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-
- The Project Gutenberg Etext of the Warlord of Mars by Burroughs
-
-
- Edgar Rice Burroughs
-
-
-
-
- CONTENTS
-
-
- On the River Iss
- Under the Mountains
- The Temple of the Sun
- The Secret Tower
- On the Kaolian Road
- A Hero in Kaol
- New Allies
- Through the Carrion Caves
- With the Yellow Men
- In Durance
- The Pity of Plenty
- "Follow the Rope!"
- The Magnet Switch
- The Tide of Battle
- Rewards
- The New Ruler
-
-
-
-
- THE WARLORD OF MARS
-
-
-
- ON THE RIVER ISS
-
-
- In the shadows of the forest that flanks the crimson plain by
- the side of the Lost Sea of Korus in the Valley Dor, beneath the
- hurtling moons of Mars, speeding their meteoric way close above the
- bosom of the dying planet, I crept stealthily along the trail of a
- shadowy form that hugged the darker places with a persistency that
- proclaimed the sinister nature of its errand.
-
- For six long Martian months I had haunted the vicinity of the
- hateful Temple of the Sun, within whose slow-revolving shaft,
- far beneath the surface of Mars, my princess lay entombed--
- but whether alive or dead I knew not. Had Phaidor's slim blade
- found that beloved heart? Time only would reveal the truth.
-
- Six hundred and eighty-seven Martian days must come and go
- before the cell's door would again come opposite the tunnel's
- end where last I had seen my ever-beautiful Dejah Thoris.
-
- Half of them had passed, or would on the morrow, yet vivid in
- my memory, obliterating every event that had come before or after,
- there remained the last scene before the gust of smoke blinded my
- eyes and the narrow slit that had given me sight of the interior of
- her cell closed between me and the Princess of Helium for a long
- Martian year.
-
- As if it were yesterday, I still saw the beautiful face of Phaidor,
- daughter of Matai Shang, distorted with jealous rage and hatred
- as she sprang forward with raised dagger upon the woman I loved.
-
- I saw the red girl, Thuvia of Ptarth, leap forward to prevent
- the hideous deed.
-
- The smoke from the burning temple had come then to blot out
- the tragedy, but in my ears rang the single shriek as the knife
- fell. Then silence, and when the smoke had cleared, the revolving
- temple had shut off all sight or sound from the chamber in which
- the three beautiful women were imprisoned.
-
- Much there had been to occupy my attention since that terrible moment;
- but never for an instant had the memory of the thing faded,
- and all the time that I could spare from the numerous duties that
- had devolved upon me in the reconstruction of the government of the
- First Born since our victorious fleet and land forces had
- overwhelmed them, had been spent close to the grim shaft that held
- the mother of my boy, Carthoris of Helium.
-
- The race of blacks that for ages had worshiped Issus, the
- false deity of Mars, had been left in a state of chaos by my
- revealment of her as naught more than a wicked old woman.
- In their rage they had torn her to pieces.
-
- From the high pinnacle of their egotism the First Born had
- been plunged to the depths of humiliation. Their deity was gone,
- and with her the whole false fabric of their religion. Their
- vaunted navy had fallen in defeat before the superior ships and
- fighting men of the red men of Helium.
-
- Fierce green warriors from the ocher sea bottoms of outer Mars
- had ridden their wild thoats across the sacred gardens of the
- Temple of Issus, and Tars Tarkas, Jeddak of Thark, fiercest of
- them all, had sat upon the throne of Issus and ruled the First Born
- while the allies were deciding the conquered nation's fate.
-
- Almost unanimous was the request that I ascend the ancient throne
- of the black men, even the First Born themselves concurring in it;
- but I would have none of it. My heart could never be with the race
- that had heaped indignities upon my princess and my son.
-
- At my suggestion Xodar became Jeddak of the First Born.
- He had been a dator, or prince, until Issus had degraded him,
- so that his fitness for the high office bestowed was unquestioned.
-
- The peace of the Valley Dor thus assured, the green warriors
- dispersed to their desolate sea bottoms, while we of Helium
- returned to our own country. Here again was a throne offered me,
- since no word had been received from the missing Jeddak of Helium,
- Tardos Mors, grandfather of Dejah Thoris, or his son, Mors Kajak,
- Jed of Helium, her father.
-
- Over a year had elapsed since they had set out to explore the
- northern hemisphere in search of Carthoris, and at last their
- disheartened people had accepted as truth the vague rumors of their
- death that had filtered in from the frozen region of the pole.
-
- Once again I refused a throne, for I would not believe that
- the mighty Tardos Mors, or his no less redoubtable son, was dead.
-
- "Let one of their own blood rule you until they return,"
- I said to the assembled nobles of Helium, as I addressed them from
- the Pedestal of Truth beside the Throne of Righteousness in the
- Temple of Reward, from the very spot where I had stood a year
- before when Zat Arras pronounced the sentence of death upon me.
-
- As I spoke I stepped forward and laid my hand upon the
- shoulder of Carthoris where he stood in the front rank of the
- circle of nobles about me.
-
- As one, the nobles and the people lifted their voices in a
- long cheer of approbation. Ten thousand swords sprang on high from
- as many scabbards, and the glorious fighting men of ancient Helium
- hailed Carthoris Jeddak of Helium.
-
- His tenure of office was to be for life or until his great-
- grandfather, or grandfather, should return. Having thus
- satisfactorily arranged this important duty for Helium, I started
- the following day for the Valley Dor that I might remain close to
- the Temple of the Sun until the fateful day that should see the
- opening of the prison cell where my lost love lay buried.
-
- Hor Vastus and Kantos Kan, with my other noble lieutenants,
- I left with Carthoris at Helium, that he might have the benefit
- of their wisdom, bravery, and loyalty in the performance of the
- arduous duties which had devolved upon him. Only Woola,
- my Martian hound, accompanied me.
-
- At my heels tonight the faithful beast moved softly in my
- tracks. As large as a Shetland pony, with hideous head and
- frightful fangs, he was indeed an awesome spectacle, as he crept
- after me on his ten short, muscular legs; but to me he was the
- embodiment of love and loyalty.
-
- The figure ahead was that of the black dator of the First Born,
- Thurid, whose undying enmity I had earned that time I laid
- him low with my bare hands in the courtyard of the Temple of Issus,
- and bound him with his own harness before the noble men and women
- who had but a moment before been extolling his prowess.
-
- Like many of his fellows, he had apparently accepted the new order of
- things with good grace, and had sworn fealty to Xodar, his new ruler;
- but I knew that he hated me, and I was sure that in his heart he envied
- and hated Xodar, so I had kept a watch upon his comings and goings,
- to the end that of late I had become convinced that he was occupied
- with some manner of intrigue.
-
- Several times I had observed him leaving the walled city of
- the First Born after dark, taking his way out into the cruel and
- horrible Valley Dor, where no honest business could lead any man.
-
- Tonight he moved quickly along the edge of the forest until
- well beyond sight or sound of the city, then he turned across the
- crimson sward toward the shore of the Lost Sea of Korus.
-
- The rays of the nearer moon, swinging low across the valley,
- touched his jewel-incrusted harness with a thousand changing lights
- and glanced from the glossy ebony of his smooth hide. Twice he
- turned his head back toward the forest, after the manner of one who is
- upon an evil errand, though he must have felt quite safe from pursuit.
-
- I did not dare follow him there beneath the moonlight, since
- it best suited my plans not to interrupt his--I wished him to reach
- his destination unsuspecting, that I might learn just where that
- destination lay and the business that awaited the night prowler there.
-
- So it was that I remained hidden until after Thurid had
- disappeared over the edge of the steep bank beside the sea a
- quarter of a mile away. Then, with Woola following, I hastened
- across the open after the black dator.
-
- The quiet of the tomb lay upon the mysterious valley of death,
- crouching deep in its warm nest within the sunken area at the south
- pole of the dying planet. In the far distance the Golden Cliffs
- raised their mighty barrier faces far into the starlit heavens,
- the precious metals and scintillating jewels that composed them
- sparkling in the brilliant light of Mars's two gorgeous moons.
-
- At my back was the forest, pruned and trimmed like the sward
- to parklike symmetry by the browsing of the ghoulish plant men.
-
- Before me lay the Lost Sea of Korus, while farther on I caught
- the shimmering ribbon of Iss, the River of Mystery, where it wound
- out from beneath the Golden Cliffs to empty into Korus, to which
- for countless ages had been borne the deluded and unhappy Martians
- of the outer world upon the voluntary pilgrimage to this false heaven.
-
- The plant men, with their blood-sucking hands, and the monstrous
- white apes that make Dor hideous by day, were hidden in their
- lairs for the night.
-
- There was no longer a Holy Thern upon the balcony in the Golden
- Cliffs above the Iss to summon them with weird cry to the victims
- floating down to their maws upon the cold, broad bosom of ancient Iss.
-
- The navies of Helium and the First Born had cleared the
- fortresses and the temples of the therns when they had refused to
- surrender and accept the new order of things that had swept their
- false religion from long-suffering Mars.
-
- In a few isolated countries they still retained their age-old
- power; but Matai Shang, their hekkador, Father of Therns, had been
- driven from his temple. Strenuous had been our endeavors to
- capture him; but with a few of the faithful he had escaped, and was
- in hiding--where we knew not.
-
- As I came cautiously to the edge of the low cliff overlooking
- the Lost Sea of Korus I saw Thurid pushing out upon the bosom of
- the shimmering water in a small skiff--one of those strangely
- wrought craft of unthinkable age which the Holy Therns, with their
- organization of priests and lesser therns, were wont to distribute
- along the banks of the Iss, that the long journey of their victims
- might be facilitated.
-
- Drawn up on the beach below me were a score of similar boats,
- each with its long pole, at one end of which was a pike, at the
- other a paddle. Thurid was hugging the shore, and as he passed out
- of sight round a near-by promontory I shoved one of the boats into
- the water and, calling Woola into it, pushed out from shore.
-
- The pursuit of Thurid carried me along the edge of the sea
- toward the mouth of the Iss. The farther moon lay close to the
- horizon, casting a dense shadow beneath the cliffs that fringed the
- water. Thuria, the nearer moon, had set, nor would it rise again
- for near four hours, so that I was ensured concealing darkness for
- that length of time at least.
-
- On and on went the black warrior. Now he was opposite the
- mouth of the Iss. Without an instant's hesitation he turned up the
- grim river, paddling hard against the strong current.
-
- After him came Woola and I, closer now, for the man was too
- intent upon forcing his craft up the river to have any eyes for
- what might be transpiring behind him. He hugged the shore where
- the current was less strong.
-
- Presently he came to the dark cavernous portal in the face of
- the Golden Cliffs, through which the river poured. On into the
- Stygian darkness beyond he urged his craft.
-
- It seemed hopeless to attempt to follow him here where I could
- not see my hand before my face, and I was almost on the point of
- giving up the pursuit and drifting back to the mouth of the river,
- there to await his return, when a sudden bend showed a faint
- luminosity ahead.
-
- My quarry was plainly visible again, and in the increasing
- light from the phosphorescent rock that lay embedded in great
- patches in the roughly arched roof of the cavern I had no
- difficulty in following him.
-
- It was my first trip upon the bosom of Iss, and the things
- I saw there will live forever in my memory.
-
- Terrible as they were, they could not have commenced to
- approximate the horrible conditions which must have obtained before
- Tars Tarkas, the great green warrior, Xodar, the black dator, and
- I brought the light of truth to the outer world and stopped the mad
- rush of millions upon the voluntary pilgrimage to what they believed
- would end in a beautiful valley of peace and happiness and love.
-
- Even now the low islands which dotted the broad stream were choked
- with the skeletons and half devoured carcasses of those who,
- through fear or a sudden awakening to the truth, had halted almost
- at the completion of their journey.
-
- In the awful stench of these frightful charnel isles haggard
- maniacs screamed and gibbered and fought among the torn remnants of
- their grisly feasts; while on those which contained but clean-
- picked bones they battled with one another, the weaker furnishing
- sustenance for the stronger; or with clawlike hands clutched at the
- bloated bodies that drifted down with the current.
-
- Thurid paid not the slightest attention to the screaming things
- that either menaced or pleaded with him as the mood directed
- them--evidently he was familiar with the horrid sights that
- surrounded him. He continued up the river for perhaps a mile;
- and then, crossing over to the left bank, drew his craft up on
- a low ledge that lay almost on a level with the water.
-
- I dared not follow across the stream, for he most surely would
- have seen me. Instead I stopped close to the opposite wall beneath
- an overhanging mass of rock that cast a dense shadow beneath it.
- Here I could watch Thurid without danger of discovery.
-
- The black was standing upon the ledge beside his boat, looking
- up the river, as though he were awaiting one whom he expected
- from that direction.
-
- As I lay there beneath the dark rocks I noticed that a strong
- current seemed to flow directly toward the center of the river,
- so that it was difficult to hold my craft in its position. I edged
- farther into the shadow that I might find a hold upon the bank;
- but, though I proceeded several yards, I touched nothing; and then,
- finding that I would soon reach a point from where I could no
- longer see the black man, I was compelled to remain where I was,
- holding my position as best I could by paddling strongly against
- the current which flowed from beneath the rocky mass behind me.
-
- I could not imagine what might cause this strong lateral flow,
- for the main channel of the river was plainly visible to me from
- where I sat, and I could see the rippling junction of it and the
- mysterious current which had aroused my curiosity.
-
- While I was still speculating upon the phenomenon, my
- attention was suddenly riveted upon Thurid, who had raised both
- palms forward above his head in the universal salute of Martians,
- and a moment later his "Kaor!" the Barsoomian word of greeting,
- came in low but distinct tones.
-
- I turned my eyes up the river in the direction that his were bent,
- and presently there came within my limited range of vision a
- long boat, in which were six men. Five were at the paddles,
- while the sixth sat in the seat of honor.
-
- The white skins, the flowing yellow wigs which covered their
- bald pates, and the gorgeous diadems set in circlets of gold
- about their heads marked them as Holy Therns.
-
- As they drew up beside the ledge upon which Thurid awaited
- them, he in the bow of the boat arose to step ashore, and then I
- saw that it was none other than Matai Shang, Father of Therns.
-
- The evident cordiality with which the two men exchanged
- greetings filled me with wonder, for the black and white men of
- Barsoom were hereditary enemies--nor ever before had I known of
- two meeting other than in battle.
-
- Evidently the reverses that had recently overtaken both peoples
- had resulted in an alliance between these two individuals--at
- least against the common enemy--and now I saw why Thurid had
- come so often out into the Valley Dor by night, and that the
- nature of his conspiring might be such as to strike very close
- to me or to my friends.
-
- I wished that I might have found a point closer to the two men
- from which to have heard their conversation; but it was out of the
- question now to attempt to cross the river, and so I lay quietly
- watching them, who would have given so much to have known how close
- I lay to them, and how easily they might have overcome and killed
- me with their superior force.
-
- Several times Thurid pointed across the river in my direction,
- but that his gestures had any reference to me I did not for a
- moment believe. Presently he and Matai Shang entered the latter's
- boat, which turned out into the river and, swinging round, forged
- steadily across in my direction.
-
- As they advanced I moved my boat farther and farther in
- beneath the overhanging wall, but at last it became evident that
- their craft was holding the same course. The five paddlers sent
- the larger boat ahead at a speed that taxed my energies to equal.
-
- Every instant I expected to feel my prow crash against solid rock.
- The light from the river was no longer visible, but ahead I
- saw the faint tinge of a distant radiance, and still the water
- before me was open.
-
- At last the truth dawned upon me--I was following a subterranean
- river which emptied into the Iss at the very point where I had hidden.
-
- The rowers were now quite close to me. The noise of their own
- paddles drowned the sound of mine, but in another instant the
- growing light ahead would reveal me to them.
-
- There was no time to be lost. Whatever action I was to take must
- be taken at once. Swinging the prow of my boat toward the right,
- I sought the river's rocky side, and there I lay while Matai Shang
- and Thurid approached up the center of the stream, which was much
- narrower than the Iss.
-
- As they came nearer I heard the voices of Thurid and the
- Father of Therns raised in argument.
-
- "I tell you, Thern," the black dator was saying, "that I wish
- only vengeance upon John Carter, Prince of Helium. I am leading
- you into no trap. What could I gain by betraying you to those who
- have ruined my nation and my house?"
-
- "Let us stop here a moment that I may hear your plans,"
- replied the hekkador, "and then we may proceed with a better
- understanding of our duties and obligations."
-
- To the rowers he issued the command that brought their boat in
- toward the bank not a dozen paces beyond the spot where I lay.
-
- Had they pulled in below me they must surely have seen me
- against the faint glow of light ahead, but from where they finally
- came to rest I was as secure from detection as though miles
- separated us.
-
- The few words I had already overheard whetted my curiosity,
- and I was anxious to learn what manner of vengeance Thurid was
- planning against me. Nor had I long to wait. I listened intently.
-
- "There are no obligations, Father of Therns," continued the
- First Born. "Thurid, Dator of Issus, has no price. When the thing
- has been accomplished I shall be glad if you will see to it that I
- am well received, as is befitting my ancient lineage and noble
- rank, at some court that is yet loyal to thy ancient faith, for I
- cannot return to the Valley Dor or elsewhere within the power of
- the Prince of Helium; but even that I do not demand--it shall be as
- your own desire in the matter directs."
-
- "It shall be as you wish, Dator," replied Matai Shang; "nor is
- that all--power and riches shall be yours if you restore my
- daughter, Phaidor, to me, and place within my power Dejah Thoris,
- Princess of Helium.
-
- "Ah," he continued with a malicious snarl, "but the Earth man
- shall suffer for the indignities he has put upon the holy of
- holies, nor shall any vileness be too vile to inflict upon his
- princess. Would that it were in my power to force him to witness
- the humiliation and degradation of the red woman."
-
- "You shall have your way with her before another day has
- passed, Matai Shang," said Thurid, "if you but say the word."
-
- "I have heard of the Temple of the Sun, Dator," replied Matai Shang,
- "but never have I heard that its prisoners could be released
- before the allotted year of their incarceration had elapsed.
- How, then, may you accomplish the impossible?"
-
- "Access may be had to any cell of the temple at any time,"
- replied Thurid. "Only Issus knew this; nor was it ever Issus' way
- to divulge more of her secrets than were necessary. By chance,
- after her death, I came upon an ancient plan of the temple,
- and there I found, plainly writ, the most minute directions
- for reaching the cells at any time.
-
- "And more I learned--that many men had gone thither for Issus in
- the past, always on errands of death and torture to the prisoners;
- but those who thus learned the secret way were wont to die
- mysteriously immediately they had returned and made their
- reports to cruel Issus."
-
- "Let us proceed, then," said Matai Shang at last. "I must
- trust you, yet at the same time you must trust me, for we
- are six to your one."
-
- "I do not fear," replied Thurid, "nor need you. Our hatred of
- the common enemy is sufficient bond to insure our loyalty to each
- other, and after we have defiled the Princess of Helium there will
- be still greater reason for the maintenance of our allegiance--
- unless I greatly mistake the temper of her lord."
-
- Matai Shang spoke to the paddlers. The boat moved on up the tributary.
-
- It was with difficulty that I restrained myself from rushing upon
- them and slaying the two vile plotters; but quickly I saw the mad
- rashness of such an act, which would cut down the only man who
- could lead the way to Dejah Thoris' prison before the long
- Martian year had swung its interminable circle.
-
- If he should lead Matai Shang to that hollowed spot, then,
- too, should he lead John Carter, Prince of Helium.
