advanced there were cries of "The woman!
|
|
The woman! Strike her down; it is her plot. Kill her! Kill
|
|
her!"
|
|
|
|
Calling to Dejah Thoris to get behind me I worked my
|
|
way toward the little doorway back of the throne, but the
|
|
officers realized my intentions, and three of them sprang in
|
|
behind me and blocked my chances for gaining a position
|
|
where I could have defended Dejah Thoris against any army
|
|
of swordsmen.
|
|
|
|
The Tharks were having their hands full in the center of
|
|
the room, and I began to realize that nothing short of a
|
|
miracle could save Dejah Thoris and myself, when I saw
|
|
Tars Tarkas surging through the crowd of pygmies that
|
|
swarmed about him. With one swing of his mighty longsword
|
|
he laid a dozen corpses at his feet, and so he hewed a pathway
|
|
before him until in another moment he stood upon the platform
|
|
beside me, dealing death and destruction right and left.
|
|
|
|
The bravery of the Zodangans was awe-inspiring, not one
|
|
attempted to escape, and when the fighting ceased it was
|
|
because only Tharks remained alive in the great hall, other
|
|
than Dejah Thoris and myself.
|
|
|
|
Sab Than lay dead beside his father, and the corpses of
|
|
the flower of Zodangan nobility and chivalry covered the
|
|
floor of the bloody shambles.
|
|
|
|
My first thought when the battle was over was for Kantos
|
|
Kan, and leaving Dejah Thoris in charge of Tars Tarkas I took
|
|
a dozen warriors and hastened to the dungeons beneath the
|
|
palace. The jailers had all left to join the fighters in the
|
|
throne room, so we searched the labyrinthine prison without
|
|
opposition.
|
|
|
|
I called Kantos Kan's name aloud in each new corridor
|
|
and compartment, and finally I was rewarded by hearing a
|
|
faint response. Guided by the sound, we soon found him
|
|
helpless in a dark recess.
|
|
|
|
He was overjoyed at seeing me, and to know the meaning
|
|
of the fight, faint echoes of which had reached his prison
|
|
cell. He told me that the air patrol had captured him before
|
|
he reached the high tower of the palace, so that he had not
|
|
even seen Sab Than.
|
|
|
|
We discovered that it would be futile to attempt to cut
|
|
away the bars and chains which held him prisoner, so, at his
|
|
suggestion I returned to search the bodies on the floor above
|
|
for keys to open the padlocks of his cell and of his chains.
|
|
|
|
Fortunately among the first I examined I found his jailer,
|
|
and soon we had Kantos Kan with us in the throne room.
|
|
|
|
The sounds of heavy firing, mingled with shouts and
|
|
cries, came to us from the city's streets, and Tars Tarkas
|
|
hastened away to direct the fighting without. Kantos Kan
|
|
accompanied him to act as guide, the green warriors commencing
|
|
a thorough search of the palace for other Zodangans and for loot,
|
|
and Dejah Thoris and I were left alone.
|
|
|
|
She had sunk into one of the golden thrones, and as I
|
|
turned to her she greeted me with a wan smile.
|
|
|
|
"Was there ever such a man!" she exclaimed. "I know that
|
|
Barsoom has never before seen your like. Can it be that all
|
|
Earth men are as you? Alone, a stranger, hunted, threatened,
|
|
persecuted, you have done in a few short months what in
|
|
all the past ages of Barsoom no man has ever done: joined
|
|
together the wild hordes of the sea bottoms and brought them
|
|
to fight as allies of a red Martian people."
|
|
|
|
"The answer is easy, Dejah Thoris," I replied smiling. "It
|
|
was not I who did it, it was love, love for Dejah Thoris, a
|
|
power that would work greater miracles than this you have seen."
|
|
|
|
A pretty flush overspread her face and she answered,
|
|
|
|
"You may say that now, John Carter, and I may listen, for I am free."
|
|
|
|
"And more still I have to say, ere it is again too late,"
|
|
I returned. "I have done many strange things in my life, many
|
|
things that wiser men would not have dared, but never in my
|
|
wildest fancies have I dreamed of winning a Dejah Thoris
|
|
for myself--for never had I dreamed that in all the universe
|
|
dwelt such a woman as the Princess of Helium. That you
|
|
are a princess does not abash me, but that you are you is
|
|
enough to make me doubt my sanity as I ask you, my princess,
|
|
to be mine."
|
|
|
|
"He does not need to be abashed who so well knew the
|
|
answer to his plea before the plea were made," she replied,
|
|
rising and placing her dear hands upon my shoulders, and so
|
|
I took her in my arms and kissed her.
|
|
|
|
And thus in the midst of a city of wild conflict, filled
|
|
with the alarms of war; with death and destruction reaping
|
|
their terrible harvest around her, did Dejah Thoris, Princess
|
|
of Helium, true daughter of Mars, the God of War, promise
|
|
herself in marriage to John Carter, Gentleman of Virginia.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXVI
|
|
|
|
|
|
THROUGH CARNAGE TO JOY
|
|
|
|
|
|
Sometime later Tars Tarkas and Kantos Kan returned to
|
|
report that Zodanga had been completely reduced. Her forces
|
|
were entirely destroyed or captured, and no further resistance
|
|
was to be expected from within. Several battleships had escaped,
|
|
but there were thousands of war and merchant vessels under guard
|
|
of Thark warriors.
|
|
|
|
The lesser hordes had commenced looting and quarreling
|
|
among themselves, so it was decided that we collect what
|
|
warriors we could, man as many vessels as possible with
|
|
Zodangan prisoners and make for Helium without further
|
|
loss of time.
|
|
|
|
Five hours later we sailed from the roofs of the dock
|
|
buildings with a fleet of two hundred and fifty battleships,
|
|
carrying nearly one hundred thousand green warriors, followed
|
|
by a fleet of transports with our thoats.
|
|
|
|
Behind us we left the stricken city in the fierce and brutal
|
|
clutches of some forty thousand green warriors of the lesser
|
|
hordes. They were looting, murdering, and fighting amongst
|
|
themselves. In a hundred places they had applied the torch,
|
|
and columns of dense smoke were rising above the city as
|
|
though to blot out from the eye of heaven the horrid sights
|
|
beneath.
|
|
|
|
In the middle of the afternoon we sighted the scarlet and
|
|
yellow towers of Helium, and a short time later a great fleet
|
|
of Zodangan battleships rose from the camps of the besiegers
|
|
without the city, and advanced to meet us.
|
|
|
|
The banners of Helium had been strung from stem to
|
|
stern of each of our mighty craft, but the Zodangans did
|
|
not need this sign to realize that we were enemies, for our
|
|
green Martian warriors had opened fire upon them almost
|
|
as they left the ground. With their uncanny marksmanship
|
|
they raked the on-coming fleet with volley after volley.
|
|
|
|
The twin cities of Helium, perceiving that we were friends,
|
|
sent out hundreds of vessels to aid us, and then began the
|
|
first real air battle I had ever witnessed.
|
|
|
|
The vessels carrying our green warriors were kept circling
|
|
above the contending fleets of Helium and Zodanga, since
|
|
their batteries were useless in the hands of the Tharks who,
|
|
having no navy, have no skill in naval gunnery. Their small-
|
|
arm fire, however, was most effective, and the final outcome
|
|
of the engagement was strongly influenced, if not wholly
|
|
determined, by their presence.
|
|
|
|
At first the two forces circled at the same altitude, pouring
|
|
broadside after broadside into each other. Presently a great
|
|
hole was torn in the hull of one of the immense battle craft
|
|
from the Zodangan camp; with a lurch she turned completely
|
|
over, the little figures of her crew plunging, turning
|
|
and twisting toward the ground a thousand feet below; then
|
|
with sickening velocity she tore after them, almost completely
|
|
burying herself in the soft loam of the ancient sea bottom.
|
|
|
|
A wild cry of exultation arose from the Heliumite squadron,
|
|
and with redoubled ferocity they fell upon the Zodangan
|
|
fleet. By a pretty maneuver two of the vessels of Helium
|
|
gained a position above their adversaries, from which they
|
|
poured upon them from their keel bomb batteries a perfect
|
|
torrent of exploding bombs.