-
- With silent paddle I swung slowly into the wake of the larger craft.
-
-
-
-
- UNDER THE MOUNTAINS
-
-
- As we advanced up the river which winds beneath the Golden
- Cliffs out of the bowels of the Mountains of Otz to mingle its dark
- waters with the grim and mysterious Iss the faint glow which had
- appeared before us grew gradually into an all-enveloping radiance.
-
- The river widened until it presented the aspect of a large
- lake whose vaulted dome, lighted by glowing phosphorescent rock,
- was splashed with the vivid rays of the diamond, the sapphire,
- the ruby, and the countless, nameless jewels of Barsoom which lay
- incrusted in the virgin gold which forms the major portion of these
- magnificent cliffs.
-
- Beyond the lighted chamber of the lake was darkness--what lay
- behind the darkness I could not even guess.
-
- To have followed the thern boat across the gleaming water
- would have been to invite instant detection, and so, though I was
- loath to permit Thurid to pass even for an instant beyond my sight,
- I was forced to wait in the shadows until the other boat had passed
- from my sight at the far extremity of the lake.
-
- Then I paddled out upon the brilliant surface in the direction
- they had taken.
-
- When, after what seemed an eternity, I reached the shadows at
- the upper end of the lake I found that the river issued from a low
- aperture, to pass beneath which it was necessary that I compel
- Woola to lie flat in the boat, and I, myself, must need bend double
- before the low roof cleared my head.
-
- Immediately the roof rose again upon the other side, but no longer
- was the way brilliantly lighted. Instead only a feeble glow emanated
- from small and scattered patches of phosphorescent rock in wall and roof.
-
- Directly before me the river ran into this smaller chamber through
- three separate arched openings.
-
- Thurid and the therns were nowhere to be seen--into which of
- the dark holes had they disappeared? There was no means by which
- I might know, and so I chose the center opening as being as
- likely to lead me in the right direction as another.
-
- Here the way was through utter darkness. The stream was narrow--
- so narrow that in the blackness I was constantly bumping first
- one rock wall and then another as the river wound hither and
- thither along its flinty bed.
-
- Far ahead I presently heard a deep and sullen roar which
- increased in volume as I advanced, and then broke upon my ears with
- all the intensity of its mad fury as I swung round a sharp curve
- into a dimly lighted stretch of water.
-
- Directly before me the river thundered down from above in a
- mighty waterfall that filled the narrow gorge from side to side,
- rising far above me several hundred feet--as magnificent a
- spectacle as I ever had seen.
-
- But the roar--the awful, deafening roar of those tumbling
- waters penned in the rocky, subterranean vault! Had the fall not
- entirely blocked my further passage and shown me that I had
- followed the wrong course I believe that I should have fled anyway
- before the maddening tumult.
-
- Thurid and the therns could not have come this way. By
- stumbling upon the wrong course I had lost the trail, and they had
- gained so much ahead of me that now I might not be able to find
- them before it was too late, if, in fact, I could find them at all.
-
- It had taken several hours to force my way up to the falls
- against the strong current, and other hours would be required for
- the descent, although the pace would be much swifter.
-
- With a sigh I turned the prow of my craft down stream, and
- with mighty strokes hastened with reckless speed through the dark
- and tortuous channel until once again I came to the chamber into
- which flowed the three branches of the river.
-
- Two unexplored channels still remained from which to choose;
- nor was there any means by which I could judge which was the more
- likely to lead me to the plotters.
-
- Never in my life, that I can recall, have I suffered such an
- agony of indecision. So much depended upon a correct choice;
- so much depended upon haste.
-
- The hours that I had already lost might seal the fate of the
- incomparable Dejah Thoris were she not already dead--to sacrifice
- other hours, and maybe days in a fruitless exploration of another
- blind lead would unquestionably prove fatal.
-
- Several times I essayed the right-hand entrance only to turn
- back as though warned by some strange intuitive sense that
- this was not the way. At last, convinced by the oft-recurring
- phenomenon, I cast my all upon the left-hand archway; yet it was
- with a lingering doubt that I turned a parting look at the sullen
- waters which rolled, dark and forbidding, from beneath the grim,
- low archway on the right.
-
- And as I looked there came bobbing out upon the current from
- the Stygian darkness of the interior the shell of one of the great,
- succulent fruits of the sorapus tree.
-
- I could scarce restrain a shout of elation as this silent, insensate
- messenger floated past me, on toward the Iss and Korus, for it
- told me that journeying Martians were above me on that very stream.
-
- They had eaten of this marvelous fruit which nature concentrates
- within the hard shell of the sorapus nut, and having eaten had
- cast the husk overboard. It could have come from no others than
- the party I sought.
-
- Quickly I abandoned all thought of the left-hand passage, and
- a moment later had turned into the right. The stream soon widened,
- and recurring areas of phosphorescent rock lighted my way.
-
- I made good time, but was convinced that I was nearly a day
- behind those I was tracking. Neither Woola nor I had eaten since
- the previous day, but in so far as he was concerned it mattered but
- little, since practically all the animals of the dead sea bottoms
- of Mars are able to go for incredible periods without nourishment.
-
- Nor did I suffer. The water of the river was sweet and cold,
- for it was unpolluted by decaying bodies--like the Iss--and as for
- food, why the mere thought that I was nearing my beloved princess
- raised me above every material want.
-
- As I proceeded, the river became narrower and the current
- swift and turbulent--so swift in fact that it was with difficulty
- that I forced my craft upward at all. I could not have been making
- to exceed a hundred yards an hour when, at a bend, I was confronted
- by a series of rapids through which the river foamed and boiled at
- a terrific rate.
-
- My heart sank within me. The sorapus nutshell had proved a
- false prophet, and, after all, my intuition had been correct--it
- was the left-hand channel that I should have followed.
-
- Had I been a woman I should have wept. At my right was a great,
- slow-moving eddy that circled far beneath the cliff's overhanging side,
- and to rest my tired muscles before turning back I let my boat drift
- into its embrace.
-
- I was almost prostrated by disappointment. It would mean
- another half-day's loss of time to retrace my way and take the only
- passage that yet remained unexplored. What hellish fate had led me
- to select from three possible avenues the two that were wrong?
-
- As the lazy current of the eddy carried me slowly about the
- periphery of the watery circle my boat twice touched the rocky side
- of the river in the dark recess beneath the cliff. A third time it
- struck, gently as it had before, but the contact resulted in a
- different sound--the sound of wood scraping upon wood.
-
- In an instant I was on the alert, for there could be no wood
- within that buried river that had not been man brought. Almost
- coincidentally with my first apprehension of the noise, my hand
- shot out across the boat's side, and a second later I felt my
- fingers gripping the gunwale of another craft.
-
- As though turned to stone I sat in tense and rigid silence,
- straining my eyes into the utter darkness before me in an effort to
- discover if the boat were occupied.
-
- It was entirely possible that there might be men on board it
- who were still ignorant of my presence, for the boat was scraping
- gently against the rocks upon one side, so that the gentle touch of
- my boat upon the other easily could have gone unnoticed.
-
- Peer as I would I could not penetrate the darkness, and then
- I listened intently for the sound of breathing near me; but except
- for the noise of the rapids, the soft scraping of the boats, and
- the lapping of the water at their sides I could distinguish no
- sound. As usual, I thought rapidly.
-
- A rope lay coiled in the bottom of my own craft. Very softly
- I gathered it up, and making one end fast to the bronze ring in the
- prow I stepped gingerly into the boat beside me. In one hand I
- grasped the rope, in the other my keen long-sword.
-
- For a full minute, perhaps, I stood motionless after entering
- the strange craft. It had rocked a trifle beneath my weight, but
- it had been the scraping of its side against the side of my own
- boat that had seemed most likely to alarm its occupants, if there
- were any.
-
- But there was no answering sound, and a moment later I had
- felt from stem to stern and found the boat deserted.
-
- Groping with my hands along the face of the rocks to which the
- craft was moored, I discovered a narrow ledge which I knew must be
- the avenue taken by those who had come before me. That they could
- be none other than Thurid and his party I was convinced by the size
- and build of the boat I had found.
-
- Calling to Woola to follow me I stepped out upon the ledge.
- The great, savage brute, agile as a cat, crept after me.
-
- As he passed through the boat that had been occupied by Thurid
- and the therns he emitted a single low growl, and when he came
- beside me upon the ledge and my hand rested upon his neck I felt
- his short mane bristling with anger. I think he sensed
- telepathically the recent presence of an enemy, for I had made no
- effort to impart to him the nature of our quest or the status of
- those we tracked.
-
- This omission I now made haste to correct, and, after the
- manner of green Martians with their beasts, I let him know
- partially by the weird and uncanny telepathy of Barsoom and partly
- by word of mouth that we were upon the trail of those who had
- recently occupied the boat through which we had just passed.
-
- A soft purr, like that of a great cat, indicated that Woola
- understood, and then, with a word to him to follow, I turned to the
- right along the ledge, but scarcely had I done so than I felt his
- mighty fangs tugging at my leathern harness.
-
- As I turned to discover the cause of his act he continued to pull
- me steadily in the opposite direction, nor would he desist until I
- had turned about and indicated that I would follow him voluntarily.
-
- Never had I known him to be in error in a matter of tracking,
- so it was with a feeling of entire security that I moved cautiously
- in the huge beast's wake. Through Cimmerian darkness he moved
- along the narrow ledge beside the boiling rapids.
-
- As we advanced, the way led from beneath the overhanging
- cliffs out into a dim light, and then it was that I saw that the
- trail had been cut from the living rock, and that it ran up along
- the river's side beyond the rapids.
-
- For hours we followed the dark and gloomy river farther and
- farther into the bowels of Mars. From the direction and
- distance I knew that we must be well beneath the Valley Dor,
- and possibly beneath the Sea of Omean as well--it could not
- be much farther now to the Temple of the Sun.
-
- Even as my mind framed the thought, Woola halted suddenly
- before a narrow, arched doorway in the cliff by the trail's side.
- Quickly he crouched back away from the entrance, at the same time
- turning his eyes toward me.
-
- Words could not have more plainly told me that danger of some
- sort lay near by, and so I pressed quietly forward to his side,
- and passing him looked into the aperture at our right.
-
- Before me was a fair-sized chamber that, from its appointments,
- I knew must have at one time been a guardroom. There were racks
- for weapons, and slightly raised platforms for the sleeping silks
- and furs of the warriors, but now its only occupants were two of
- the therns who had been of the party with Thurid and Matai Shang.
-
- The men were in earnest conversation, and from their tones it was
- apparent that they were entirely unaware that they had listeners.
-
- "I tell you," one of them was saying, "I do not trust the black one.
- There was no necessity for leaving us here to guard the way.
- Against what, pray, should we guard this long-forgotten,
- abysmal path? It was but a ruse to divide our numbers.
-
- "He will have Matai Shang leave others elsewhere on some
- pretext or other, and then at last he will fall upon us with his
- confederates and slay us all."
-
- "I believe you, Lakor," replied the other, "there can never be
- aught else than deadly hatred between thern and First Born. And
- what think you of the ridiculous matter of the light? `Let the
- light shine with the intensity of three radium units for fifty
- tals, and for one xat let it shine with the intensity of one radium
- unit, and then for twenty-five tals with nine units.' Those were
- his very words, and to think that wise old Matai Shang should
- listen to such foolishness."
-
- "Indeed, it is silly," replied Lakor. "It will open nothing
- other than the way to a quick death for us all. He had to make
- some answer when Matai Shang asked him flatly what he should do
- when he came to the Temple of the Sun, and so he made his answer
- quickly from his imagination--I would wager a hekkador's diadem
- that he could not now repeat it himself."
-
- "Let us not remain here longer, Lakor," spoke the other thern.
- "Perchance if we hasten after them we may come in time to rescue
- Matai Shang, and wreak our own vengeance upon the black dator.
- What say you?"
-
- "Never in a long life," answered Lakor, "have I disobeyed a
- single command of the Father of Therns. I shall stay here
- until I rot if he does not return to bid me elsewhere."
-
- Lakor's companion shook his head.
-
- "You are my superior," he said; "I cannot do other than you
- sanction, though I still believe that we are foolish to remain."
-
- I, too, thought that they were foolish to remain, for I saw
- from Woola's actions that the trail led through the room where the
- two therns held guard. I had no reason to harbor any considerable
- love for this race of self-deified demons, yet I would have passed
- them by were it possible without molesting them.
-
- It was worth trying anyway, for a fight might delay us considerably,
- or even put an end entirely to my search--better men than I have
- gone down before fighters of meaner ability than that possessed
- by the fierce thern warriors.
-
- Signaling Woola to heel I stepped suddenly into the room before the
- two men. At sight of me their long-swords flashed from the harness
- at their sides, but I raised my hand in a gesture of restraint.
-
- "I seek Thurid, the black dator," I said. "My quarrel is with him,
- not with you. Let me pass then in peace, for if I mistake not he is
- as much your enemy as mine, and you can have no cause to protect him."
-
- They lowered their swords and Lakor spoke.
-
- "I know not whom you may be, with the white skin of a thern
- and the black hair of a red man; but were it only Thurid whose
- safety were at stake you might pass, and welcome, in so far as we
- be concerned.
-
- "Tell us who you be, and what mission calls you to this unknown
- world beneath the Valley Dor, then maybe we can see our way to
- let you pass upon the errand which we should like to undertake
- would our orders permit."
-
- I was surprised that neither of them had recognized me, for I
- thought that I was quite sufficiently well known either by
- personal experience or reputation to every thern upon Barsoom as
- to make my identity immediately apparent in any part of the planet.
- In fact, I was the only white man upon Mars whose hair was black
- and whose eyes were gray, with the exception of my son, Carthoris.
-
- To reveal my identity might be to precipitate an attack, for every
- thern upon Barsoom knew that to me they owed the fall of their
- age-old spiritual supremacy. On the other hand my reputation as a
- fighting man might be sufficient to pass me by these two were their
- livers not of the right complexion to welcome a battle to the death.
-
- To be quite candid I did not attempt to delude myself with any
- such sophistry, since I knew well that upon war-like Mars there
- are few cowards, and that every man, whether prince, priest,
- or peasant, glories in deadly strife. And so I gripped my
- long-sword the tighter as I replied to Lakor.
-
- "I believe that you will see the wisdom of permitting me to
- pass unmolested," I said, "for it would avail you nothing to die
- uselessly in the rocky bowels of Barsoom merely to protect a
- hereditary enemy, such as Thurid, Dator of the First Born.
-
- "That you shall die should you elect to oppose me is evidenced by
- the moldering corpses of all the many great Barsoomian warriors who
- have gone down beneath this blade--I am John Carter, Prince of Helium."
-
- For a moment that name seemed to paralyze the two men; but only
- for a moment, and then the younger of them, with a vile name
- upon his lips, rushed toward me with ready sword.
-
- He had been standing a little behind his companion, Lakor,
- during our parley, and now, ere he could engage me, the older man
- grasped his harness and drew him back.
-
- "Hold!" commanded Lakor. "There will be plenty of time to
- fight if we find it wise to fight at all. There be good reasons
- why every thern upon Barsoom should yearn to spill the blood of
- the blasphemer, the sacrilegist; but let us mix wisdom with our
- righteous hate. The Prince of Helium is bound upon an errand which
- we ourselves, but a moment since, were wishing that we might undertake.
-
- "Let him go then and slay the black. When he returns we shall
- still be here to bar his way to the outer world, and thus we shall
- have rid ourselves of two enemies, nor have incurred the
- displeasure of the Father of Therns."
-
- As he spoke I could not but note the crafty glint in his evil eyes,
- and while I saw the apparent logic of his reasoning I felt,
- subconsciously perhaps, that his words did but veil some sinister
- intent. The other thern turned toward him in evident surprise,
- but when Lakor had whispered a few brief words into his ear he, too,
- drew back and nodded acquiescence to his superior's suggestion.
-
- "Proceed, John Carter," said Lakor; "but know that if Thurid
- does not lay you low there will be those awaiting your return
- who will see that you never pass again into the sunlight of
- the upper world. Go!"
-
- During our conversation Woola had been growling and bristling
- close to my side. Occasionally he would look up into my face with
- a low, pleading whine, as though begging for the word that would
- send him headlong at the bare throats before him. He, too, sensed
- the villainy behind the smooth words.
-
- Beyond the therns several doorways opened off the guardroom,
- and toward the one upon the extreme right Lakor motioned.
-
- "That way leads to Thurid," he said.
-
- But when I would have called Woola to follow me there the
- beast whined and held back, and at last ran quickly to the first
- opening at the left, where he stood emitting his coughing bark,
- as though urging me to follow him upon the right way.
-
- I turned a questioning look upon Lakor.
-
- "The brute is seldom wrong," I said, "and while I do not doubt
- your superior knowledge, Thern, I think that I shall do well to
- listen to the voice of instinct that is backed by love and loyalty."
-
- As I spoke I smiled grimly that he might know without words
- that I distrusted him.
-
- "As you will," the fellow replied with a shrug. "In the end
- it shall be all the same."
-
- I turned and followed Woola into the left-hand passage, and
- though my back was toward my enemies, my ears were on the alert;
- yet I heard no sound of pursuit. The passageway was dimly lighted
- by occasional radium bulbs, the universal lighting medium of Barsoom.
-
- These same lamps may have been doing continuous duty in these
- subterranean chambers for ages, since they require no attention
- and are so compounded that they give off but the minutest of
- their substance in the generation of years of luminosity.
-
- We had proceeded for but a short distance when we commenced to pass
- the mouths of diverging corridors, but not once did Woola hesitate.
- It was at the opening to one of these corridors upon my right that
- I presently heard a sound that spoke more plainly to John Carter,
- fighting man, than could the words of my mother tongue--it was
- the clank of metal--the metal of a warrior's harness--and it
- came from a little distance up the corridor upon my right.
-
- Woola heard it, too, and like a flash he had wheeled and stood
- facing the threatened danger, his mane all abristle and all
- his rows of glistening fangs bared by snarling, backdrawn lips.
- With a gesture I silenced him, and together we drew aside into
- another corridor a few paces farther on.
-
- Here we waited; nor did we have long to wait, for presently we
- saw the shadows of two men fall upon the floor of the main corridor
- athwart the doorway of our hiding place. Very cautiously they were
- moving now--the accidental clank that had alarmed me was not repeated.
-
- Presently they came opposite our station; nor was I surprised to
- see that the two were Lakor and his companion of the guardroom.
-
- They walked very softly, and in the right hand of each gleamed
- a keen long-sword. They halted quite close to the entrance of
- our retreat, whispering to each other.
-
- "Can it be that we have distanced them already?" said Lakor.
-
- "Either that or the beast has led the man upon a wrong trail,"
- replied the other, "for the way which we took is by far the shorter
- to this point--for him who knows it. John Carter would have found
- it a short road to death had he taken it as you suggested to him."
-
- "Yes," said Lakor, "no amount of fighting ability would have
- saved him from the pivoted flagstone. He surely would have
- stepped upon it, and by now, if the pit beneath it has a bottom,
- which Thurid denies, he should have been rapidly approaching it.
- Curses on that calot of his that warned him toward the safer avenue!"
-
- "There be other dangers ahead of him, though," spoke Lakor's
- fellow, "which he may not so easily escape--should he succeed
- in escaping our two good swords. Consider, for example, what
- chance he will have, coming unexpectedly into the chamber of----"
-
- I would have given much to have heard the balance of that conversation
- that I might have been warned of the perils that lay ahead,
- but fate intervened, and just at the very instant of all other
- instants that I would not have elected to do it, I sneezed.