|
|
|
|
Then, one by one, the battleships of Helium succeeded in
|
|
rising above the Zodangans, and in a short time a number
|
|
of the beleaguering battleships were drifting hopeless wrecks
|
|
toward the high scarlet tower of greater Helium. Several
|
|
others attempted to escape, but they were soon surrounded
|
|
by thousands of tiny individual fliers, and above each hung
|
|
a monster battleship of Helium ready to drop boarding parties
|
|
upon their decks.
|
|
|
|
Within but little more than an hour from the moment the
|
|
victorious Zodangan squadron had risen to meet us from
|
|
the camp of the besiegers the battle was over, and the
|
|
remaining vessels of the conquered Zodangans were headed
|
|
toward the cities of Helium under prize crews.
|
|
|
|
There was an extremely pathetic side to the surrender
|
|
of these mighty fliers, the result of an age-old custom which
|
|
demanded that surrender should be signalized by the voluntary
|
|
plunging to earth of the commander of the vanquished vessel.
|
|
One after another the brave fellows, holding their colors
|
|
high above their heads, leaped from the towering bows of
|
|
their mighty craft to an awful death.
|
|
|
|
Not until the commander of the entire fleet took the fearful
|
|
plunge, thus indicating the surrender of the remaining vessels,
|
|
did the fighting cease, and the useless sacrifice of brave men
|
|
come to an end.
|
|
|
|
We now signaled the flagship of Helium's navy to approach,
|
|
and when she was within hailing distance I called out that
|
|
we had the Princess Dejah Thoris on board, and that we
|
|
wished to transfer her to the flagship that she might be
|
|
taken immediately to the city.
|
|
|
|
As the full import of my announcement bore in upon
|
|
them a great cry arose from the decks of the flagship, and
|
|
a moment later the colors of the Princess of Helium broke
|
|
from a hundred points upon her upper works. When the
|
|
other vessels of the squadron caught the meaning of the
|
|
signals flashed them they took up the wild acclaim and
|
|
unfurled her colors in the gleaming sunlight.
|
|
|
|
The flagship bore down upon us, and as she swung gracefully
|
|
to and touched our side a dozen officers sprang upon
|
|
our decks. As their astonished gaze fell upon the hundreds
|
|
of green warriors, who now came forth from the fighting
|
|
shelters, they stopped aghast, but at sight of Kantos Kan,
|
|
who advanced to meet them, they came forward, crowding
|
|
about him.
|
|
|
|
Dejah Thoris and I then advanced, and they had no eyes
|
|
for other than her. She received them gracefully, calling
|
|
each by name, for they were men high in the esteem and
|
|
service of her grandfather, and she knew them well.
|
|
|
|
"Lay your hands upon the shoulder of John Carter," she
|
|
said to them, turning toward me, "the man to whom Helium
|
|
owes her princess as well as her victory today."
|
|
|
|
They were very courteous to me and said many kind and
|
|
complimentary things, but what seemed to impress them
|
|
most was that I had won the aid of the fierce Tharks in my
|
|
campaign for the liberation of Dejah Thoris, and the relief
|
|
of Helium.
|
|
|
|
"You owe your thanks more to another man than to me,"
|
|
I said, "and here he is; meet one of Barsoom's greatest
|
|
soldiers and statesmen, Tars Tarkas, Jeddak of Thark."
|
|
|
|
With the same polished courtesy that had marked their
|
|
manner toward me they extended their greetings to the great
|
|
Thark, nor, to my surprise, was he much behind them in
|
|
ease of bearing or in courtly speech. Though not a garrulous
|
|
race, the Tharks are extremely formal, and their ways lend
|
|
themselves amazingly well to dignified and courtly manners.
|
|
|
|
Dejah Thoris went aboard the flagship, and was much put
|
|
out that I would not follow, but, as I explained to her, the
|
|
battle was but partly won; we still had the land forces of
|
|
the besieging Zodangans to account for, and I would not leave
|
|
Tars Tarkas until that had been accomplished.
|
|
|
|
The commander of the naval forces of Helium promised
|
|
to arrange to have the armies of Helium attack from the
|
|
city in conjunction with our land attack, and so the vessels
|
|
separated and Dejah Thoris was borne in triumph back to
|
|
the court of her grandfather, Tardos Mors, Jeddak of Helium.
|
|
|
|
In the distance lay our fleet of transports, with the thoats
|
|
of the green warriors, where they had remained during the
|
|
battle. Without landing stages it was to be a difficult matter
|
|
to unload these beasts upon the open plain, but there was
|
|
nothing else for it, and so we put out for a point about ten
|
|
miles from the city and began the task.
|
|
|
|
It was necessary to lower the animals to the ground in
|
|
slings and this work occupied the remainder of the day and
|
|
half the night. Twice we were attacked by parties of Zodangan
|
|
cavalry, but with little loss, however, and after darkness shut
|
|
down they withdrew.
|
|
|
|
As soon as the last thoat was unloaded Tars Tarkas gave
|
|
the command to advance, and in three parties we crept upon
|
|
the Zodangan camp from the north, the south and the east.
|
|
|
|
About a mile from the main camp we encountered their
|
|
outposts and, as had been prearranged, accepted this as the
|
|
signal to charge. With wild, ferocious cries and amidst the
|
|
nasty squealing of battle-enraged thoats we bore down upon
|
|
the Zodangans.
|
|
|
|
We did not catch them napping, but found a well-entrenched
|
|
battle line confronting us. Time after time we were repulsed until,
|
|
toward noon, I began to fear for the result of the battle.
|
|
|
|
The Zodangans numbered nearly a million fighting men,
|
|
gathered from pole to pole, wherever stretched their ribbon-
|
|
like waterways, while pitted against them were less than a
|
|
hundred thousand green warriors. The forces from Helium
|
|
had not arrived, nor could we receive any word from them.
|
|
|
|
Just at noon we heard heavy firing all along the line between
|
|
the Zodangans and the cities, and we knew then that
|
|
our much-needed reinforcements had come.
|
|
|
|
Again Tars Tarkas ordered the charge, and once more the
|
|
mighty thoats bore their terrible riders against the ramparts
|
|
of the enemy. At the same moment the battle line of Helium
|
|
surged over the opposite breastworks of the Zodangans and in
|
|
another moment they were being crushed as between two
|
|
millstones. Nobly they fought, but in vain.
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|
|
|
The plain before the city became a veritable shambles ere
|
|
the last Zodangan surrendered, but finally the carnage ceased,
|
|
the prisoners were marched back to Helium, and we entered
|
|
the greater city's gates, a huge triumphal procession of
|
|
conquering heroes.
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|
|
The broad avenues were lined with women and children,
|
|
among which were the few men whose duties necessitated
|
|
that they remain within the city during the battle. We were
|
|
greeted with an endless round of applause and showered with
|
|
ornaments of gold, platinum, silver, and precious jewels.
|
|
The city had gone mad with joy.
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|
|
|
My fierce Tharks caused the wildest excitement and enthusiasm.
|
|
Never before had an armed body of green warriors entered the
|
|
gates of Helium, and that they came now as friends and allies
|
|
filled the red men with rejoicing.
|
|
|
|
That my poor services to Dejah Thoris had become known
|
|
to the Heliumites was evidenced by the loud crying of my
|
|
name, and by the loads of ornaments that were fastened upon
|
|
me and my huge thoat as we passed up the avenues to the
|
|
palace, for even in the face of the ferocious appearance of
|
|
Woola the populace pressed close about me.
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|
|
|
As we approached this magnificent pile we were met by a
|
|
party of officers who greeted us warmly and requested that
|
|
Tars Tarkas and his jeds with the jeddaks and jeds of his
|
|
wild allies, together with myself, dismount and accompany
|
|
them to receive from Tardos Mors an expression of his
|
|
gratitude for our services.
|
|
|
|
At the top of the great steps leading up to the main
|
|
portals of the palace stood the royal party, and as we reached
|
|
the lower steps one of their number descended to meet us.
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|
|
|
He was an almost perfect specimen of manhood; tall, straight
|
|
as an arrow, superbly muscled and with the carriage and
|
|
bearing of a ruler of men. I did not need to be told that he
|
|
was Tardos Mors, Jeddak of Helium.