-
-
-
- THE TEMPLE OF THE SUN
-
-
- There was nothing for it now other than to fight; nor did I
- have any advantage as I sprang, sword in hand, into the corridor
- before the two therns, for my untimely sneeze had warned them of
- my presence and they were ready for me.
-
- There were no words, for they would have been a waste of breath.
- The very presence of the two proclaimed their treachery. That
- they were following to fall upon me unawares was all too plain,
- and they, of course, must have known that I understood their plan.
-
- In an instant I was engaged with both, and though I loathe the
- very name of thern, I must in all fairness admit that they are
- mighty swordsmen; and these two were no exception, unless it were
- that they were even more skilled and fearless than the average
- among their race.
-
- While it lasted it was indeed as joyous a conflict as I ever
- had experienced. Twice at least I saved my breast from the mortal
- thrust of piercing steel only by the wondrous agility with which my
- earthly muscles endow me under the conditions of lesser gravity and
- air pressure upon Mars.
-
- Yet even so I came near to tasting death that day in the gloomy
- corridor beneath Mars's southern pole, for Lakor played a
- trick upon me that in all my experience of fighting upon two
- planets I never before had witnessed the like of.
-
- The other thern was engaging me at the time, and I was forcing
- him back--touching him here and there with my point until he was
- bleeding from a dozen wounds, yet not being able to penetrate his
- marvelous guard to reach a vulnerable spot for the brief instant
- that would have been sufficient to send him to his ancestors.
-
- It was then that Lakor quickly unslung a belt from his harness,
- and as I stepped back to parry a wicked thrust he lashed one end
- of it about my left ankle so that it wound there for an instant,
- while he jerked suddenly upon the other end, throwing me
- heavily upon my back.
-
- Then, like leaping panthers, they were upon me; but they had
- reckoned without Woola, and before ever a blade touched me,
- a roaring embodiment of a thousand demons hurtled above my
- prostrate form and my loyal Martian calot was upon them.
-
- Imagine, if you can, a huge grizzly with ten legs armed with
- mighty talons and an enormous froglike mouth splitting his head
- from ear to ear, exposing three rows of long, white tusks. Then
- endow this creature of your imagination with the agility and
- ferocity of a half-starved Bengal tiger and the strength of a span
- of bulls, and you will have some faint conception of Woola in action.
-
- Before I could call him off he had crushed Lakor into a jelly with
- a single blow of one mighty paw, and had literally torn the other
- thern to ribbons; yet when I spoke to him sharply he cowed sheepishly
- as though he had done a thing to deserve censure and chastisement.
-
- Never had I had the heart to punish Woola during the long years that
- had passed since that first day upon Mars when the green jed of the
- Tharks had placed him on guard over me, and I had won his love and
- loyalty from the cruel and loveless masters of his former life,
- yet I believe he would have submitted to any cruelty that I might
- have inflicted upon him, so wondrous was his affection for me.
-
- The diadem in the center of the circlet of gold upon the brow of
- Lakor proclaimed him a Holy Thern, while his companion, not thus
- adorned, was a lesser thern, though from his harness I gleaned that
- he had reached the Ninth Cycle, which is but one below that of the
- Holy Therns.
-
- As I stood for a moment looking at the gruesome havoc Woola
- had wrought, there recurred to me the memory of that other occasion
- upon which I had masqueraded in the wig, diadem, and harness of
- Sator Throg, the Holy Thern whom Thuvia of Ptarth had slain, and
- now it occurred to me that it might prove of worth to utilize
- Lakor's trappings for the same purpose.
-
- A moment later I had torn his yellow wig from his bald pate
- and transferred it and the circlet, as well as all his harness, to
- my own person.
-
- Woola did not approve of the metamorphosis. He sniffed at me
- and growled ominously, but when I spoke to him and patted his huge
- head he at length became reconciled to the change, and at my
- command trotted off along the corridor in the direction we had
- been going when our progress had been interrupted by the therns.
-
- We moved cautiously now, warned by the fragment of conversation
- I had overheard. I kept abreast of Woola that we might have
- the benefit of all our eyes for what might appear suddenly
- ahead to menace us, and well it was that we were forewarned.
-
- At the bottom of a flight of narrow steps the corridor turned
- sharply back upon itself, immediately making another turn in the
- original direction, so that at that point it formed a perfect
- letter S, the top leg of which debouched suddenly into a large
- chamber, illy lighted, and the floor of which was completely
- covered by venomous snakes and loathsome reptiles.
-
- To have attempted to cross that floor would have been to court
- instant death, and for a moment I was almost completely discouraged.
- Then it occurred to me that Thurid and Matai Shang with their party
- must have crossed it, and so there was a way.
-
- Had it not been for the fortunate accident by which I overheard
- even so small a portion of the therns' conversation we should
- have blundered at least a step or two into that wriggling
- mass of destruction, and a single step would have been all-
- sufficient to have sealed our doom.
-
- These were the only reptiles I had ever seen upon Barsoom,
- but I knew from their similarity to the fossilized remains of
- supposedly extinct species I had seen in the museums of Helium
- that they comprised many of the known prehistoric reptilian genera,
- as well as others undiscovered.
-
- A more hideous aggregation of monsters had never before assailed
- my vision. It would be futile to attempt to describe them
- to Earth men, since substance is the only thing which they possess
- in common with any creature of the past or present with which you
- are familiar--even their venom is of an unearthly virulence that,
- by comparison, would make the cobra de capello seem quite as
- harmless as an angleworm.
-
- As they spied me there was a concerted rush by those nearest
- the entrance where we stood, but a line of radium bulbs inset along
- the threshold of their chamber brought them to a sudden halt--
- evidently they dared not cross that line of light.
-
- I had been quite sure that they would not venture beyond the
- room in which I had discovered them, though I had not guessed at
- what deterred them. The simple fact that we had found no reptiles
- in the corridor through which we had just come was sufficient
- assurance that they did not venture there.
-
- I drew Woola out of harm's way, and then began a careful survey
- of as much of the Chamber of Reptiles as I could see from where
- I stood. As my eyes became accustomed to the dim light of its
- interior I gradually made out a low gallery at the far end of
- the apartment from which opened several exits.
-
- Coming as close to the threshold as I dared, I followed this
- gallery with my eyes, discovering that it circled the room as far
- as I could see. Then I glanced above me along the upper edge of
- the entrance to which we had come, and there, to my delight, I saw
- an end of the gallery not a foot above my head. In an instant I
- had leaped to it and called Woola after me.
-
- Here there were no reptiles--the way was clear to the opposite
- side of the hideous chamber--and a moment later Woola and I dropped
- down to safety in the corridor beyond.
-
- Not ten minutes later we came into a vast circular apartment
- of white marble, the walls of which were inlaid with gold in the
- strange hieroglyphics of the First Born.
-
- From the high dome of this mighty apartment a huge circular column
- extended to the floor, and as I watched I saw that it slowly revolved.
-
- I had reached the base of the Temple of the Sun!
-
- Somewhere above me lay Dejah Thoris, and with her were Phaidor,
- daughter of Matai Shang, and Thuvia of Ptarth. But how to
- reach them, now that I had found the only vulnerable spot
- in their mighty prison, was still a baffling riddle.
-
- Slowly I circled the great shaft, looking for a means of ingress.
- Part way around I found a tiny radium flash torch, and as
- I examined it in mild curiosity as to its presence there in this
- almost inaccessible and unknown spot, I came suddenly upon the
- insignia of the house of Thurid jewel-inset in its metal case.
-
- I am upon the right trail, I thought, as I slipped the bauble
- into the pocket-pouch which hung from my harness. Then I continued
- my search for the entrance, which I knew must be somewhere about;
- nor had I long to search, for almost immediately thereafter I came
- upon a small door so cunningly inlaid in the shaft's base that it
- might have passed unnoticed by a less keen or careful observer.
-
- There was the door that would lead me within the prison, but
- where was the means to open it? No button or lock were visible.
- Again and again I went carefully over every square inch of its
- surface, but the most that I could find was a tiny pinhole a little
- above and to the right of the door's center--a pinhole that seemed
- only an accident of manufacture or an imperfection of material.
-
- Into this minute aperture I attempted to peer, but whether it
- was but a fraction of an inch deep or passed completely through
- the door I could not tell--at least no light showed beyond it.
- I put my ear to it next and listened, but again my efforts
- brought negligible results.
-
- During these experiments Woola had been standing at my side
- gazing intently at the door, and as my glance fell upon him it
- occurred to me to test the correctness of my hypothesis, that this
- portal had been the means of ingress to the temple used by Thurid,
- the black dator, and Matai Shang, Father of Therns.
-
- Turning away abruptly, I called to him to follow me. For a
- moment he hesitated, and then leaped after me, whining and tugging
- at my harness to draw me back. I walked on, however, some distance
- from the door before I let him have his way, that I might see
- precisely what he would do. Then I permitted him to lead me
- wherever he would.
-
- Straight back to that baffling portal he dragged me, again
- taking up his position facing the blank stone, gazing straight at
- its shining surface. For an hour I worked to solve the mystery of
- the combination that would open the way before me.
-
- Carefully I recalled every circumstance of my pursuit of Thurid,
- and my conclusion was identical with my original belief--that
- Thurid had come this way without other assistance than his own
- knowledge and passed through the door that barred my progress,
- unaided from within. But how had he accomplished it?
-
- I recalled the incident of the Chamber of Mystery in the
- Golden Cliffs that time I had freed Thuvia of Ptarth from the
- dungeon of the therns, and she had taken a slender, needle-like
- key from the keyring of her dead jailer to open the door leading
- back into the Chamber of Mystery where Tars Tarkas fought for his
- life with the great banths. Such a tiny keyhole as now defied me
- had opened the way to the intricate lock in that other door.
-
- Hastily I dumped the contents of my pocket-pouch upon the ground
- before me. Could I but find a slender bit of steel I might yet
- fashion a key that would give me ingress to the temple prison.
-
- As I examined the heterogeneous collection of odds and ends that
- is always to be found in the pocket-pouch of a Martian warrior my
- hand fell upon the emblazoned radium flash torch of the black dator.
-
- As I was about to lay the thing aside as of no value in my
- present predicament my eyes chanced upon a few strange characters
- roughly and freshly scratched upon the soft gold of the case.
-
- Casual curiosity prompted me to decipher them, but what I read
- carried no immediate meaning to my mind. There were three sets of
- characters, one below another:
-
-
- 3 |--| 50 T
- 1 |--| 1 X
- 9 |--| 25 T
-
-
- For only an instant my curiosity was piqued, and then I
- replaced the torch in my pocket-pouch, but my fingers had not
- unclasped from it when there rushed to my memory the recollection
- of the conversation between Lakor and his companion when the lesser
- thern had quoted the words of Thurid and scoffed at them: "And what
- think you of the ridiculous matter of the light? Let the light
- shine with the intensity of three radium units for fifty tals"--ah,
- there was the first line of characters upon the torch's metal case--
- 3--50 T; "and for one xat let it shine with the intensity of one
- radium unit"--there was the second line; "and then for twenty-five
- tals with nine units."
-
- The formula was complete; but--what did it mean?
-
- I thought I knew, and, seizing a powerful magnifying glass
- from the litter of my pocket-pouch, I applied myself to a careful
- examination of the marble immediately about the pinhole in the door.
- I could have cried aloud in exultation when my scrutiny
- disclosed the almost invisible incrustation of particles of
- carbonized electrons which are thrown off by these Martian torches.
-
- It was evident that for countless ages radium torches had been
- applied to this pinhole, and for what purpose there could be but a
- single answer--the mechanism of the lock was actuated by light
- rays; and I, John Carter, Prince of Helium, held the combination in
- my hand--scratched by the hand of my enemy upon his own torch case.
-
- In a cylindrical bracelet of gold about my wrist was my Barsoomian
- chronometer--a delicate instrument that records the tals and xats
- and zodes of Martian time, presenting them to view beneath
- a strong crystal much after the manner of an earthly odometer.
-
- Timing my operations carefully, I held the torch to the small
- aperture in the door, regulating the intensity of the light by
- means of the thumb-lever upon the side of the case.
-
- For fifty tals I let three units of light shine full in the
- pinhole, then one unit for one xat, and for twenty-five tals nine
- units. Those last twenty-five tals were the longest twenty-five
- seconds of my life. Would the lock click at the end of those
- seemingly interminable intervals of time?
-
- Twenty-three! Twenty-four! Twenty-five!
-
- I shut off the light with a snap. For seven tals I waited--
- there had been no appreciable effect upon the lock's mechanism.
- Could it be that my theory was entirely wrong?
-
- Hold! Had the nervous strain resulted in a hallucination, or
- did the door really move? Slowly the solid stone sank noiselessly
- back into the wall--there was no hallucination here.
-
- Back and back it slid for ten feet until it had disclosed at its
- right a narrow doorway leading into a dark and narrow corridor
- that paralleled the outer wall. Scarcely was the entrance
- uncovered than Woola and I had leaped through--then the door
- slipped quietly back into place.
-
- Down the corridor at some distance I saw the faint reflection
- of a light, and toward this we made our way. At the point where
- the light shone was a sharp turn, and a little distance beyond this
- a brilliantly lighted chamber.
-
- Here we discovered a spiral stairway leading up from the
- center of the circular room.
-
- Immediately I knew that we had reached the center of the base
- of the Temple of the Sun--the spiral runway led upward past the
- inner walls of the prison cells. Somewhere above me was Dejah
- Thoris, unless Thurid and Matai Shang had already succeeded in
- stealing her.
-
- We had scarcely started up the runway when Woola suddenly
- displayed the wildest excitement. He leaped back and forth,
- snapping at my legs and harness, until I thought that he was mad,
- and finally when I pushed him from me and started once more to
- ascend he grasped my sword arm between his jaws and dragged me back.
-
- No amount of scolding or cuffing would suffice to make him
- release me, and I was entirely at the mercy of his brute strength
- unless I cared to use my dagger upon him with my left hand; but,
- mad or no, I had not the heart to run the sharp blade into that
- faithful body.
-
- Down into the chamber he dragged me, and across it to the side
- opposite that at which we had entered. Here was another doorway
- leading into a corridor which ran directly down a steep incline.
- Without a moment's hesitation Woola jerked me along this rocky passage.
-
- Presently he stopped and released me, standing between me and
- the way we had come, looking up into my face as though to ask if I
- would now follow him voluntarily or if he must still resort to force.
-
- Looking ruefully at the marks of his great teeth upon my bare arm
- I decided to do as he seemed to wish me to do. After all, his strange
- instinct might be more dependable than my faulty human judgment.
-
- And well it was that I had been forced to follow him. But a
- short distance from the circular chamber we came suddenly into a
- brilliantly lighted labyrinth of crystal glass partitioned passages.
-
- At first I thought it was one vast, unbroken chamber, so clear
- and transparent were the walls of the winding corridors, but after
- I had nearly brained myself a couple of times by attempting to pass
- through solid vitreous walls I went more carefully.
-
- We had proceeded but a few yards along the corridor that had
- given us entrance to this strange maze when Woola gave mouth to
- a most frightful roar, at the same time dashing against the clear
- partition at our left.
-
- The resounding echoes of that fearsome cry were still
- reverberating through the subterranean chambers when I saw the
- thing that had startled it from the faithful beast.
-
- Far in the distance, dimly through the many thicknesses of
- intervening crystal, as in a haze that made them seem unreal and
- ghostly, I discerned the figures of eight people--three females and
- five men.
-
- At the same instant, evidently startled by Woola's fierce cry,
- they halted and looked about. Then, of a sudden, one of them, a
- woman, held her arms out toward me, and even at that great distance
- I could see that her lips moved--it was Dejah Thoris, my ever
- beautiful and ever youthful Princess of Helium.
-
- With her were Thuvia of Ptarth, Phaidor, daughter of Matai Shang,
- and Thurid, and the Father of Therns, and the three lesser therns
- that had accompanied them.
-
- Thurid shook his fist at me, and then two of the therns grasped
- Dejah Thoris and Thuvia roughly by their arms and hurried them on.
- A moment later they had disappeared into a stone corridor beyond
- the labyrinth of glass.
-
- They say that love is blind; but so great a love as that of Dejah Thoris
- that knew me even beneath the thern disguise I wore and across the
- misty vista of that crystal maze must indeed be far from blind.
-
-
-
- THE SECRET TOWER
-
-
- I have no stomach to narrate the monotonous events of the
- tedious days that Woola and I spent ferreting our way across the
- labyrinth of glass, through the dark and devious ways beyond that
- led beneath the Valley Dor and Golden Cliffs to emerge at last upon
- the flank of the Otz Mountains just above the Valley of Lost Souls--
- that pitiful purgatory peopled by the poor unfortunates who dare
- not continue their abandoned pilgrimage to Dor, or return to the
- various lands of the outer world from whence they came.
-
- Here the trail of Dejah Thoris' abductors led along the mountains' base,
- across steep and rugged ravines, by the side of appalling precipices,
- and sometimes out into the valley, where we found fighting aplenty
- with the members of the various tribes that make up the population
- of this vale of hopelessness.
-
- But through it all we came at last to where the way led up a
- narrow gorge that grew steeper and more impracticable at every step
- until before us loomed a mighty fortress buried beneath the side of
- an overhanging cliff.
-
- Here was the secret hiding place of Matai Shang, Father of Therns.
- Here, surrounded by a handful of the faithful, the hekkador of the
- ancient faith, who had once been served by millions of vassals
- and dependents, dispensed the spiritual words among the half dozen
- nations of Barsoom that still clung tenaciously to their false
- and discredited religion.
-
- Darkness was just falling as we came in sight of the seemingly
- impregnable walls of this mountain stronghold, and lest we be
- seen I drew back with Woola behind a jutting granite promontory,
- into a clump of the hardy, purple scrub that thrives upon the
- barren sides of Otz.
-
- Here we lay until the quick transition from daylight to darkness
- had passed. Then I crept out to approach the fortress walls
- in search of a way within.
-
- Either through carelessness or over-confidence in the supposed
- inaccessibility of their hiding place, the triple-barred gate
- stood ajar. Beyond were a handful of guards, laughing and
- talking over one of their incomprehensible Barsoomian games.
-
- I saw that none of the guardsmen had been of the party that
- accompanied Thurid and Matai Shang; and so, relying entirely upon
- my disguise, I walked boldly through the gateway and up to the
- thern guard.
-
- The men stopped their game and looked up at me, but there was no
- sign of suspicion. Similarly they looked at Woola, growling at
- my heel.
-
- "Kaor!" I said in true Martian greeting, and the warriors
- arose and saluted me. "I have but just found my way hither from
- the Golden Cliffs," I continued, "and seek audience with the
- hekkador, Matai Shang, Father of Therns. Where may he be found?"
-
- "Follow me," said one of the guard, and, turning, led me
- across the outer courtyard toward a second buttressed wall.
-
- Why the apparent ease with which I seemingly deceived them did not
- rouse my suspicions I know not, unless it was that my mind was still
- so full of that fleeting glimpse of my beloved princess that there
- was room in it for naught else. Be that as it may, the fact is that
- I marched buoyantly behind my guide straight into the jaws of death.
-
- Afterward I learned that thern spies had been aware of my
- coming for hours before I reached the hidden fortress.
-
- The gate had been purposely left ajar to tempt me on. The guards had
- been schooled well in their part of the conspiracy; and I, more like
- a schoolboy than a seasoned warrior, ran headlong into the trap.