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|
|
|
The first member of our party he met was Tars Tarkas
|
|
and his first words sealed forever the new friendship
|
|
between the races.
|
|
|
|
"That Tardos Mors," he said, earnestly, "may meet the
|
|
greatest living warrior of Barsoom is a priceless honor, but
|
|
that he may lay his hand on the shoulder of a friend and
|
|
ally is a far greater boon."
|
|
|
|
"Jeddak of Helium," returned Tars Tarkas, "it has remained
|
|
for a man of another world to teach the green warriors of
|
|
Barsoom the meaning of friendship; to him we owe the fact that
|
|
the hordes of Thark can understand you; that they can appreciate
|
|
and reciprocate the sentiments so graciously expressed."
|
|
|
|
Tardos Mors then greeted each of the green jeddaks and jeds,
|
|
and to each spoke words of friendship and appreciation
|
|
|
|
As he approached me he laid both hands upon my shoulders.
|
|
|
|
"Welcome, my son," he said; "that you are granted, gladly,
|
|
and without one word of opposition, the most precious
|
|
jewel in all Helium, yes, on all Barsoom, is sufficient
|
|
earnest of my esteem."
|
|
|
|
We were then presented to Mors Kajak, Jed of lesser Helium,
|
|
and father of Dejah Thoris. He had followed close behind
|
|
Tardos Mors and seemed even more affected by the meeting
|
|
than had his father.
|
|
|
|
He tried a dozen times to express his gratitude to me, but
|
|
his voice choked with emotion and he could not speak, and
|
|
yet he had, as I was to later learn, a reputation for ferocity
|
|
and fearlessness as a fighter that was remarkable even upon
|
|
warlike Barsoom. In common with all Helium he worshiped
|
|
his daughter, nor could he think of what she had escaped
|
|
without deep emotion.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXVII
|
|
|
|
|
|
FROM JOY TO DEATH
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|
|
|
|
|
For ten days the hordes of Thark and their wild allies were
|
|
feasted and entertained, and, then, loaded with costly
|
|
presents and escorted by ten thousand soldiers of Helium
|
|
commanded by Mors Kajak, they started on the return journey
|
|
to their own lands. The jed of lesser Helium with a small
|
|
party of nobles accompanied them all the way to Thark to
|
|
cement more closely the new bonds of peace and friendship.
|
|
|
|
Sola also accompanied Tars Tarkas, her father, who before
|
|
all his chieftains had acknowledged her as his daughter.
|
|
|
|
Three weeks later, Mors Kajak and his officers, accompanied
|
|
by Tars Tarkas and Sola, returned upon a battleship that
|
|
had been dispatched to Thark to fetch them in time for
|
|
the ceremony which made Dejah Thoris and John Carter one.
|
|
|
|
For nine years I served in the councils and fought in the
|
|
armies of Helium as a prince of the house of Tardos Mors.
|
|
The people seemed never to tire of heaping honors upon me,
|
|
and no day passed that did not bring some new proof of
|
|
their love for my princess, the incomparable Dejah Thoris.
|
|
|
|
In a golden incubator upon the roof of our palace lay a
|
|
snow-white egg. For nearly five years ten soldiers of the
|
|
jeddak's Guard had constantly stood over it, and not a day
|
|
passed when I was in the city that Dejah Thoris and I did
|
|
not stand hand in hand before our little shrine planning for
|
|
the future, when the delicate shell should break.
|
|
|
|
Vivid in my memory is the picture of the last night as we
|
|
sat there talking in low tones of the strange romance which
|
|
had woven our lives together and of this wonder which was
|
|
coming to augment our happiness and fulfill our hopes.
|
|
|
|
In the distance we saw the bright-white light of an
|
|
approaching airship, but we attached no special
|
|
significance to so common a sight. Like a bolt of
|
|
lightning it raced toward Helium until its very speed
|
|
bespoke the unusual.
|
|
|
|
Flashing the signals which proclaimed it a dispatch bearer
|
|
for the jeddak, it circled impatiently awaiting the tardy
|
|
patrol boat which must convoy it to the palace docks.
|
|
|
|
Ten minutes after it touched at the palace a message
|
|
called me to the council chamber, which I found filling with
|
|
the members of that body.
|
|
|
|
On the raised platform of the throne was Tardos Mors,
|
|
pacing back and forth with tense-drawn face. When all were
|
|
in their seats he turned toward us.
|
|
|
|
"This morning," he said, "word reached the several
|
|
governments of Barsoom that the keeper of the atmosphere
|
|
plant had made no wireless report for two days, nor had
|
|
almost ceaseless calls upon him from a score of capitals
|
|
elicited a sign of response.
|
|
|
|
"The ambassadors of the other nations asked us to take
|
|
the matter in hand and hasten the assistant keeper to the
|
|
plant. All day a thousand cruisers have been searching for
|
|
him until just now one of them returns bearing his dead
|
|
body, which was found in the pits beneath his house horribly
|
|
mutilated by some assassin.
|
|
|
|
"I do not need to tell you what this means to Barsoom. It
|
|
would take months to penetrate those mighty walls, in fact
|
|
the work has already commenced, and there would be little
|
|
to fear were the engine of the pumping plant to run as it
|
|
should and as they all have for hundreds of years now; but the
|
|
worst, we fear, has happened. The instruments show a rapidly
|
|
decreasing air pressure on all parts of Barsoom--the engine has stopped."
|
|
|
|
"My gentlemen," he concluded, "we have at best three days to live."
|
|
|
|
There was absolute silence for several minutes, and then
|
|
a young noble arose, and with his drawn sword held high
|
|
above his head addressed Tardos Mors.
|
|
|
|
"The men of Helium have prided themselves that they have
|
|
ever shown Barsoom how a nation of red men should live,
|
|
now is our opportunity to show them how they should die.
|
|
Let us go about our duties as though a thousand useful years
|
|
still lay before us."
|
|
|
|
The chamber rang with applause and as there was nothing
|
|
better to do than to allay the fears of the people by our
|
|
example we went our ways with smiles upon our faces and
|
|
sorrow gnawing at our hearts.
|
|
|
|
When I returned to my palace I found that the rumor already
|
|
had reached Dejah Thoris, so I told her all that I had heard.
|
|
|
|
"We have been very happy, John Carter," she said, "and I thank
|
|
whatever fate overtakes us that it permits us to die together."
|
|
|
|
The next two days brought no noticeable change in the
|
|
supply of air, but on the morning of the third day breathing
|
|
became difficult at the higher altitudes of the rooftops.
|
|
The avenues and plazas of Helium were filled with people.
|
|
All business had ceased. For the most part the people looked
|
|
bravely into the face of their unalterable doom. Here and
|
|
there, however, men and women gave way to quiet grief.
|
|
|
|
Toward the middle of the day many of the weaker commenced
|
|
to succumb and within an hour the people of Barsoom
|
|
were sinking by thousands into the unconsciousness
|
|
which precedes death by asphyxiation.
|
|
|
|
Dejah Thoris and I with the other members of the royal
|
|
family had collected in a sunken garden within an inner
|
|
courtyard of the palace. We conversed in low tones, when
|
|
we conversed at all, as the awe of the grim shadow of death
|
|
crept over us. Even Woola seemed to feel the weight of the
|
|
impending calamity, for he pressed close to Dejah Thoris
|
|
and to me, whining pitifully.
|
|
|
|
The little incubator had been brought from the roof of
|
|
our palace at request of Dejah Thoris and now she sat gazing
|
|
longingly upon the unknown little life that now she would
|
|
never know.
|
|
|
|
As it was becoming perceptibly difficult to breathe Tardos
|
|
Mors arose, saying,
|
|
|
|
"Let us bid each other farewell. The days of the greatness
|
|
of Barsoom are over. Tomorrow's sun will look down upon a
|
|
dead world which through all eternity must go swinging through
|
|
the heavens peopled not even by memories. It is the end."
|
|
|
|
He stooped and kissed the women of his family, and laid
|
|
his strong hand upon the shoulders of the men.
|
|
|
|
As I turned sadly from him my eyes fell upon Dejah
|
|
Thoris. Her head was drooping upon her breast, to all
|
|
appearances she was lifeless. With a cry I sprang to her
|
|
and raised her in my arms.
|
|
|
|
Her eyes opened and looked into mine.
|
|
|
|
"Kiss me, John Carter," she murmured. "I love you!