-
- At the far side of the outer court a narrow door let into the
- angle made by one of the buttresses with the wall. Here my guide
- produced a key and opened the way within; then, stepping back, he
- motioned me to enter.
-
- "Matai Shang is in the temple court beyond," he said; and as Woola
- and I passed through, the fellow closed the door quickly upon us.
-
- The nasty laugh that came to my ears through the heavy
- planking of the door after the lock clicked was my first intimation
- that all was not as it should be.
-
- I found myself in a small, circular chamber within the buttress.
- Before me a door opened, presumably, upon the inner court beyond.
- For a moment I hesitated, all my suspicions now suddenly,
- though tardily, aroused; then, with a shrug of my shoulders,
- I opened the door and stepped out into the glare of torches
- that lighted the inner court.
-
- Directly opposite me a massive tower rose to a height of three
- hundred feet. It was of the strangely beautiful modern Barsoomian
- style of architecture, its entire surface hand carved in bold
- relief with intricate and fanciful designs. Thirty feet above the
- courtyard and overlooking it was a broad balcony, and there,
- indeed, was Matai Shang, and with him were Thurid and Phaidor,
- Thuvia, and Dejah Thoris--the last two heavily ironed. A handful
- of thern warriors stood just behind the little party.
-
- As I entered the enclosure the eyes of those in the balcony
- were full upon me.
-
- An ugly smile distorted the cruel lips of Matai Shang. Thurid
- hurled a taunt at me and placed a familiar hand upon the shoulder
- of my princess. Like a tigress she turned upon him, striking the
- beast a heavy blow with the manacles upon her wrist.
-
- He would have struck back had not Matai Shang interfered, and then
- I saw that the two men were not over-friendly; for the manner
- of the thern was arrogant and domineering as he made it plain to
- the First Born that the Princess of Helium was the personal
- property of the Father of Therns. And Thurid's bearing toward
- the ancient hekkador savored not at all of liking or respect.
-
- When the altercation in the balcony had subsided Matai Shang
- turned again to me.
-
- "Earth man," he cried, "you have earned a more ignoble death
- than now lies within our weakened power to inflict upon you;
- but that the death you die tonight may be doubly bitter, know
- you that when you have passed, your widow becomes the wife of
- Matai Shang, Hekkador of the Holy Therns, for a Martian year.
-
- "At the end of that time, as you know, she shall be discarded,
- as is the law among us, but not, as is usual, to lead a quiet and
- honored life as high priestess of some hallowed shrine. Instead,
- Dejah Thoris, Princess of Helium, shall become the plaything of my
- lieutenants--perhaps of thy most hated enemy, Thurid, the black dator."
-
- As he ceased speaking he awaited in silence evidently for some
- outbreak of rage upon my part--something that would have
- added to the spice of his revenge. But I did not give him the
- satisfaction that he craved.
-
- Instead, I did the one thing of all others that might rouse his
- anger and increase his hatred of me; for I knew that if I died
- Dejah Thoris, too, would find a way to die before they could
- heap further tortures or indignities upon her.
-
- Of all the holy of holies which the thern venerates and worships none
- is more revered than the yellow wig which covers his bald pate,
- and next thereto comes the circlet of gold and the great diadem,
- whose scintillant rays mark the attainment of the Tenth Cycle.
-
- And, knowing this, I removed the wig and circlet from my head,
- tossing them carelessly upon the flagging of the court. Then I
- wiped my feet upon the yellow tresses; and as a groan of rage arose
- from the balcony I spat full upon the holy diadem.
-
- Matai Shang went livid with anger, but upon the lips of Thurid
- I could see a grim smile of amusement, for to him these things were
- not holy; so, lest he should derive too much amusement from my act,
- I cried: "And thus did I with the holies of Issus, Goddess of Life
- Eternal, ere I threw Issus herself to the mob that once had
- worshiped her, to be torn to pieces in her own temple."
-
- That put an end to Thurid's grinning, for he had been high in
- the favor of Issus.
-
- "Let us have an end to this blaspheming!" he cried, turning to
- the Father of Therns.
-
- Matai Shang rose and, leaning over the edge of the balcony,
- gave voice to the weird call that I had heard from the lips of the
- priests upon the tiny balcony upon the face of the Golden Cliffs
- overlooking the Valley Dor, when, in times past, they called the
- fearsome white apes and the hideous plant men to the feast of
- victims floating down the broad bosom of the mysterious Iss toward
- the silian-infested waters of the Lost Sea of Korus.
- "Let loose the death!" he cried, and immediately a dozen
- doors in the base of the tower swung open, and a dozen grim
- and terrible banths sprang into the arena.
-
- This was not the first time that I had faced the ferocious
- Barsoomian lion, but never had I been pitted, single-handed,
- against a full dozen of them. Even with the assistance of
- the fierce Woola, there could be but a single outcome to so
- unequal a struggle.
-
- For a moment the beasts hesitated beneath the brilliant glare
- of the torches; but presently their eyes, becoming accustomed to
- the light, fell upon Woola and me, and with bristling manes and
- deep-throated roars they advanced, lashing their tawny sides with
- their powerful tails.
-
- In the brief interval of life that was left me I shot a last,
- parting glance toward my Dejah Thoris. Her beautiful face was set
- in an expression of horror; and as my eyes met hers she extended
- both arms toward me as, struggling with the guards who now held her,
- she endeavored to cast herself from the balcony into the pit beneath,
- that she might share my death with me. Then, as the banths were about
- to close upon me, she turned and buried her dear face in her arms.
-
- Suddenly my attention was drawn toward Thuvia of Ptarth.
- The beautiful girl was leaning far over the edge of the balcony,
- her eyes bright with excitement.
-
- In another instant the banths would be upon me, but I could
- not force my gaze from the features of the red girl, for I knew
- that her expression meant anything but the enjoyment of the grim
- tragedy that would so soon be enacted below her; there was some
- deeper, hidden meaning which I sought to solve.
-
- For an instant I thought of relying on my earthly muscles and
- agility to escape the banths and reach the balcony, which I could
- easily have done, but I could not bring myself to desert the
- faithful Woola and leave him to die alone beneath the cruel fangs
- of the hungry banths; that is not the way upon Barsoom, nor was it
- ever the way of John Carter.
-
- Then the secret of Thuvia's excitement became apparent as from
- her lips there issued the purring sound I had heard once before;
- that time that, within the Golden Cliffs, she called the fierce
- banths about her and led them as a shepherdess might lead her flock
- of meek and harmless sheep.
-
- At the first note of that soothing sound the banths halted in
- their tracks, and every fierce head went high as the beasts sought
- the origin of the familiar call. Presently they discovered the red
- girl in the balcony above them, and, turning, roared out their
- recognition and their greeting.
-
- Guards sprang to drag Thuvia away, but ere they had succeeded
- she had hurled a volley of commands at the listening brutes,
- and as one they turned and marched back into their dens.
-
- "You need not fear them now, John Carter!" cried Thuvia,
- before they could silence her. "Those banths will never harm
- you now, nor Woola, either."
-
- It was all I cared to know. There was naught to keep me from
- that balcony now, and with a long, running leap I sprang far aloft
- until my hands grasped its lowest sill.
-
- In an instant all was wild confusion. Matai Shang shrank back.
- Thurid sprang forward with drawn sword to cut me down.
-
- Again Dejah Thoris wielded her heavy irons and fought him back.
- Then Matai Shang grasped her about the waist and dragged her
- away through a door leading within the tower.
-
- For an instant Thurid hesitated, and then, as though fearing
- that the Father of Therns would escape him with the Princess of
- Helium, he, too, dashed from the balcony in their wake.
-
- Phaidor alone retained her presence of mind. Two of the guards
- she ordered to bear away Thuvia of Ptarth; the others she commanded
- to remain and prevent me from following. Then she turned toward me.
-
- "John Carter," she cried, "for the last time I offer you the
- love of Phaidor, daughter of the Holy Hekkador. Accept and your
- princess shall be returned to the court of her grandfather, and you
- shall live in peace and happiness. Refuse and the fate that my
- father has threatened shall fall upon Dejah Thoris.
-
- "You cannot save her now, for by this time they have reached a place
- where even you may not follow. Refuse and naught can save you;
- for, though the way to the last stronghold of the Holy Therns
- was made easy for you, the way hence hath been made impossible.
- What say you?"
-
- "You knew my answer, Phaidor," I replied, "before ever you spoke.
- Make way," I cried to the guards, "for John Carter, Prince of
- Helium, would pass!"
-
- With that I leaped over the low baluster that surrounded the
- balcony, and with drawn long-sword faced my enemies.
-
- There were three of them; but Phaidor must have guessed what the
- outcome of the battle would be, for she turned and fled from the
- balcony the moment she saw that I would have none of her proposition.
-
- The three guardsmen did not wait for my attack. Instead, they
- rushed me--the three of them simultaneously; and it was that which
- gave me an advantage, for they fouled one another in the narrow
- precincts of the balcony, so that the foremost of them stumbled
- full upon my blade at the first onslaught.
-
- The red stain upon my point roused to its full the old blood-lust
- of the fighting man that has ever been so strong within my breast,
- so that my blade flew through the air with a swiftness and deadly
- accuracy that threw the two remaining therns into wild despair.
-
- When at last the sharp steel found the heart of one of them
- the other turned to flee, and, guessing that his steps would lead
- him along the way taken by those I sought, I let him keep ever far
- enough ahead to think that he was safely escaping my sword.
-
- Through several inner chambers he raced until he came to a
- spiral runway. Up this he dashed, I in close pursuit. At the
- upper end we came out into a small chamber, the walls of which were
- plank except for a single window overlooking the slopes of Otz and
- the Valley of Lost Souls beyond.
-
- Here the fellow tore frantically at what appeared to be but a
- piece of the blank wall opposite the single window. In an instant
- I guessed that it was a secret exit from the room, and so I paused
- that he might have an opportunity to negotiate it, for I cared
- nothing to take the life of this poor servitor--all I craved was a
- clear road in pursuit of Dejah Thoris, my long-lost princess.
-
- But, try as he would, the panel would yield neither to cunning
- nor force, so that eventually he gave it up and turned to face me.
-
- "Go thy way, Thern," I said to him, pointing toward the entrance
- to the runway up which we had but just come. "I have no quarrel
- with you, nor do I crave your life. Go!"
-
- For answer he sprang upon me with his sword, and so suddenly,
- at that, that I was like to have gone down before his first rush.
- So there was nothing for it but to give him what he sought, and
- that as quickly as might be, that I might not be delayed too long
- in this chamber while Matai Shang and Thurid made way with Dejah
- Thoris and Thuvia of Ptarth.
-
- The fellow was a clever swordsman--resourceful and extremely tricky.
- In fact, he seemed never to have heard that there existed such a thing
- as a code of honor, for he repeatedly outraged a dozen Barsoomian
- fighting customs that an honorable man would rather die than ignore.
-
- He even went so far as to snatch his holy wig from his head
- and throw it in my face, so as to blind me for a moment while he
- thrust at my unprotected breast.
-
- When he thrust, however, I was not there, for I had fought with
- therns before; and while none had ever resorted to precisely that
- same expedient, I knew them to be the least honorable and most
- treacherous fighters upon Mars, and so was ever on the alert for some
- new and devilish subterfuge when I was engaged with one of their race.
-
- But at length he overdid the thing; for, drawing his
- shortsword, he hurled it, javelinwise, at my body, at the same
- instant rushing upon me with his long-sword. A single sweeping
- circle of my own blade caught the flying weapon and hurled it
- clattering against the far wall, and then, as I sidestepped my
- antagonist's impetuous rush, I let him have my point full in the
- stomach as he hurtled by.
-
- Clear to the hilt my weapon passed through his body, and with
- a frightful shriek he sank to the floor, dead.
-
- Halting only for the brief instant that was required to wrench
- my sword from the carcass of my late antagonist, I sprang across
- the chamber to the blank wall beyond, through which the thern had
- attempted to pass. Here I sought for the secret of its lock,
- but all to no avail.
-
- In despair I tried to force the thing, but the cold, unyielding
- stone might well have laughed at my futile, puny endeavors.
- In fact, I could have sworn that I caught the faint suggestion
- of taunting laughter from beyond the baffling panel.
-
- In disgust I desisted from my useless efforts and stepped to
- the chamber's single window.
-
- The slopes of Otz and the distant Valley of Lost Souls held
- nothing to compel my interest then; but, towering far above me,
- the tower's carved wall riveted my keenest attention.
-
- Somewhere within that massive pile was Dejah Thoris. Above me
- I could see windows. There, possibly, lay the only way by which
- I could reach her. The risk was great, but not too great when
- the fate of a world's most wondrous woman was at stake.
-
- I glanced below. A hundred feet beneath lay jagged granite
- boulders at the brink of a frightful chasm upon which the tower
- abutted; and if not upon the boulders, then at the chasm's bottom,
- lay death, should a foot slip but once, or clutching fingers loose
- their hold for the fraction of an instant.
-
- But there was no other way and with a shrug, which I must
- admit was half shudder, I stepped to the window's outer sill
- and began my perilous ascent.
-
- To my dismay I found that, unlike the ornamentation upon most
- Heliumetic structures, the edges of the carvings were quite
- generally rounded, so that at best my every hold was most
- precarious.
-
- Fifty feet above me commenced a series of projecting cylindrical
- stones some six inches in diameter. These apparently circled
- the tower at six-foot intervals, in bands six feet apart;
- and as each stone cylinder protruded some four or five inches
- beyond the surface of the other ornamentation, they presented a
- comparatively easy mode of ascent could I but reach them.
-
- Laboriously I climbed toward them by way of some windows which
- lay below them, for I hoped that I might find ingress to the tower
- through one of these, and thence an easier avenue along which to
- prosecute my search.
-
- At times so slight was my hold upon the rounded surfaces of the
- carving's edges that a sneeze, a cough, or even a slight gust of
- wind would have dislodged me and sent me hurtling to the depths below.
-
- But finally I reached a point where my fingers could just clutch
- the sill of the lowest window, and I was on the point of breathing
- a sigh of relief when the sound of voices came to me from above
- through the open window.
-
- "He can never solve the secret of that lock." The voice was
- Matai Shang's. "Let us proceed to the hangar above that we may be
- far to the south before he finds another way--should that be possible."
-
- "All things seem possible to that vile calot," replied another voice,
- which I recognized as Thurid's.
-
- "Then let us haste," said Matai Shang. "But to be doubly sure,
- I will leave two who shall patrol this runway. Later they
- may follow us upon another flier--overtaking us at Kaol."
-
- My upstretched fingers never reached the window's sill. At
- the first sound of the voices I drew back my hand and clung there
- to my perilous perch, flattened against the perpendicular wall,
- scarce daring to breathe.
-
- What a horrible position, indeed, in which to be discovered by
- Thurid! He had but to lean from the window to push me with his
- sword's point into eternity.
-
- Presently the sound of the voices became fainter, and once
- again I took up my hazardous ascent, now more difficult, since more
- circuitous, for I must climb so as to avoid the windows.
-
- Matai Shang's reference to the hangar and the fliers indicated
- that my destination lay nothing short of the roof of the tower, and
- toward this seemingly distant goal I set my face.
-
- The most difficult and dangerous part of the journey was accomplished
- at last, and it was with relief that I felt my fingers close about
- the lowest of the stone cylinders.
-
- It is true that these projections were too far apart to make
- the balance of the ascent anything of a sinecure, but I at least
- had always within my reach a point of safety to which I might cling
- in case of accident.
-
- Some ten feet below the roof, the wall inclined slightly inward
- possibly a foot in the last ten feet, and here the climbing was
- indeed immeasurably easier, so that my fingers soon clutched the eaves.
-
- As I drew my eyes above the level of the tower's top I saw a
- flier all but ready to rise.
-
- Upon her deck were Matai Shang, Phaidor, Dejah Thoris, Thuvia
- of Ptarth, and a few thern warriors, while near her was Thurid in
- the act of clambering aboard.
-
- He was not ten paces from me, facing in the opposite direction;
- and what cruel freak of fate should have caused him to turn about
- just as my eyes topped the roof's edge I may not even guess.
-
- But turn he did; and when his eyes met mine his wicked face
- lighted with a malignant smile as he leaped toward me, where I
- was hastening to scramble to the secure footing of the roof.
-
- Dejah Thoris must have seen me at the same instant, for she
- screamed a useless warning just as Thurid's foot, swinging in
- a mighty kick, landed full in my face.
-
- Like a felled ox, I reeled and tumbled backward over the
- tower's side.
-
-
-
-
- ON THE KAOLIAN ROAD
-
-
- If there be a fate that is sometimes cruel to me, there surely
- is a kind and merciful Providence which watches over me.
-
- As I toppled from the tower into the horrid abyss below I
- counted myself already dead; and Thurid must have done likewise,
- for he evidently did not even trouble himself to look after me,
- but must have turned and mounted the waiting flier at once.
-
- Ten feet only I fell, and then a loop of my tough, leathern harness
- caught upon one of the cylindrical stone projections in the tower's
- surface--and held. Even when I had ceased to fall I could not believe
- the miracle that had preserved me from instant death, and for a moment
- I hung there, cold sweat exuding from every pore of my body.
-
- But when at last I had worked myself back to a firm position
- I hesitated to ascend, since I could not know that Thurid was not
- still awaiting me above.
-
- Presently, however, there came to my ears the whirring of the
- propellers of a flier, and as each moment the sound grew fainter
- I realized that the party had proceeded toward the south without
- assuring themselves as to my fate.
-
- Cautiously I retraced my way to the roof, and I must admit
- that it was with no pleasant sensation that I raised my eyes once
- more above its edge; but, to my relief, there was no one in sight,
- and a moment later I stood safely upon its broad surface.
-
- To reach the hangar and drag forth the only other flier which
- it contained was the work of but an instant; and just as the two
- thern warriors whom Matai Shang had left to prevent this very
- contingency emerged upon the roof from the tower's interior,
- I rose above them with a taunting laugh.
-
- Then I dived rapidly to the inner court where I had last seen Woola,
- and to my immense relief found the faithful beast still there.
-
- The twelve great banths lay in the doorways of their lairs,
- eyeing him and growling ominously, but they had not disobeyed
- Thuvia's injunction; and I thanked the fate that had made her
- their keeper within the Golden Cliffs, and endowed her with the
- kind and sympathetic nature that had won the loyalty and affection
- of these fierce beasts for her.
-
- Woola leaped in frantic joy when he discovered me; and as the
- flier touched the pavement of the court for a brief instant he
- bounded to the deck beside me, and in the bearlike manifestation
- of his exuberant happiness all but caused me to wreck the vessel
- against the courtyard's rocky wall.
-
- Amid the angry shouting of thern guardsmen we rose high above
- the last fortress of the Holy Therns, and then raced straight
- toward the northeast and Kaol, the destination which I had heard
- from the lips of Matai Shang.
-
- Far ahead, a tiny speck in the distance, I made out another
- flier late in the afternoon. It could be none other than that
- which bore my lost love and my enemies.
-
- I had gained considerably on the craft by night; and then,
- knowing that they must have sighted me and would show no lights
- after dark, I set my destination compass upon her--that wonderful
- little Martian mechanism which, once attuned to the object of
- destination, points away toward it, irrespective of every change
- in its location.
-
- All that night we raced through the Barsoomian void, passing over
- low hills and dead sea bottoms; above long-deserted cities and
- populous centers of red Martian habitation upon the ribbon-like
- lines of cultivated land which border the globe-encircling
- waterways, which Earth men call the canals of Mars.