|
|
I love you! It is cruel that we must be torn apart who
|
|
were just starting upon a life of love and happiness."
|
|
|
|
As I pressed her dear lips to mine the old feeling of
|
|
unconquerable power and authority rose in me. The fighting
|
|
blood of Virginia sprang to life in my veins.
|
|
|
|
"It shall not be, my princess," I cried. "There is, there
|
|
must be some way, and John Carter, who has fought his way
|
|
through a strange world for love of you, will find it."
|
|
|
|
And with my words there crept above the threshold of my
|
|
conscious mind a series of nine long forgotten sounds. Like a
|
|
flash of lightning in the darkness their full purport dawned
|
|
upon me--the key to the three great doors of the atmosphere plant!
|
|
|
|
Turning suddenly toward Tardos Mors as I still clasped my
|
|
dying love to my breast I cried.
|
|
|
|
"A flier, Jeddak! Quick! Order your swiftest flier to the
|
|
palace top. I can save Barsoom yet."
|
|
|
|
He did not wait to question, but in an instant a guard was racing
|
|
to the nearest dock and though the air was thin and almost gone
|
|
at the rooftop they managed to launch the fastest one-man,
|
|
air-scout machine that the skill of Barsoom had ever produced.
|
|
|
|
Kissing Dejah Thoris a dozen times and commanding Woola,
|
|
who would have followed me, to remain and guard her,
|
|
I bounded with my old agility and strength to the high
|
|
ramparts of the palace, and in another moment I was headed
|
|
toward the goal of the hopes of all Barsoom.
|
|
|
|
I had to fly low to get sufficient air to breathe, but I took
|
|
a straight course across an old sea bottom and so had to rise
|
|
only a few feet above the ground.
|
|
|
|
I traveled with awful velocity for my errand was a race
|
|
against time with death. The face of Dejah Thoris hung
|
|
always before me. As I turned for a last look as I left
|
|
the palace garden I had seen her stagger and sink upon the
|
|
ground beside the little incubator. That she had dropped
|
|
into the last coma which would end in death, if the air
|
|
supply remained unreplenished, I well knew, and so, throwing
|
|
caution to the winds, I flung overboard everything but the
|
|
engine and compass, even to my ornaments, and lying on my
|
|
belly along the deck with one hand on the steering wheel
|
|
and the other pushing the speed lever to its last notch I
|
|
split the thin air of dying Mars with the speed of a meteor.
|
|
|
|
An hour before dark the great walls of the atmosphere
|
|
plant loomed suddenly before me, and with a sickening thud
|
|
I plunged to the ground before the small door which was
|
|
withholding the spark of life from the inhabitants of an
|
|
entire planet.
|
|
|
|
Beside the door a great crew of men had been laboring
|
|
to pierce the wall, but they had scarcely scratched the flint-
|
|
like surface, and now most of them lay in the last sleep from
|
|
which not even air would awaken them.
|
|
|
|
Conditions seemed much worse here than at Helium, and
|
|
it was with difficulty that I breathed at all. There were
|
|
a few men still conscious, and to one of these I spoke.
|
|
|
|
"If I can open these doors is there a man who can start
|
|
the engines?" I asked.
|
|
|
|
"I can," he replied, "if you open quickly. I can last but a
|
|
few moments more. But it is useless, they are both dead
|
|
and no one else upon Barsoom knew the secret of these awful
|
|
locks. For three days men crazed with fear have surged
|
|
about this portal in vain attempts to solve its mystery."
|
|
|
|
I had no time to talk, I was becoming very weak and it
|
|
was with difficulty that I controlled my mind at all.
|
|
|
|
But, with a final effort, as I sank weakly to my knees I
|
|
hurled the nine thought waves at that awful thing before me.
|
|
The Martian had crawled to my side and with staring eyes
|
|
fixed on the single panel before us we waited in the silence
|
|
of death.
|
|
|
|
Slowly the mighty door receded before us. I attempted to
|
|
rise and follow it but I was too weak.
|
|
|
|
"After it," I cried to my companion, "and if you reach the
|
|
pump room turn loose all the pumps. It is the only chance
|
|
Barsoom has to exist tomorrow!"
|
|
|
|
From where I lay I opened the second door, and then the
|
|
third, and as I saw the hope of Barsoom crawling weakly on
|
|
hands and knees through the last doorway I sank unconscious
|
|
upon the ground.
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
|
CHAPTER XXVIII
|
|
|
|
|
|
AT THE ARIZONA CAVE
|
|
|
|
|
|
It was dark when I opened my eyes again. Strange, stiff
|
|
garments were upon my body; garments that cracked and
|
|
powdered away from me as I rose to a sitting posture.
|
|
|
|
I felt myself over from head to foot and from head to
|
|
foot I was clothed, though when I fell unconscious at the
|
|
little doorway I had been naked. Before me was a small
|
|
patch of moonlit sky which showed through a ragged aperture.
|
|
|
|
As my hands passed over my body they came in contact
|
|
with pockets and in one of these a small parcel of matches
|
|
wrapped in oiled paper. One of these matches I struck, and
|
|
its dim flame lighted up what appeared to be a huge cave,
|
|
toward the back of which I discovered a strange, still figure
|
|
huddled over a tiny bench. As I approached it I saw that it
|
|
was the dead and mummified remains of a little old woman
|
|
with long black hair, and the thing it leaned over was a small
|
|
charcoal burner upon which rested a round copper vessel
|
|
containing a small quantity of greenish powder.
|
|
|
|
Behind her, depending from the roof upon rawhide thongs,
|
|
and stretching entirely across the cave, was a row of human
|
|
skeletons. From the thong which held them stretched another
|
|
to the dead hand of the little old woman; as I touched
|
|
the cord the skeletons swung to the motion with a noise as
|
|
of the rustling of dry leaves.
|
|
|
|
It was a most grotesque and horrid tableau and I hastened
|
|
out into the fresh air; glad to escape from so gruesome a place.
|
|
|
|
The sight that met my eyes as I stepped out upon a small
|
|
ledge which ran before the entrance of the cave filled me
|
|
with consternation.
|
|
|
|
A new heaven and a new landscape met my gaze. The silvered
|
|
mountains in the distance, the almost stationary moon
|
|
hanging in the sky, the cacti-studded valley below me
|
|
were not of Mars. I could scarcely believe my eyes, but the
|
|
truth slowly forced itself upon me--I was looking upon Arizona
|
|
from the same ledge from which ten years before I had gazed
|
|
with longing upon Mars.
|
|
|
|
Burying my head in my arms I turned, broken, and sorrowful,
|
|
down the trail from the cave.
|
|
|
|
Above me shone the red eye of Mars holding her awful
|
|
secret, forty-eight million miles away.
|
|
|
|
Did the Martian reach the pump room? Did the vitalizing
|
|
air reach the people of that distant planet in time to save
|
|
them? Was my Dejah Thoris alive, or did her beautiful body
|
|
lie cold in death beside the tiny golden incubator in the
|
|
sunken garden of the inner courtyard of the palace of Tardos
|
|
Mors, the jeddak of Helium?
|
|
|
|
For ten years I have waited and prayed for an answer to
|
|
my questions. For ten years I have waited and prayed to be
|
|
taken back to the world of my lost love. I would rather lie
|
|
dead beside her there than live on Earth all those millions of
|
|
terrible miles from her.
|
|
|
|
The old mine, which I found untouched, has made me
|
|
fabulously wealthy; but what care I for wealth!
|
|
|
|
As I sit here tonight in my little study overlooking the
|
|
Hudson, just twenty years have elapsed since I first opened
|
|
my eyes upon Mars.
|
|
|
|
I can see her shining in the sky through the little window
|
|
by my desk, and tonight she seems calling to me again as
|
|
she has not called before since that long dead night, and I
|
|
think I can see, across that awful abyss of space, a beautiful
|
|
black-haired woman standing in the garden of a palace,
|
|
and at her side is a little boy who puts his arm around her
|
|
as she points into the sky toward the planet Earth, while at
|
|
their feet is a huge and hideous creature with a heart of gold.
|
|
|
|
I believe that they are waiting there for me, and something
|
|
tells me that I shall soon know.
|
|
|
|
|
|
End of The Project Gutenberg Etext of A PRINCESS OF MARS
|
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|