-
- Dawn showed that I had gained appreciably upon the flier ahead of me.
- It was a larger craft than mine, and not so swift; but even so,
- it had covered an immense distance since the flight began.
-
- The change in vegetation below showed me that we were rapidly
- nearing the equator. I was now near enough to my quarry to have
- used my bow gun; but, though I could see that Dejah Thoris was not
- on deck, I feared to fire upon the craft which bore her.
-
- Thurid was deterred by no such scruples; and though it must have been
- difficult for him to believe that it was really I who followed them,
- he could not very well doubt the witness of his own eyes; and so he
- trained their stern gun upon me with his own hands, and an instant later
- an explosive radium projectile whizzed perilously close above my deck.
-
- The black's next shot was more accurate, striking my flier
- full upon the prow and exploding with the instant of contact,
- ripping wide open the bow buoyancy tanks and disabling the engine.
-
- So quickly did my bow drop after the shot that I scarce had
- time to lash Woola to the deck and buckle my own harness to a
- gunwale ring before the craft was hanging stern up and making
- her last long drop to ground.
-
- Her stern buoyancy tanks prevented her dropping with great rapidity;
- but Thurid was firing rapidly now in an attempt to burst these also,
- that I might be dashed to death in the swift fall that would instantly
- follow a successful shot.
-
- Shot after shot tore past or into us, but by a miracle neither
- Woola nor I was hit, nor were the after tanks punctured. This good
- fortune could not last indefinitely, and, assured that Thurid would
- not again leave me alive, I awaited the bursting of the next shell
- that hit; and then, throwing my hands above my head, I let go my hold
- and crumpled, limp and inert, dangling in my harness like a corpse.
-
- The ruse worked, and Thurid fired no more at us. Presently I
- heard the diminishing sound of whirring propellers and realized
- that again I was safe.
-
- Slowly the stricken flier sank to the ground, and when I had freed
- myself and Woola from the entangling wreckage I found that we were
- upon the verge of a natural forest--so rare a thing upon the bosom
- of dying Mars that, outside of the forest in the Valley Dor beside
- the Lost Sea of Korus, I never before had seen its like upon the planet.
-
- From books and travelers I had learned something of the little-known
- land of Kaol, which lies along the equator almost halfway round the
- planet to the east of Helium.
-
- It comprises a sunken area of extreme tropical heat, and is
- inhabited by a nation of red men varying but little in manners,
- customs, and appearance from the balance of the red men of Barsoom.
-
- I knew that they were among those of the outer world who still
- clung tenaciously to the discredited religion of the Holy Therns,
- and that Matai Shang would find a ready welcome and safe refuge
- among them; while John Carter could look for nothing better
- than an ignoble death at their hands.
-
- The isolation of the Kaolians is rendered almost complete by
- the fact that no waterway connects their land with that of any
- other nation, nor have they any need of a waterway since the low,
- swampy land which comprises the entire area of their domain
- self-waters their abundant tropical crops.
-
- For great distances in all directions rugged hills and arid
- stretches of dead sea bottom discourage intercourse with them,
- and since there is practically no such thing as foreign commerce
- upon warlike Barsoom, where each nation is sufficient to itself,
- really little has been known relative to the court of the Jeddak of Kaol
- and the numerous strange, but interesting, people over whom he rules.
-
- Occasional hunting parties have traveled to this out-of-the-way
- corner of the globe, but the hostility of the natives has usually
- brought disaster upon them, so that even the sport of hunting the
- strange and savage creatures which haunt the jungle fastnesses
- of Kaol has of later years proved insufficient lure even to the
- most intrepid warriors.
-
- It was upon the verge of the land of the Kaols that I now knew
- myself to be, but in what direction to search for Dejah Thoris,
- or how far into the heart of the great forest I might have to
- penetrate I had not the faintest idea.
-
- But not so Woola.
-
- Scarcely had I disentangled him than he raised his head high
- in air and commenced circling about at the edge of the forest.
- Presently he halted, and, turning to see if I were following,
- set off straight into the maze of trees in the direction we had
- been going before Thurid's shot had put an end to our flier.
-
- As best I could, I stumbled after him down a steep declivity
- beginning at the forest's edge.
-
- Immense trees reared their mighty heads far above us, their broad
- fronds completely shutting off the slightest glimpse of the sky.
- It was easy to see why the Kaolians needed no navy; their cities,
- hidden in the midst of this towering forest, must be entirely
- invisible from above, nor could a landing be made by any but the
- smallest fliers, and then only with the greatest risk of accident.
-
- How Thurid and Matai Shang were to land I could not imagine,
- though later I was to learn that to the level of the forest
- top there rises in each city of Kaol a slender watchtower
- which guards the Kaolians by day and by night against the secret
- approach of a hostile fleet. To one of these the hekkador of the
- Holy Therns had no difficulty in approaching, and by its means the
- party was safely lowered to the ground.
-
- As Woola and I approached the bottom of the declivity the
- ground became soft and mushy, so that it was with the greatest
- difficulty that we made any headway whatever.
-
- Slender purple grasses topped with red and yellow fern-like fronds
- grew rankly all about us to the height of several feet above my head.
-
- Myriad creepers hung festooned in graceful loops from tree to tree,
- and among them were several varieties of the Martian "man-flower,"
- whose blooms have eyes and hands with which to see and seize the
- insects which form their diet.
-
- The repulsive calot tree was, too, much in evidence. It is a
- carnivorous plant of about the bigness of a large sage-brush such
- as dots our western plains. Each branch ends in a set of strong jaws,
- which have been known to drag down and devour large and formidable
- beasts of prey.
-
- Both Woola and I had several narrow escapes from these greedy,
- arboreous monsters.
-
- Occasional areas of firm sod gave us intervals of rest from
- the arduous labor of traversing this gorgeous, twilight swamp, and
- it was upon one of these that I finally decided to make camp for
- the night which my chronometer warned me would soon be upon us.
-
- Many varieties of fruit grew in abundance about us; and as Martian
- calots are omnivorous, Woola had no difficulty in making a square
- meal after I had brought down the viands for him. Then, having eaten,
- too, I lay down with my back to that of my faithful hound, and dropped
- into a deep and dreamless sleep.
-
- The forest was shrouded in impenetrable darkness when a low
- growl from Woola awakened me. All about us I could hear the
- stealthy movement of great, padded feet, and now and then the
- wicked gleam of green eyes upon us. Arising, I drew my
- long-sword and waited.
-
- Suddenly a deep-toned, horrid roar burst from some savage
- throat almost at my side. What a fool I had been not to have
- found safer lodgings for myself and Woola among the branches
- of one of the countless trees that surrounded us!
-
- By daylight it would have been comparatively easy to have hoisted
- Woola aloft in one manner or another, but now it was too late.
- There was nothing for it but to stand our ground and take
- our medicine, though, from the hideous racket which now assailed
- our ears, and for which that first roar had seemed to be the signal,
- I judged that we must be in the midst of hundreds, perhaps thousands,
- of the fierce, man-eating denizens of the Kaolian jungle.
-
- All the balance of the night they kept up their infernal din,
- but why they did not attack us I could not guess, nor am I sure to
- this day, unless it is that none of them ever venture upon the
- patches of scarlet sward which dot the swamp.
-
- When morning broke they were still there, walking about as in
- a circle, but always just beyond the edge of the sward. A more
- terrifying aggregation of fierce and blood-thirsty monsters it
- would be difficult to imagine.
-
- Singly and in pairs they commenced wandering off into the
- jungle shortly after sunrise, and when the last of them had
- departed Woola and I resumed our journey.
-
- Occasionally we caught glimpses of horrid beasts all during the day;
- but, fortunately, we were never far from a sward island, and when
- they saw us their pursuit always ended at the verge of the solid sod.
-
- Toward noon we stumbled upon a well-constructed road running
- in the general direction we had been pursuing. Everything about
- this highway marked it as the work of skilled engineers, and I was
- confident, from the indications of antiquity which it bore, as well
- as from the very evident signs of its being still in everyday use,
- that it must lead to one of the principal cities of Kaol.
-
- Just as we entered it from one side a huge monster emerged from the
- jungle upon the other, and at sight of us charged madly in our direction.
-
- Imagine, if you can, a bald-faced hornet of your earthly experience
- grown to the size of a prize Hereford bull, and you will have some
- faint conception of the ferocious appearance and awesome formidability
- of the winged monster that bore down upon me.
-
- Frightful jaws in front and mighty, poisoned sting behind made my
- relatively puny long-sword seem a pitiful weapon of defense indeed.
- Nor could I hope to escape the lightning-like movements or hide
- from those myriad facet eyes which covered three-fourths of the
- hideous head, permitting the creature to see in all directions
- at one and the same time.
-
- Even my powerful and ferocious Woola was as helpless as a kitten
- before that frightful thing. But to flee were useless, even had
- it ever been to my liking to turn my back upon a danger; so I stood
- my ground, Woola snarling at my side, my only hope to die as
- I had always lived--fighting.
-
- The creature was upon us now, and at the instant there seemed
- to me a single slight chance for victory. If I could but remove
- the terrible menace of certain death hidden in the poison sacs
- that fed the sting the struggle would be less unequal.
-
- At the thought I called to Woola to leap upon the creature's
- head and hang there, and as his mighty jaws closed upon that
- fiendish face, and glistening fangs buried themselves in the bone
- and cartilage and lower part of one of the huge eyes, I dived
- beneath the great body as the creature rose, dragging Woola from
- the ground, that it might bring its sting beneath and pierce the
- body of the thing hanging to its head.
-
- To put myself in the path of that poison-laden lance was to court
- instant death, but it was the only way; and as the thing shot
- lightning-like toward me I swung my long-sword in a terrific cut
- that severed the deadly member close to the gorgeously marked body.
-
- Then, like a battering-ram, one of the powerful hind legs caught
- me full in the chest and hurled me, half stunned and wholly winded,
- clear across the broad highway and into the underbrush of the
- jungle that fringes it.
-
- Fortunately, I passed between the boles of trees; had I struck
- one of them I should have been badly injured, if not killed,
- so swiftly had I been catapulted by that enormous hind leg.
-
- Dazed though I was, I stumbled to my feet and staggered back to
- Woola's assistance, to find his savage antagonist circling ten
- feet above the ground, beating madly at the clinging calot with
- all six powerful legs.
-
- Even during my sudden flight through the air I had not once
- released my grip upon my long-sword, and now I ran beneath the
- two battling monsters, jabbing the winged terror repeatedly
- with its sharp point.
-
- The thing might easily have risen out of my reach, but evidently
- it knew as little concerning retreat in the face of danger as
- either Woola or I, for it dropped quickly toward me, and before
- I could escape had grasped my shoulder between its powerful jaws.
-
- Time and again the now useless stub of its giant sting struck
- futilely against my body, but the blows alone were almost as
- effective as the kick of a horse; so that when I say futilely,
- I refer only to the natural function of the disabled member--
- eventually the thing would have hammered me to a pulp.
- Nor was it far from accomplishing this when an interruption
- occurred that put an end forever to its hostilities.
-
- From where I hung a few feet above the road I could see along the
- highway a few hundred yards to where it turned toward the east,
- and just as I had about given up all hope of escaping the perilous
- position in which I now was I saw a red warrior come into view
- from around the bend.
-
- He was mounted on a splendid thoat, one of the smaller species
- used by red men, and in his hand was a wondrous long, light lance.
-
- His mount was walking sedately when I first perceived them, but the
- instant that the red man's eyes fell upon us a word to the thoat
- brought the animal at full charge down upon us. The long lance of
- the warrior dipped toward us, and as thoat and rider hurtled beneath,
- the point passed through the body of our antagonist.
-
- With a convulsive shudder the thing stiffened, the jaws relaxed,
- dropping me to the ground, and then, careening once in mid air,
- the creature plunged headforemost to the road, full upon Woola,
- who still clung tenaciously to its gory head.
-
- By the time I had regained my feet the red man had turned and
- ridden back to us. Woola, finding his enemy inert and lifeless,
- released his hold at my command and wriggled from beneath the body
- that had covered him, and together we faced the warrior looking
- down upon us.
-
- I started to thank the stranger for his timely assistance,
- but he cut me off peremptorily.
-
- "Who are you," he asked, "who dare enter the land of Kaol and
- hunt in the royal forest of the jeddak?"
-
- Then, as he noted my white skin through the coating of grime
- and blood that covered me, his eyes went wide and in an altered
- tone he whispered: "Can it be that you are a Holy Thern?"
-
- I might have deceived the fellow for a time, as I had deceived
- others, but I had cast away the yellow wig and the holy diadem in
- the presence of Matai Shang, and I knew that it would not be long
- ere my new acquaintance discovered that I was no thern at all.
-
- "I am not a thern," I replied, and then, flinging caution to
- the winds, I said: "I am John Carter, Prince of Helium, whose
- name may not be entirely unknown to you."
-
- If his eyes had gone wide when he thought that I was a Holy Thern,
- they fairly popped now that he knew that I was John Carter.
- I grasped my long-sword more firmly as I spoke the words which I
- was sure would precipitate an attack, but to my surprise they
- precipitated nothing of the kind.
-
- "John Carter, Prince of Helium," he repeated slowly, as though
- he could not quite grasp the truth of the statement. "John Carter,
- the mightiest warrior of Barsoom!"
-
- And then he dismounted and placed his hand upon my shoulder
- after the manner of most friendly greeting upon Mars.
-
- "It is my duty, and it should be my pleasure, to kill you,
- John Carter," he said, "but always in my heart of hearts have I
- admired your prowess and believed in your sincerity the while I
- have questioned and disbelieved the therns and their religion.
-
- "It would mean my instant death were my heresy to be suspected
- in the court of Kulan Tith, but if I may serve you, Prince,
- you have but to command Torkar Bar, Dwar of the Kaolian Road."
-
- Truth and honesty were writ large upon the warrior's noble countenance,
- so that I could not but have trusted him, enemy though he should have been.
- His title of Captain of the Kaolian Road explained his timely presence
- in the heart of the savage forest, for every highway upon Barsoom is
- patrolled by doughty warriors of the noble class, nor is there any
- service more honorable than this lonely and dangerous duty in the
- less frequented sections of the domains of the red men of Barsoom.
-
- "Torkar Bar has already placed a great debt of gratitude upon
- my shoulders," I replied, pointing to the carcass of the
- creature from whose heart he was dragging his long spear.
-
- The red man smiled.
-
- "It was fortunate that I came when I did," he said. "Only
- this poisoned spear pricking the very heart of a sith can kill it
- quickly enough to save its prey. In this section of Kaol we are
- all armed with a long sith spear, whose point is smeared with the
- poison of the creature it is intended to kill; no other virus acts
- so quickly upon the beast as its own.
-
- "Look," he continued, drawing his dagger and making an
- incision in the carcass a foot above the root of the sting, from
- which he presently drew forth two sacs, each of which held fully a
- gallon of the deadly liquid.
-
- "Thus we maintain our supply, though were it not for
- certain commercial uses to which the virus is put,
- it would scarcely be necessary to add to our present store,
- since the sith is almost extinct.
-
- "Only occasionally do we now run upon one. Of old, however,
- Kaol was overrun with the frightful monsters that often came in
- herds of twenty or thirty, darting down from above into our cities
- and carrying away women, children, and even warriors."
-
- As he spoke I had been wondering just how much I might safely tell
- this man of the mission which brought me to his land, but his next
- words anticipated the broaching of the subject on my part, and
- rendered me thankful that I had not spoken too soon.
-
- "And now as to yourself, John Carter," he said, "I shall not
- ask your business here, nor do I wish to hear it. I have eyes and
- ears and ordinary intelligence, and yesterday morning I saw the
- party that came to the city of Kaol from the north in a small flier.
- But one thing I ask of you, and that is: the word of John Carter
- that he contemplates no overt act against either the nation
- of Kaol or its jeddak."
-
- "You may have my word as to that, Torkar Bar," I replied.
-
- "My way leads along the Kaolian road, away from the city of Kaol,"
- he continued. "I have seen no one--John Carter least of all.
- Nor have you seen Torkar Bar, nor ever heard of him. You understand?"
-
- "Perfectly," I replied.
-
- He laid his hand upon my shoulder.
-
- "This road leads directly into the city of Kaol," he said.
- "I wish you fortune," and vaulting to the back of his thoat
- he trotted away without even a backward glance.
-
- It was after dark when Woola and I spied through the mighty
- forest the great wall which surrounds the city of Kaol.
-
- We had traversed the entire way without mishap or adventure,
- and though the few we had met had eyed the great calot wonderingly,
- none had pierced the red pigment with which I had smoothly smeared
- every square inch of my body.
-
- But to traverse the surrounding country, and to enter the guarded
- city of Kulan Tith, Jeddak of Kaol, were two very different things.
- No man enters a Martian city without giving a very detailed and
- satisfactory account of himself, nor did I delude myself with
- the belief that I could for a moment impose upon the acumen of
- the officers of the guard to whom I should be taken the moment
- I applied at any one of the gates.
-
- My only hope seemed to lie in entering the city surreptitiously
- under cover of the darkness, and once in, trust to my own wits
- to hide myself in some crowded quarter where detection would
- be less liable to occur.
-
- With this idea in view I circled the great wall, keeping within
- the fringe of the forest, which is cut away for a short distance
- from the wall all about the city, that no enemy may utilize the
- trees as a means of ingress.
-
- Several times I attempted to scale the barrier at different points,
- but not even my earthly muscles could overcome that cleverly
- constructed rampart. To a height of thirty feet the face of the
- wall slanted outward, and then for almost an equal distance it
- was perpendicular, above which it slanted in again for some
- fifteen feet to the crest.
-
- And smooth! Polished glass could not be more so. Finally I
- had to admit that at last I had discovered a Barsoomian
- fortification which I could not negotiate.
-
- Discouraged, I withdrew into the forest beside a broad highway
- which entered the city from the east, and with Woola beside me
- lay down to sleep.
-
-
-
-
- A HERO IN KAOL
-
-
- It was daylight when I was awakened by the sound of stealthy
- movement near by.
-
- As I opened my eyes Woola, too, moved and, coming up to his
- haunches, stared through the intervening brush toward the road,
- each hair upon his neck stiffly erect.
-
- At first I could see nothing, but presently I caught a glimpse
- of a bit of smooth and glossy green moving among the scarlet and
- purple and yellow of the vegetation.
-
- Motioning Woola to remain quietly where he was, I crept forward
- to investigate, and from behind the bole of a great tree I
- saw a long line of the hideous green warriors of the dead sea
- bottoms hiding in the dense jungle beside the road.
-
- As far as I could see, the silent line of destruction and
- death stretched away from the city of Kaol. There could be
- but one explanation. The green men were expecting an exodus
- of a body of red troops from the nearest city gate, and they
- were lying there in ambush to leap upon them.
-
- I owed no fealty to the Jeddak of Kaol, but he was of the same
- race of noble red men as my own princess, and I would not stand
- supinely by and see his warriors butchered by the cruel and
- heartless demons of the waste places of Barsoom.
-
- Cautiously I retraced my steps to where I had left Woola,
- and warning him to silence, signaled him to follow me.
- Making a considerable detour to avoid the chance of falling
- into the hands of the green men, I came at last to the great wall.
-
- A hundred yards to my right was the gate from which the troops
- were evidently expected to issue, but to reach it I must pass the
- flank of the green warriors within easy sight of them, and, fearing
- that my plan to warn the Kaolians might thus be thwarted, I decided
- upon hastening toward the left, where another gate a mile away
- would give me ingress to the city.
-
- I knew that the word I brought would prove a splendid passport
- to Kaol, and I must admit that my caution was due more to my
- ardent desire to make my way into the city than to avoid a brush
- with the green men. As much as I enjoy a fight, I cannot always
- indulge myself, and just now I had more weighty matters to occupy
- my time than spilling the blood of strange warriors.
-
- Could I but win beyond the city's wall, there might be opportunity
- in the confusion and excitement which were sure to follow my
- announcement of an invading force of green warriors to find my
- way within the palace of the jeddak, where I was sure Matai Shang
- and his party would be quartered.
-
- But scarcely had I taken a hundred steps in the direction of the
- farther gate when the sound of marching troops, the clank of metal,
- and the squealing of thoats just within the city apprised me of the
- fact that the Kaolians were already moving toward the other gate.
-
- There was no time to be lost. In another moment the gate
- would be opened and the head of the column pass out upon
- the death-bordered highway.
-
- Turning back toward the fateful gate, I ran rapidly along the edge of
- the clearing, taking the ground in the mighty leaps that had first
- made me famous upon Barsoom. Thirty, fifty, a hundred feet at a bound
- are nothing for the muscles of an athletic Earth man upon Mars.
-
- As I passed the flank of the waiting green men they saw my eyes
- turned upon them, and in an instant, knowing that all secrecy
- was at an end, those nearest me sprang to their feet in an effort
- to cut me off before I could reach the gate.
-
- At the same instant the mighty portal swung wide and the head
- of the Kaolian column emerged. A dozen green warriors had
- succeeded in reaching a point between me and the gate, but they
- had but little idea who it was they had elected to detain.
-
- I did not slacken my speed an iota as I dashed among them, and
- as they fell before my blade I could not but recall the happy
- memory of those other battles when Tars Tarkas, Jeddak of Thark,
- mightiest of Martian green men, had stood shoulder to shoulder with me
- through long, hot Martian days, as together we hewed down our enemies
- until the pile of corpses about us rose higher than a tall man's head.
-
- When several pressed me too closely, there before the carved
- gateway of Kaol, I leaped above their heads, and fashioning my
- tactics after those of the hideous plant men of Dor, struck down
- upon my enemies' heads as I passed above them.
-
- From the city the red warriors were rushing toward us, and from
- the jungle the savage horde of green men were coming to meet them.
- In a moment I was in the very center of as fierce and bloody a
- battle as I had ever passed through.
-
- These Kaolians are most noble fighters, nor are the green men
- of the equator one whit less warlike than their cold, cruel cousins
- of the temperate zone. There were many times when either side
- might have withdrawn without dishonor and thus ended hostilities,
- but from the mad abandon with which each invariably renewed
- hostilities I soon came to believe that what need not have been
- more than a trifling skirmish would end only with the complete
- extermination of one force or the other.
-
- With the joy of battle once roused within me, I took keen delight
- in the fray, and that my fighting was noted by the Kaolians was
- often evidenced by the shouts of applause directed at me.
-
- If I sometimes seem to take too great pride in my fighting
- ability, it must be remembered that fighting is my vocation.
- If your vocation be shoeing horses, or painting pictures, and you
- can do one or the other better than your fellows, then you are a
- fool if you are not proud of your ability. And so I am very proud
- that upon two planets no greater fighter has ever lived than John
- Carter, Prince of Helium.
-
- And I outdid myself that day to impress the fact upon the natives
- of Kaol, for I wished to win a way into their hearts--and their city.
- Nor was I to be disappointed in my desire.
-
- All day we fought, until the road was red with blood and clogged
- with corpses. Back and forth along the slippery highway the tide of
- battle surged, but never once was the gateway to Kaol really in danger.
-
- There were breathing spells when I had a chance to converse with the
- red men beside whom I fought, and once the jeddak, Kulan Tith himself,
- laid his hand upon my shoulder and asked my name.
-
- "I am Dotar Sojat," I replied, recalling a name given me by the
- Tharks many years before, from the surnames of the first two of
- their warriors I had killed, which is the custom among them.
-
- "You are a mighty warrior, Dotar Sojat," he replied, "and when this
- day is done I shall speak with you again in the great audience chamber."
-
- And then the fight surged upon us once more and we were separated,
- but my heart's desire was attained, and it was with renewed vigor
- and a joyous soul that I laid about me with my long-sword until
- the last of the green men had had enough and had withdrawn toward
- their distant sea bottom.
-
- Not until the battle was over did I learn why the red troops had
- sallied forth that day. It seemed that Kulan Tith was expecting
- a visit from a mighty jeddak of the north--a powerful and the
- only ally of the Kaolians, and it had been his wish to meet his
- guest a full day's journey from Kaol.
-
- But now the march of the welcoming host was delayed until the
- following morning, when the troops again set out from Kaol.
- I had not been bidden to the presence of Kulan Tith after the battle,
- but he had sent an officer to find me and escort me to comfortable
- quarters in that part of the palace set aside for the officers of
- the royal guard.
-
- There, with Woola, I had spent a comfortable night, and rose
- much refreshed after the arduous labors of the past few days.
- Woola had fought with me through the battle of the previous day,
- true to the instincts and training of a Martian war dog, great
- numbers of which are often to be found with the savage green hordes
- of the dead sea bottoms.
-
- Neither of us had come through the conflict unscathed, but the
- marvelous, healing salves of Barsoom had sufficed, overnight,
- to make us as good as new.
-
- I breakfasted with a number of the Kaolian officers, whom I found
- as courteous and delightful hosts as even the nobles of Helium,
- who are renowned for their ease of manners and excellence
- of breeding. The meal was scarcely concluded when a messenger
- arrived from Kulan Tith summoning me before him.
-
- As I entered the royal presence the jeddak rose, and stepping from
- the dais which supported his magnificent throne, came forward to
- meet me--a mark of distinction that is seldom accorded to other
- than a visiting ruler.
-
- "Kaor, Dotar Sojat!" he greeted me. "I have summoned you to
- receive the grateful thanks of the people of Kaol, for had it not
- been for your heroic bravery in daring fate to warn us of the
- ambuscade we must surely have fallen into the well-laid trap.
- Tell me more of yourself--from what country you come, and what
- errand brings you to the court of Kulan Tith."
-
- "I am from Hastor," I said, for in truth I had a small palace
- in that southern city which lies within the far-flung dominions of
- the Heliumetic nation.
-
- "My presence in the land of Kaol is partly due to accident, my
- flier being wrecked upon the southern fringe of your great forest.
- It was while seeking entrance to the city of Kaol that I discovered
- the green horde lying in wait for your troops."
-
- If Kulan Tith wondered what business brought me in a flier to
- the very edge of his domain he was good enough not to press me
- further for an explanation, which I should indeed have had
- difficulty in rendering.
-
- During my audience with the jeddak another party entered the chamber
- from behind me, so that I did not see their faces until Kulan Tith
- stepped past me to greet them, commanding me to follow and be presented.
-
- As I turned toward them it was with difficulty that I controlled
- my features, for there, listening to Kulan Tith's eulogistic words
- concerning me, stood my arch-enemies, Matai Shang and Thurid.
-
- "Holy Hekkador of the Holy Therns," the jeddak was saying,
- "shower thy blessings upon Dotar Sojat, the valorous stranger from
- distant Hastor, whose wondrous heroism and marvelous ferocity saved
- the day for Kaol yesterday."
-
- Matai Shang stepped forward and laid his hand upon my shoulder.
- No slightest indication that he recognized me showed upon his
- countenance--my disguise was evidently complete.
-
- He spoke kindly to me and then presented me to Thurid. The black,
- too, was evidently entirely deceived. Then Kulan Tith regaled them,
- much to my amusement, with details of my achievements upon the
- field of battle.
-
- The thing that seemed to have impressed him most was my
- remarkable agility, and time and again he described the wondrous
- way in which I had leaped completely over an antagonist, cleaving
- his skull wide open with my long-sword as I passed above him.
-
- I thought that I saw Thurid's eyes widen a bit during the
- narrative, and several times I surprised him gazing intently into
- my face through narrowed lids. Was he commencing to suspect?
- And then Kulan Tith told of the savage calot that fought beside
- me, and after that I saw suspicion in the eyes of Matai Shang--
- or did I but imagine it?
-
- At the close of the audience Kulan Tith announced that he
- would have me accompany him upon the way to meet his royal guest,
- and as I departed with an officer who was to procure proper
- trappings and a suitable mount for me, both Matai Shang and Thurid
- seemed most sincere in professing their pleasure at having had an
- opportunity to know me. It was with a sigh of relief that I
- quitted the chamber, convinced that nothing more than a guilty
- conscience had prompted my belief that either of my enemies
- suspected my true identity.
-
- A half-hour later I rode out of the city gate with the column that
- accompanied Kulan Tith upon the way to meet his friend and ally.
- Though my eyes and ears had been wide open during my audience
- with the jeddak and my various passages through the palace,
- I had seen or heard nothing of Dejah Thoris or Thuvia of Ptarth.
- That they must be somewhere within the great rambling edifice
- I was positive, and I should have given much to have found a
- way to remain behind during Kulan Tith's absence, that I might
- search for them.
-
- Toward noon we came in touch with the head of the column we
- had set out to meet.
-
- It was a gorgeous train that accompanied the visiting jeddak,
- and for miles it stretched along the wide, white road to Kaol.
- Mounted troops, their trappings of jewel and metal-incrusted
- leather glistening in the sunlight, formed the vanguard of the body,
- and then came a thousand gorgeous chariots drawn by huge zitidars.
-
- These low, commodious wagons moved two abreast, and on either
- side of them marched solid ranks of mounted warriors, for in
- the chariots were the women and children of the royal court.
- Upon the back of each monster zitidar rode a Martian youth,
- and the whole scene carried me back to my first days upon Barsoom,
- now twenty-two years in the past, when I had first beheld the
- gorgeous spectacle of a caravan of the green horde of Tharks.
-
- Never before today had I seen zitidars in the service of red men.
- These brutes are huge mastodonian animals that tower to an immense
- height even beside the giant green men and their giant thoats;
- but when compared to the relatively small red man and his breed of
- thoats they assume Brobdingnagian proportions that are truly appalling.
-
- The beasts were hung with jeweled trappings and saddlepads of
- gay silk, embroidered in fanciful designs with strings of diamonds,
- pearls, rubies, emeralds, and the countless unnamed jewels of
- Mars, while from each chariot rose a dozen standards from
- which streamers, flags, and pennons fluttered in the breeze.
-
- Just in front of the chariots the visiting jeddak rode alone
- upon a pure white thoat--another unusual sight upon Barsoom--and
- after them came interminable ranks of mounted spearmen, riflemen,
- and swordsmen. It was indeed a most imposing sight.
-
- Except for the clanking of accouterments and the occasional
- squeal of an angry thoat or the low guttural of a zitidar,
- the passage of the cavalcade was almost noiseless, for neither
- thoat nor zitidar is a hoofed animal, and the broad tires of the
- chariots are of an elastic composition, which gives forth no sound.
-
- Now and then the gay laughter of a woman or the chatter of
- children could be heard, for the red Martians are a social,
- pleasure-loving people--in direct antithesis to the cold and
- morbid race of green men.
-
- The forms and ceremonials connected with the meeting of the
- two jeddaks consumed an hour, and then we turned and retraced our
- way toward the city of Kaol, which the head of the column reached
- just before dark, though it must have been nearly morning before
- the rear guard passed through the gateway.
-
- Fortunately, I was well up toward the head of the column, and
- after the great banquet, which I attended with the officers of the
- royal guard, I was free to seek repose. There was so much activity
- and bustle about the palace all during the night with the constant
- arrival of the noble officers of the visiting jeddak's retinue that
- I dared not attempt to prosecute a search for Dejah Thoris, and so,
- as soon as it was seemly for me to do so, I returned to my quarters.
-
- As I passed along the corridors between the banquet hall and
- the apartments that had been allotted me, I had a sudden feeling
- that I was under surveillance, and, turning quickly in my tracks,
- caught a glimpse of a figure which darted into an open doorway
- the instant I wheeled about.
-
- Though I ran quickly back to the spot where the shadower had
- disappeared I could find no trace of him, yet in the brief glimpse
- that I had caught I could have sworn that I had seen a white face
- surmounted by a mass of yellow hair.
-
- The incident gave me considerable food for speculation, since
- if I were right in the conclusion induced by the cursory glimpse
- I had had of the spy, then Matai Shang and Thurid must suspect my
- identity, and if that were true not even the service I had rendered
- Kulan Tith could save me from his religious fanaticism.
-
- But never did vague conjecture or fruitless fears for the future
- lie with sufficient weight upon my mind to keep me from my rest,
- and so tonight I threw myself upon my sleeping silks and furs
- and passed at once into dreamless slumber.
-
- Calots are not permitted within the walls of the palace proper,
- and so I had had to relegate poor Woola to quarters in the stables
- where the royal thoats are kept. He had comfortable, even luxurious
- apartments, but I would have given much to have had him with me;
- and if he had been, the thing which happened that night would not
- have come to pass.
-
- I could not have slept over a quarter of an hour when I was
- suddenly awakened by the passing of some cold and clammy thing
- across my forehead. Instantly I sprang to my feet, clutching in
- the direction I thought the presence lay. For an instant my hand
- touched against human flesh, and then, as I lunged headforemost
- through the darkness to seize my nocturnal visitor, my foot became
- entangled in my sleeping silks and I fell sprawling to the floor.
-
- By the time I had resumed my feet and found the button which
- controlled the light my caller had disappeared. Careful search of
- the room revealed nothing to explain either the identity or business
- of the person who had thus secretly sought me in the dead of night.
-
- That the purpose might be theft I could not believe, since thieves
- are practically unknown upon Barsoom. Assassination, however,
- is rampant, but even this could not have been the motive of my
- stealthy friend, for he might easily have killed me had he desired.
-
- I had about given up fruitless conjecture and was on the point
- of returning to sleep when a dozen Kaolian guardsmen entered my
- apartment. The officer in charge was one of my genial hosts of
- the morning, but now upon his face was no sign of friendship.
-
- "Kulan Tith commands your presence before him," he said. "Come!"
-
-
-
-
- NEW ALLIES
-
-
- Surrounded by guardsmen I marched back along the corridors of
- the palace of Kulan Tith, Jeddak of Kaol, to the great audience
- chamber in the center of the massive structure.
-
- As I entered the brilliantly lighted apartment, filled with
- the nobles of Kaol and the officers of the visiting jeddak,
- all eyes were turned upon me. Upon the great dais at the end
- of the chamber stood three thrones, upon which sat Kulan Tith
- and his two guests, Matai Shang, and the visiting jeddak.
-
- Up the broad center aisle we marched beneath deadly silence,
- and at the foot of the thrones we halted.
-
- "Prefer thy charge," said Kulan Tith, turning to one who stood
- among the nobles at his right; and then Thurid, the black dator
- of the First Born, stepped forward and faced me.
-
- "Most noble Jeddak," he said, addressing Kulan Tith,
- "from the first I suspected this stranger within thy palace.
- Your description of his fiendish prowess tallied with that
- of the arch-enemy of truth upon Barsoom.
-
- "But that there might be no mistake I despatched a priest of
- your own holy cult to make the test that should pierce his disguise
- and reveal the truth. Behold the result!" and Thurid pointed a
- rigid finger at my forehead.
-
- All eyes followed the direction of that accusing digit--I alone
- seemed at a loss to guess what fatal sign rested upon my brow.
-
- The officer beside me guessed my perplexity; and as the brows of
- Kulan Tith darkened in a menacing scowl as his eyes rested upon me,
- the noble drew a small mirror from his pocket-pouch and held it
- before my face.
-
- One glance at the reflection it gave back to me was sufficient.
-
- From my forehead the hand of the sneaking thern had reached out
- through the concealing darkness of my bed-chamber and wiped away
- a patch of the disguising red pigment as broad as my palm.
- Beneath showed the tanned texture of my own white skin.
-
- For a moment Thurid ceased speaking, to enhance, I suspect,
- the dramatic effect of his disclosure. Then he resumed.
-
- "Here, O Kulan Tith," he cried, "is he who has desecrated the
- temples of the Gods of Mars, who has violated the persons of the
- Holy Therns themselves and turned a world against its age-old
- religion. Before you, in your power, Jeddak of Kaol, Defender of
- the Holies, stands John Carter, Prince of Helium!"
-
- Kulan Tith looked toward Matai Shang as though for corroboration
- of these charges. The Holy Thern nodded his head.
-
- "It is indeed the arch-blasphemer," he said. "Even now he has
- followed me to the very heart of thy palace, Kulan Tith, for the
- sole purpose of assassinating me. He--"
-
- "He lies!" I cried. "Kulan Tith, listen that you may know the truth.
- Listen while I tell you why John Carter has followed Matai Shang
- to the heart of thy palace. Listen to me as well as to them,
- and then judge if my acts be not more in accord with true
- Barsoomian chivalry and honor than those of these revengeful
- devotees of the spurious creeds from whose cruel bonds I have
- freed your planet."
-
- "Silence!" roared the jeddak, leaping to his feet and laying his hand
- upon the hilt of his sword. "Silence, blasphemer! Kulan Tith need not
- permit the air of his audience chamber to be defiled by the heresies
- that issue from your polluted throat to judge you.
-
- "You stand already self-condemned. It but remains to determine the
- manner of your death. Even the service that you rendered the arms
- of Kaol shall avail you naught; it was but a base subterfuge whereby
- you might win your way into my favor and reach the side of this holy
- man whose life you craved. To the pits with him!" he concluded,
- addressing the officer of my guard.
-
- Here was a pretty pass, indeed! What chance had I against a
- whole nation? What hope for me of mercy at the hands of the
- fanatical Kulan Tith with such advisers as Matai Shang and Thurid.
- The black grinned malevolently in my face.
-
- "You shall not escape this time, Earth man," he taunted.
-
- The guards closed toward me. A red haze blurred my vision.
- The fighting blood of my Virginian sires coursed hot through
- my veins. The lust of battle in all its mad fury was upon me.
-
- With a leap I was beside Thurid, and ere the devilish smirk
- had faded from his handsome face I had caught him full upon the
- mouth with my clenched fist; and as the good, old American blow
- landed, the black dator shot back a dozen feet, to crumple in a
- heap at the foot of Kulan Tith's throne, spitting blood and teeth
- from his hurt mouth.
-
- Then I drew my sword and swung round, on guard, to face a nation.
-
- In an instant the guardsmen were upon me, but before a blow
- had been struck a mighty voice rose above the din of shouting
- warriors, and a giant figure leaped from the dais beside Kulan Tith
- and, with drawn long-sword, threw himself between me and my adversaries.
-
- It was the visiting jeddak.
-
- "Hold!" he cried. "If you value my friendship, Kulan Tith,
- and the age-old peace that has existed between our peoples,
- call off your swordsmen; for wherever or against whomsoever
- fights John Carter, Prince of Helium, there beside him and
- to the death fights Thuvan Dihn, Jeddak of Ptarth."
-
- The shouting ceased and the menacing points were lowered as a
- thousand eyes turned first toward Thuvan Dihn in surprise and then
- toward Kulan Tith in question. At first the Jeddak of Kaol went white
- in rage, but before he spoke he had mastered himself, so that his tone
- was calm and even as befitted intercourse between two great jeddaks.
-
- "Thuvan Dihn," he said slowly, "must have great provocation
- thus to desecrate the ancient customs which inspire the deportment
- of a guest within the palace of his host. Lest I, too, should
- forget myself as has my royal friend, I should prefer to remain
- silent until the Jeddak of Ptarth has won from me applause for his
- action by relating the causes which provoked it."
-
- I could see that the Jeddak of Ptarth was of half a mind to
- throw his metal in Kulan Tith's face, but he controlled himself
- even as well as had his host.
-
- "None knows better than Thuvan Dihn," he said, "the laws which
- govern the acts of men in the domains of their neighbors; but
- Thuvan Dihn owes allegiance to a higher law than these--the
- law of gratitude. Nor to any man upon Barsoom does he owe a
- greater debt of gratitude than to John Carter, Prince of Helium.
-
- "Years ago, Kulan Tith," he continued, "upon the occasion of
- your last visit to me, you were greatly taken with the charms and
- graces of my only daughter, Thuvia. You saw how I adored her, and
- later you learned that, inspired by some unfathomable whim, she had
- taken the last, long, voluntary pilgrimage upon the cold bosom of
- the mysterious Iss, leaving me desolate.
-
- "Some months ago I first heard of the expedition which John Carter had
- led against Issus and the Holy Therns. Faint rumors of the atrocities
- reported to have been committed by the therns upon those who for
- countless ages have floated down the mighty Iss came to my ears.
-
- "I heard that thousands of prisoners had been released, few of
- whom dared to return to their own countries owing to the mandate of
- terrible death which rests against all who return from the Valley Dor.
-
- "For a time I could not believe the heresies which I heard,
- and I prayed that my daughter Thuvia might have died before she
- ever committed the sacrilege of returning to the outer world.
- But then my father's love asserted itself, and I vowed that I
- would prefer eternal damnation to further separation from her
- if she could be found.
-
- "So I sent emissaries to Helium, and to the court of Xodar,
- Jeddak of the First Born, and to him who now rules those of the
- thern nation that have renounced their religion; and from each
- and all I heard the same story of unspeakable cruelties and
- atrocities perpetrated upon the poor defenseless victims of
- their religion by the Holy Therns.
-
- "Many there were who had seen or known my daughter, and from
- therns who had been close to Matai Shang I learned of the
- indignities that he personally heaped upon her; and I was glad
- when I came here to find that Matai Shang was also your guest,
- for I should have sought him out had it taken a lifetime.
-
- "More, too, I heard, and that of the chivalrous kindness that
- John Carter had accorded my daughter. They told me how he fought
- for her and rescued her, and how he spurned escape from the savage
- Warhoons of the south, sending her to safety upon his own
- thoat and remaining upon foot to meet the green warriors.
-
- "Can you wonder, Kulan Tith, that I am willing to jeopardize
- my life, the peace of my nation, or even your friendship, which I
- prize more than aught else, to champion the Prince of Helium?"
-
- For a moment Kulan Tith was silent. I could see by the expression
- of his face that he was sore perplexed. Then he spoke.
-
- "Thuvan Dihn," he said, and his tone was friendly though sad,
- "who am I to judge my fellow-man? In my eyes the Father of Therns
- is still holy, and the religion which he teaches the only true religion,
- but were I faced by the same problem that has vexed you I doubt not
- that I should feel and act precisely as you have.
-
- "In so far as the Prince of Helium is concerned I may act, but between
- you and Matai Shang my only office can be one of conciliation.
- The Prince of Helium shall be escorted in safety to the boundary
- of my domain ere the sun has set again, where he shall be free
- to go whither he will; but upon pain of death must he never
- again enter the land of Kaol.
-
- "If there be a quarrel between you and the Father of Therns,
- I need not ask that the settlement of it be deferred until both
- have passed beyond the limits of my power. Are you satisfied,
- Thuvan Dihn?"
-
- The Jeddak of Ptarth nodded his assent, but the ugly scowl that
- he bent upon Matai Shang harbored ill for that pasty-faced godling.
-
- "The Prince of Helium is far from satisfied," I cried,
- breaking rudely in upon the beginnings of peace, for I
- had no stomach for peace at the price that had been named.
-
- "I have escaped death in a dozen forms to follow Matai Shang
- and overtake him, and I do not intend to be led, like a decrepit
- thoat to the slaughter, from the goal that I have won by the
- prowess of my sword arm and the might of my muscles.
-
- "Nor will Thuvan Dihn, Jeddak of Ptarth, be satisfied when he
- has heard me through. Do you know why I have followed Matai Shang
- and Thurid, the black dator, from the forests of the Valley Dor
- across half a world through almost insurmountable difficulties?
-
- "Think you that John Carter, Prince of Helium, would stoop to
- assassination? Can Kulan Tith be such a fool as to believe
- that lie, whispered in his ear by the Holy Thern or Dator Thurid?
-
- "I do not follow Matai Shang to kill him, though the God of
- mine own planet knows that my hands itch to be at his throat.
- I follow him, Thuvan Dihn, because with him are two prisoners--
- my wife, Dejah Thoris, Princess of Helium, and your daughter,
- Thuvia of Ptarth.
-
- "Now think you that I shall permit myself to be led beyond
- the walls of Kaol unless the mother of my son accompanies me,
- and thy daughter be restored?"
-
- Thuvan Dihn turned upon Kulan Tith. Rage flamed in his keen eyes;
- but by the masterfulness of his self-control he kept his tones level
- as he spoke.
-
- "Knew you this thing, Kulan Tith?" he asked. "Knew you that
- my daughter lay a prisoner in your palace?"
-
- "He could not know it," interrupted Matai Shang, white with
- what I am sure was more fear than rage. "He could not know it,
- for it is a lie."
-
- I would have had his life for that upon the spot, but even as
- I sprang toward him Thuvan Dihn laid a heavy hand upon my shoulder.
-
- "Wait," he said to me, and then to Kulan Tith. "It is not a lie.
- This much have I learned of the Prince of Helium--he does not lie.
- Answer me, Kulan Tith--I have asked you a question."
-
- "Three women came with the Father of Therns," replied Kulan Tith.
- "Phaidor, his daughter, and two who were reported to be her slaves.
- If these be Thuvia of Ptarth and Dejah Thoris of Helium I did not
- know it--I have seen neither. But if they be, then shall they be
- returned to you on the morrow."
-
- As he spoke he looked straight at Matai Shang, not as a devotee
- should look at a high priest, but as a ruler of men looks at one
- to whom he issues a command.
-
- It must have been plain to the Father of Therns, as it was to me,
- that the recent disclosures of his true character had done much
- already to weaken the faith of Kulan Tith, and that it would require
- but little more to turn the powerful jeddak into an avowed enemy;
- but so strong are the seeds of superstition that even the great
- Kaolian still hesitated to cut the final strand that bound him
- to his ancient religion.
-
- Matai Shang was wise enough to seem to accept the mandate of
- his follower, and promised to bring the two slave women to the
- audience chamber on the morrow.
-
- "It is almost morning now," he said, "and I should dislike to break
- in upon the slumber of my daughter, or I would have them fetched
- at once that you might see that the Prince of Helium is mistaken,"
- and he emphasized the last word in an effort to affront me so
- subtilely that I could not take open offense.
-
- I was about to object to any delay, and demand that the Princess
- of Helium be brought to me forthwith, when Thuvan Dihn made such
- insistence seem unnecessary.
-
- "I should like to see my daughter at once," he said, "but if
- Kulan Tith will give me his assurance that none will be permitted
- to leave the palace this night, and that no harm shall befall
- either Dejah Thoris or Thuvia of Ptarth between now and the moment
- they are brought into our presence in this chamber at daylight I
- shall not insist."
-
- "None shall leave the palace tonight," replied the Jeddak of Kaol,
- "and Matai Shang will give us assurance that no harm will come
- to the two women?"
-
- The thern assented with a nod. A few moments later Kulan Tith
- indicated that the audience was at an end, and at Thuvan Dihn's
- invitation I accompanied the Jeddak of Ptarth to his own apartments,
- where we sat until daylight, while he listened to the account of
- my experiences upon his planet and to all that had befallen
- his daughter during the time that we had been together.
-
- I found the father of Thuvia a man after my own heart, and that
- night saw the beginning of a friendship which has grown until
- it is second only to that which obtains between Tars Tarkas,
- the green Jeddak of Thark, and myself.
-
- The first burst of Mars's sudden dawn brought messengers from
- Kulan Tith, summoning us to the audience chamber where Thuvan Dihn
- was to receive his daughter after years of separation, and I was to
- be reunited with the glorious daughter of Helium after an almost
- unbroken separation of twelve years.
-
- My heart pounded within my bosom until I looked about me in
- embarrassment, so sure was I that all within the room must hear.
- My arms ached to enfold once more the divine form of her
- whose eternal youth and undying beauty were but outward
- manifestations of a perfect soul.
-
- At last the messenger despatched to fetch Matai Shang returned.
- I craned my neck to catch the first glimpse of those who should
- be following, but the messenger was alone.
-
- Halting before the throne he addressed his jeddak in a voice
- that was plainly audible to all within the chamber.
-
- "O Kulan Tith, Mightiest of Jeddaks," he cried, after the
- fashion of the court, "your messenger returns alone, for when he
- reached the apartments of the Father of Therns he found them empty,
- as were those occupied by his suite."
-
- Kulan Tith went white.
-
- A low groan burst from the lips of Thuvan Dihn who stood next me,
- not having ascended the throne which awaited him beside his host.
- For a moment the silence of death reigned in the great audience
- chamber of Kulan Tith, Jeddak of Kaol. It was he who broke the spell.
-
- Rising from his throne he stepped down from the dais to the
- side of Thuvan Dihn. Tears dimmed his eyes as he placed both
- his hands upon the shoulders of his friend.
-
- "O Thuvan Dihn," he cried, "that this should have happened in the
- palace of thy best friend! With my own hands would I have wrung
- the neck of Matai Shang had I guessed what was in his foul heart.
- Last night my life-long faith was weakened--this morning it has
- been shattered; but too late, too late.
-
- "To wrest your daughter and the wife of this royal warrior
- from the clutches of these archfiends you have but to command the
- resources of a mighty nation, for all Kaol is at your disposal.
- What may be done? Say the word!"
-
- "First," I suggested, "let us find those of your people who be
- responsible for the escape of Matai Shang and his followers.
- Without assistance on the part of the palace guard this thing
- could not have come to pass. Seek the guilty, and from them
- force an explanation of the manner of their going and the
- direction they have taken."
-
- Before Kulan Tith could issue the commands that would initiate
- the investigation a handsome young officer stepped forward and
- addressed his jeddak.
-
- "O Kulan Tith, Mightiest of Jeddaks," he said, "I alone be
- responsible for this grievous error. Last night it was I
- who commanded the palace guard. I was on duty in other parts of
- the palace during the audience of the early morning, and knew
- nothing of what transpired then, so that when the Father of Therns
- summoned me and explained that it was your wish that his party be
- hastened from the city because of the presence here of a deadly
- enemy who sought the Holy Hekkador's life I did only what a
- lifetime of training has taught me was the proper thing to do--
- I obeyed him whom I believed to be the ruler of us all,
- mightier even than thou, mightiest of jeddaks.
-
- "Let the consequences and the punishment fall on me alone,
- for I alone am guilty. Those others of the palace guard who
- assisted in the flight did so under my instructions."
-
- Kulan Tith looked first at me and then at Thuvan Dihn, as though
- to ask our judgment upon the man, but the error was so evidently
- excusable that neither of us had any mind to see the young officer
- suffer for a mistake that any might readily have made.
-
- "How left they," asked Thuvan Dihn, "and what direction did they take?"
-
- "They left as they came," replied the officer, "upon their own flier.
- For some time after they had departed I watched the vessel's lights,
- which vanished finally due north."
-
- "Where north could Matai Shang find an asylum?" asked Thuvan Dihn
- of Kulan Tith.
-
- For some moments the Jeddak of Kaol stood with bowed head,
- apparently deep in thought. Then a sudden light brightened
- his countenance.
-
- "I have it!" he cried. "Only yesterday Matai Shang let drop
- a hint of his destination, telling me of a race of people unlike
- ourselves who dwell far to the north. They, he said, had always
- been known to the Holy Therns and were devout and faithful
- followers of the ancient cult. Among them would he find a
- perpetual haven of refuge, where no `lying heretics' might
- seek him out. It is there that Matai Shang has gone."
-
- "And in all Kaol there be no flier wherein to follow," I cried.
-
- "Nor nearer than Ptarth," replied Thuvan Dihn.
-
- "Wait!" I exclaimed, "beyond the southern fringe of this great
- forest lies the wreck of the thern flier which brought me that far
- upon my way. If you will loan me men to fetch it, and
- artificers to assist me, I can repair it in two days, Kulan Tith."
-
- I had been more than half suspicious of the seeming sincerity
- of the Kaolian jeddak's sudden apostasy, but the alacrity with
- which he embraced my suggestion, and the despatch with which a
- force of officers and men were placed at my disposal entirely
- removed the last vestige of my doubts.
-
- Two days later the flier rested upon the top of the watchtower,
- ready to depart. Thuvan Dihn and Kulan Tith had offered me the
- entire resources of two nations--millions of fighting men were
- at my disposal; but my flier could hold but one other than
- myself and Woola.
-
- As I stepped aboard her, Thuvan Dihn took his place beside me.
- I cast a look of questioning surprise upon him. He turned to the
- highest of his own officers who had accompanied him to Kaol.
-
- "To you I entrust the return of my retinue to Ptarth," he said.
- "There my son rules ably in my absence. The Prince of Helium
- shall not go alone into the land of his enemies. I have spoken.
- Farewell!"
-
-
-
-
- THROUGH THE CARRION CAVES
-
-
- Straight toward the north, day and night, our destination compass
- led us after the fleeing flier upon which it had remained set
- since I first attuned it after leaving the thern fortress.
-
- Early in the second night we noticed the air becoming
- perceptibly colder, and from the distance we had come
- from the equator were assured that we were rapidly
- approaching the north arctic region.
-
- My knowledge of the efforts that had been made by countless
- expeditions to explore that unknown land bade me to caution,
- for never had flier returned who had passed to any considerable
- distance beyond the mighty ice-barrier that fringes the southern
- hem of the frigid zone.
-
- What became of them none knew--only that they passed forever out of
- the sight of man into that grim and mysterious country of the pole.
-
- The distance from the barrier to the pole was no more than a swift
- flier should cover in a few hours, and so it was assumed that some
- frightful catastrophe awaited those who reached the "forbidden land,"
- as it had come to be called by the Martians of the outer world.
-
- Thus it was that I went more slowly as we approached the barrier,
- for it was my intention to move cautiously by day over the ice-pack
- that I might discover, before I had run into a trap, if there really
- lay an inhabited country at the north pole, for there only could I
- imagine a spot where Matai Shang might feel secure from John Carter,
- Prince of Helium.
-
- We were flying at a snail's pace but a few feet above the
- ground--literally feeling our way along through the darkness, for
- both moons had set, and the night was black with the clouds that
- are to be found only at Mars's two extremities.
-
- Suddenly a towering wall of white rose directly in our path,
- and though I threw the helm hard over, and reversed our engine,
- I was too late to avoid collision. With a sickening crash we
- struck the high looming obstacle three-quarters on.
-
- The flier reeled half over; the engine stopped; as one, the
- patched buoyancy tanks burst, and we plunged, headforemost,
- to the ground twenty feet beneath.
-
- Fortunately none of us was injured, and when we had disentangled
- ourselves from the wreckage, and the lesser moon had burst again
- from below the horizon, we found that we were at the foot of a
- mighty ice-barrier, from which outcropped great patches of the
- granite hills which hold it from encroaching farther toward the south.
-
- What fate! With the journey all but completed to be thus
- wrecked upon the wrong side of that precipitous and unscalable wall
- of rock and ice!
-
- I looked at Thuvan Dihn. He but shook his head dejectedly.
-
- The balance of the night we spent shivering in our inadequate sleeping
- silks and furs upon the snow that lies at the foot of the ice-barrier.
-
- With daylight my battered spirits regained something of their
- accustomed hopefulness, though I must admit that there was little
- enough for them to feed upon.
-
- "What shall we do?" asked Thuvan Dihn. "How may we pass that
- which is impassable?"
-
- "First we must disprove its impassability," I replied.
- "Nor shall I admit that it is impassable before I have
- followed its entire circle and stand again upon this spot,
- defeated. The sooner we start, the better, for I see no
- other way, and it will take us more than a month to travel
- the weary, frigid miles that lie before us."
-
- For five days of cold and suffering and privation we traversed
- the rough and frozen way which lies at the foot of the ice-barrier.
- Fierce, fur-bearing creatures attacked us by daylight and by dark.
- Never for a moment were we safe from the sudden charge of some huge
- demon of the north.
-
- The apt was our most consistent and dangerous foe.
-
- It is a huge, white-furred creature with six limbs, four of which,
- short and heavy, carry it swiftly over the snow and ice;
- while the other two, growing forward from its shoulders on either
- side of its long, powerful neck, terminate in white, hairless hands,
- with which it seizes and holds its prey.
-
- Its head and mouth are more similar in appearance to those of
- a hippopotamous than to any other earthly animal, except that from
- the sides of the lower jawbone two mighty horns curve slightly
- downward toward the front.
-
- Its two huge eyes inspired my greatest curiosity. They extend
- in two vast, oval patches from the center of the top of the cranium
- down either side of the head to below the roots of the horns, so
- that these weapons really grow out from the lower part of the eyes,
- which are composed of several thousand ocelli each.
-
- This eye structure seemed remarkable in a beast whose haunts
- were upon a glaring field of ice and snow, and though I found upon
- minute examination of several that we killed that each ocellus is
- furnished with its own lid, and that the animal can at will close
- as many of the facets of his huge eyes as he chooses, yet I was
- positive that nature had thus equipped him because much of his life
- was to be spent in dark, subterranean recesses.
-
- Shortly after this we came upon the hugest apt that we had seen.
- The creature stood fully eight feet at the shoulder, and was
- so sleek and clean and glossy that I could have sworn that he had
- but recently been groomed.
-
- He stood head-on eyeing us as we approached him, for we had found
- it a waste of time to attempt to escape the perpetual bestial
- rage which seems to possess these demon creatures, who rove the
- dismal north attacking every living thing that comes within the
- scope of their far-seeing eyes.
-
- Even when their bellies are full and they can eat no more,
- they kill purely for the pleasure which they derive from taking life,
- and so when this particular apt failed to charge us, and instead
- wheeled and trotted away as we neared him, I should have been
- greatly surprised had I not chanced to glimpse the sheen of a
- golden collar about its neck.
-
- Thuvan Dihn saw it, too, and it carried the same message of
- hope to us both. Only man could have placed that collar there, and
- as no race of Martians of which we knew aught ever had attempted to
- domesticate the ferocious apt, he must belong to a people of the
- north of whose very existence we were ignorant--possibly to the
- fabled yellow men of Barsoom; that once powerful race which was
- supposed to be extinct, though sometimes, by theorists,
- thought still to exist in the frozen north.
-
- Simultaneously we started upon the trail of the great beast.
- Woola was quickly made to understand our desires, so that it was
- unnecessary to attempt to keep in sight of the animal whose swift
- flight over the rough ground soon put him beyond our vision.
-
- For the better part of two hours the trail paralleled the barrier,
- and then suddenly turned toward it through the roughest
- and seemingly most impassable country I ever had beheld.
-
- Enormous granite boulders blocked the way on every hand; deep
- rifts in the ice threatened to engulf us at the least misstep;
- and from the north a slight breeze wafted to our nostrils an
- unspeakable stench that almost choked us.
-
- For another two hours we were occupied in traversing a few
- hundred yards to the foot of the barrier.
-
- Then, turning about the corner of a wall-like outcropping of
- granite, we came upon a smooth area of two or three acres before
- the base of the towering pile of ice and rock that had baffled us
- for days, and before us beheld the dark and cavernous mouth of a cave.
-
- From this repelling portal the horrid stench was emanating,
- and as Thuvan Dihn espied the place he halted with an exclamation
- of profound astonishment.
-
- "By all my ancestors!" he ejaculated. "That I should have
- lived to witness the reality of the fabled Carrion Caves!
- If these indeed be they, we have found a way beyond the ice-barrier.
-
- "The ancient chronicles of the first historians of Barsoom--so
- ancient that we have for ages considered them mythology--record the
- passing of the yellow men from the ravages of the green hordes that
- overran Barsoom as the drying up of the great oceans drove the
- dominant races from their strongholds.
-
- "They tell of the wanderings of the remnants of this once powerful race,
- harassed at every step, until at last they found a way through the
- ice-barrier of the north to a fertile valley at the pole.
-
- "At the opening to the subterranean passage that led to their
- haven of refuge a mighty battle was fought in which the yellow
- men were victorious, and within the caves that gave ingress
- to their new home they piled the bodies of the dead, both yellow
- and green, that the stench might warn away their enemies from
- further pursuit.
-
- "And ever since that long-gone day have the dead of this fabled
- land been carried to the Carrion Caves, that in death and decay
- they might serve their country and warn away invading enemies.
- Here, too, is brought, so the fable runs, all the waste
- stuff of the nation--everything that is subject to rot, and that
- can add to the foul stench that assails our nostrils.
-
- "And death lurks at every step among rotting dead, for here
- the fierce apts lair, adding to the putrid accumulation with the
- fragments of their own prey which they cannot devour. It is a
- horrid avenue to our goal, but it is the only one."
-
- "You are sure, then, that we have found the way to the land
- of the yellow men?" I cried.
-
- "As sure as may be," he replied; "having only ancient legend
- to support my belief. But see how closely, so far, each detail
- tallies with the world-old story of the hegira of the yellow race.
- Yes, I am sure that we have discovered the way to their ancient
- hiding place."
-
- "If it be true, and let us pray that such may be the case," I said,
- "then here may we solve the mystery of the disappearance of
- Tardos Mors, Jeddak of Helium, and Mors Kajak, his son, for no
- other spot upon Barsoom has remained unexplored by the many
- expeditions and the countless spies that have been searching for
- them for nearly two years. The last word that came from them was
- that they sought Carthoris, my own brave son, beyond the ice-barrier."
-
- As we talked we had been approaching the entrance to the cave,
- and as we crossed the threshold I ceased to wonder that the
- ancient green enemies of the yellow men had been halted by the
- horrors of that awful way.
-
- The bones of dead men lay man high upon the broad floor of the
- first cave, and over all was a putrid mush of decaying flesh,
- through which the apts had beaten a hideous trail toward the
- entrance to the second cave beyond.
-
- The roof of this first apartment was low, like all that we
- traversed subsequently, so that the foul odors were confined
- and condensed to such an extent that they seemed to possess
- tangible substance. One was almost tempted to draw his
- short-sword and hew his way through in search of pure air beyond.
-
- "Can man breathe this polluted air and live?"
- asked Thuvan Dihn, choking.
-
- "Not for long, I imagine," I replied; "so let us make haste.
- I will go first, and you bring up the rear, with Woola between.
- Come," and with the words I dashed forward, across the fetid
- mass of putrefaction.
-
- It was not until we had passed through seven caves of different
- sizes and varying but little in the power and quality of their
- stenches that we met with any physical opposition. Then, within
- the eighth cave, we came upon a lair of apts.
-
- A full score of the mighty beasts were disposed about the chamber.
- Some were sleeping, while others tore at the fresh-killed carcasses
- of new-brought prey, or fought among themselves in their love-making.
-
- Here in the dim light of their subterranean home the value of
- their great eyes was apparent, for these inner caves are shrouded
- in perpetual gloom that is but little less than utter darkness.
-
- To attempt to pass through the midst of that fierce herd
- seemed, even to me, the height of folly, and so I proposed to
- Thuvan Dihn that he return to the outer world with Woola, that the
- two might find their way to civilization and come again with a
- sufficient force to overcome not only the apts, but any further
- obstacles that might lie between us and our goal.
-
- "In the meantime," I continued, "I may discover some means of
- winning my way alone to the land of the yellow men, but if I am
- unsuccessful one life only will have been sacrificed. Should we
- all go on and perish, there will be none to guide a succoring party
- to Dejah Thoris and your daughter."
-
- "I shall not return and leave you here alone, John Carter,"
- replied Thuvan Dihn. "Whether you go on to victory or death,
- the Jeddak of Ptarth remains at your side. I have spoken."
-
- I knew from his tone that it were useless to attempt to argue
- the question, and so I compromised by sending Woola back with a
- hastily penned note enclosed in a small metal case and fastened
- about his neck. I commanded the faithful creature to seek
- Carthoris at Helium, and though half a world and countless
- dangers lay between I knew that if the thing could be done Woola
- would do it.
-
- Equipped as he was by nature with marvelous speed and endurance,
- and with frightful ferocity that made him a match for any single
- enemy of the way, his keen intelligence and wondrous instinct
- should easily furnish all else that was needed for the successful
- accomplishment of his mission.
-
- It was with evident reluctance that the great beast turned to leave
- me in compliance with my command, and ere he had gone I could not
- resist the inclination to throw my arms about his great neck in
- a parting hug. He rubbed his cheek against mine in a final caress,
- and a moment later was speeding through the Carrion Caves toward
- the outer world.
-
- In my note to Carthoris I had given explicit directions for locating
- the Carrion Caves, impressing upon him the necessity for making
- entrance to the country beyond through this avenue, and not to attempt
- under any circumstances to cross the ice-barrier with a fleet.
- I told him that what lay beyond the eighth cave I could not
- even guess; but I was sure that somewhere upon the other side of the
- ice-barrier his mother lay in the power of Matai Shang, and that
- possibly his grandfather and great-grandfather as well, if they lived.
-
- Further, I advised him to call upon Kulan Tith and the son of
- Thuvan Dihn for warriors and ships that the expedition might be
- sufficiently strong to insure success at the first blow.
-
- "And," I concluded, "if there be time bring Tars Tarkas with you,
- for if I live until you reach me I can think of few greater pleasures
- than to fight once more, shoulder to shoulder, with my old friend."
-
- When Woola had left us Thuvan Dihn and I, hiding in the seventh cave,
- discussed and discarded many plans for crossing the eighth chamber.
- From where we stood we saw that the fighting among the apts was
- growing less, and that many that had been feeding had ceased and
- lain down to sleep.
-
- Presently it became apparent that in a short time all the ferocious
- monsters might be peacefully slumbering, and thus a hazardous
- opportunity be presented to us to cross through their lair.
-
- One by one the remaining brutes stretched themselves upon the
- bubbling decomposition that covered the mass of bones upon
- the floor of their den, until but a single apt remained awake.
- This huge fellow roamed restlessly about, nosing among his
- companion and the abhorrent litter of the cave.
-
- Occasionally he would stop to peer intently toward first
- one of the exits from the chamber and then the other.
- His whole demeanor was as of one who acts as sentry.
-
- We were at last forced to the belief that he would not sleep
- while the other occupants of the lair slept, and so cast about in
- our minds for some scheme whereby we might trick him. Finally I
- suggested a plan to Thuvan Dihn, and as it seemed as good as any
- that we had discussed we decided to put it to the test.
-
- To this end Thuvan Dihn placed himself close against the
- cave's wall, beside the entrance to the eighth chamber, while I
- deliberately showed myself to the guardian apt as he looked toward
- our retreat. Then I sprang to the opposite side of the entrance,
- flattening my body close to the wall.
-
- Without a sound the great beast moved rapidly toward the
- seventh cave to see what manner of intruder had thus rashly
- penetrated so far within the precincts of his habitation.
-
- As he poked his head through the narrow aperture that connects
- the two caves a heavy long-sword was awaiting him upon either hand,
- and before he had an opportunity to emit even a single growl his
- severed head rolled at our feet.
-
- Quickly we glanced into the eighth chamber--not an apt had moved.
- Crawling over the carcass of the huge beast that blocked the
- doorway Thuvan Dihn and I cautiously entered the forbidding
- and dangerous den.
-
- Like snails we wound our silent and careful way among the
- huge, recumbent forms. The only sound above our breathing was
- the sucking noise of our feet as we lifted them from the ooze of
- decaying flesh through which we crept.
-
- Halfway across the chamber and one of the mighty beasts
- directly before me moved restlessly at the very instant that my
- foot was poised above his head, over which I must step.
-
- Breathlessly I waited, balancing upon one foot, for I did not
- dare move a muscle. In my right hand was my keen short-sword,
- the point hovering an inch above the thick fur beneath which
- beat the savage heart.
-
- Finally the apt relaxed, sighing, as with the passing of a bad
- dream, and resumed the regular respiration of deep slumber.
- I planted my raised foot beyond the fierce head and an instant
- later had stepped over the beast.
-
- Thuvan Dihn followed directly after me, and another moment
- found us at the further door, undetected.
-
- The Carrion Caves consist of a series of twenty-seven
- connecting chambers, and present the appearance of having been
- eroded by running water in some far-gone age when a mighty river
- found its way to the south through this single breach in the
- barrier of rock and ice that hems the country of the pole.
-
- Thuvan Dihn and I traversed the remaining nineteen caverns
- without adventure or mishap.
-
- We were afterward to learn that but once a month is it possible
- to find all the apts of the Carrion Caves in a single chamber.
-
- At other times they roam singly or in pairs in and out of the caves,
- so that it would have been practically impossible for two men to
- have passed through the entire twenty-seven chambers without
- encountering an apt in nearly every one of them. Once a month
- they sleep for a full day, and it was our good fortune to stumble
- by accident upon one of these occasions.
-
- Beyond the last cave we emerged into a desolate country of
- snow and ice, but found a well-marked trail leading north.
- The way was boulder-strewn, as had been that south of the barrier,
- so that we could see but a short distance ahead of us at any time.
-
- After a couple of hours we passed round a huge boulder to come
- to a steep declivity leading down into a valley.
-
- Directly before us we saw a half dozen men--fierce, black-bearded
- fellows, with skins the color of a ripe lemon.
-
- "The yellow men of Barsoom!" ejaculated Thuvan Dihn, as though
- even now that he saw them he found it scarce possible to believe
- that the very race we expected to find hidden in this remote and
- inaccessible land did really exist.
-
- We withdrew behind an adjacent boulder to watch the actions of the
- little party, which stood huddled at the foot of another huge rock,
- their backs toward us.
-
- One of them was peering round the edge of the granite mass as
- though watching one who approached from the opposite side.
-
- Presently the object of his scrutiny came within the range
- of my vision and I saw that it was another yellow man. All
- were clothed in magnificent furs--the six in the black and yellow
- striped hide of the orluk, while he who approached alone was
- resplendent in the pure white skin of an apt.
-
- The yellow men were armed with two swords, and a short javelin
- was slung across the back of each, while from their left arms hung
- cuplike shields no larger than a dinner plate, the concave sides of
- which turned outward toward an antagonist.
-
- They seemed puny and futile implements of safety against an
- even ordinary swordsman, but I was later to see the purpose of them
- and with what wondrous dexterity the yellow men manipulate them.
-
- One of the swords which each of the warriors carried caught my
- immediate attention. I call it a sword, but really it was a sharp-
- edged blade with a complete hook at the far end.
-
- The other sword was of about the same length as the hooked
- instrument, and somewhere between that of my long-sword and my
- short-sword. It was straight and two-edged. In addition to the
- weapons I have innumerated each man carried a dagger in his harness.
-
- As the white-furred one approached, the six grasped their
- swords more firmly--the hooked instrument in the left hand, the
- straight sword in the right, while above the left wrist the small
- shield was held rigid upon a metal bracelet.
-
- As the lone warrior came opposite them the six rushed out upon
- him with fiendish yells that resembled nothing more closely than
- the savage war cry of the Apaches of the South-west.
-
- Instantly the attacked drew both his swords, and as the six fell
- upon him I witnessed as pretty fighting as one might care to see.
-
- With their sharp hooks the combatants attempted to take hold of an
- adversary, but like lightning the cupshaped shield would spring
- before the darting weapon and into its hollow the hook would plunge.
-
- Once the lone warrior caught an antagonist in the side with
- his hook, and drawing him close ran his sword through him.
-
- But the odds were too unequal, and, though he who fought alone
- was by far the best and bravest of them all, I saw that it was
- but a question of time before the remaining five would find an
- opening through his marvelous guard and bring him down.
-
- Now my sympathies have ever been with the weaker side of an argument,
- and though I knew nothing of the cause of the trouble I could not
- stand idly by and see a brave man butchered by superior numbers.
-
- As a matter of fact I presume I gave little attention to
- seeking an excuse, for I love a good fight too well to need any
- other reason for joining in when one is afoot.
-
- So it was that before Thuvan Dihn knew what I was about he saw
- me standing by the side of the white-clad yellow man, battling like
- mad with his five adversaries.
-
-
-
-
- WITH THE YELLOW MEN
-
-
- Thuvan Dihn was not long in joining me; and, though we found
- the hooked weapon a strange and savage thing with which to deal,
- the three of us soon despatched the five black-bearded warriors who
- opposed us.
-
- When the battle was over our new acquaintance turned to me,
- and removing the shield from his wrist, held it out. I did not
- know the significance of his act, but judged that it was but a
- form of expressing his gratitude to me.
-
- I afterward learned that it symbolized the offering of a man's life
- in return for some great favor done him; and my act of refusing,
- which I had immediately done, was what was expected of me.
-
- "Then accept from Talu, Prince of Marentina," said the yellow man,
- "this token of my gratitude," and reaching beneath one of his
- wide sleeves he withdrew a bracelet and placed it upon my arm.
- He then went through the same ceremony with Thuvan Dihn.
-
- Next he asked our names, and from what land we hailed.
- He seemed quite familiar with the geography of the outerworld,
- and when I said I was from Helium he raised his brows.
-
- "Ah," he said, "you seek your ruler and his company?"
-
- "Know you of them?" I asked.
-
- "But little more than that they were captured by my uncle, Salensus Oll,
- Jeddak of Jeddaks, Ruler of Okar, land of the yellow men of Barsoom.
- As to their fate I know nothing, for I am at war with my uncle,
- who would crush my power in the principality of Marentina.
-
- "These from whom you have just saved me are warriors he has
- sent out to find and slay me, for they know that often I come alone
- to hunt and kill the sacred apt which Salensus Oll so much reveres.
- It is partly because I hate his religion that Salensus Oll hates me;
- but mostly does he fear my growing power and the great faction
- which has arisen throughout Okar that would be glad to see
- me ruler of Okar and Jeddak of Jeddaks in his place.
-
- "He is a cruel and tyrannous master whom all hate, and were it not
- for the great fear they have of him I could raise an army overnight
- that would wipe out the few that might remain loyal to him. My own
- people are faithful to me, and the little valley of Marentina has
- paid no tribute to the court of Salensus Oll for a year.
-
- "Nor can he force us, for a dozen men may hold the narrow way
- to Marentina against a million. But now, as to thine own affairs.
- How may I aid you? My palace is at your disposal, if you wish to
- honor me by coming to Marentina."
-
- "When our work is done we shall be glad to accept your invitation,"
- I replied. "But now you can assist us most by directing us to the
- court of Salensus Oll, and suggesting some means by which we may
- gain admission to the city and the palace, or whatever other place
- we find our friends to be confined."
-
- Talu gazed ruefully at our smooth faces and at Thuvan Dihn's
- red skin and my white one.
-
- "First you must come to Marentina," he said, "for a great change
- must be wrought in your appearance before you can hope to
- enter any city in Okar. You must have yellow faces and black
- beards, and your apparel and trappings must be those least likely
- to arouse suspicion. In my palace is one who can make you appear
- as truly yellow men as does Salensus Oll himself."
-
- His counsel seemed wise; and as there was apparently no other
- way to insure a successful entry to Kadabra, the capital city of
- Okar, we set out with Talu, Prince of Marentina, for his little,
- rock-bound country.
-
- The way was over some of the worst traveling I have ever seen,
- and I do not wonder that in this land where there are neither
- thoats nor fliers that Marentina is in little fear of invasion; but
- at last we reached our destination, the first view of which I had
- from a slight elevation a half-mile from the city.
-
- Nestled in a deep valley lay a city of Martian concrete,
- whose every street and plaza and open space was roofed with glass.
- All about lay snow and ice, but there was none upon the rounded,
- domelike, crystal covering that enveloped the whole city.
-
- Then I saw how these people combatted the rigors of the arctic,
- and lived in luxury and comfort in the midst of a land of
- perpetual ice. Their cities were veritable hothouses, and when I
- had come within this one my respect and admiration for the
- scientific and engineering skill of this buried nation was unbounded.
-
- The moment we entered the city Talu threw off his outer garments
- of fur, as did we, and I saw that his apparel differed but little
- from that of the red races of Barsoom. Except for his leathern
- harness, covered thick with jewels and metal, he was naked,
- nor could one have comfortably worn apparel in that warm and
- humid atmosphere.
-
- For three days we remained the guests of Prince Talu, and
- during that time he showered upon us every attention and courtesy
- within his power. He showed us all that was of interest in his
- great city.
-
- The Marentina atmosphere plant will maintain life indefinitely
- in the cities of the north pole after all life upon the balance of
- dying Mars is extinct through the failure of the air supply, should
- the great central plant again cease functioning as it did upon that
- memorable occasion that gave me the opportunity of restoring life
- and happiness to the strange world that I had already learned to
- love so well.
-
- He showed us the heating system that stores the sun's rays in
- great reservoirs beneath the city, and how little is necessary to
- maintain the perpetual summer heat of the glorious garden spot
- within this arctic paradise.
-
- Broad avenues of sod sewn with the seed of the ocher vegetation
- of the dead sea bottoms carried the noiseless traffic of light
- and airy ground fliers that are the only form of artificial
- transportation used north of the gigantic ice-barrier.
-
- The broad tires of these unique fliers are but rubber-like gas
- bags filled with the eighth Barsoomian ray, or ray of propulsion--
- that remarkable discovery of the Martians that has made possible
- the great fleets of mighty airships that render the red man of the
- outer world supreme. It is this ray which propels the inherent or
- reflected light of the planet off into space, and when confined
- gives to the Martian craft their airy buoyancy.
-
- The ground fliers of Marentina contain just sufficient buoyancy
- in their automobile-like wheels to give the cars traction for
- steering purposes; and though the hind wheels are geared to the
- engine, and aid in driving the machine, the bulk of this work is
- carried by a small propeller at the stern.
-
- I know of no more delightful sensation than that of riding in
- one of these luxuriously appointed cars which skim, light and airy
- as feathers, along the soft, mossy avenues of Marentina. They move
- with absolute noiselessness between borders of crimson sward and
- beneath arching trees gorgeous with the wondrous blooms that mark
- so many of the highly cultivated varieties of Barsoomian vegetation.
-
- By the end of the third day the court barber--I can think of no
- other earthly appellation by which to describe him--had wrought
- so remarkable a transformation in both Thuvan Dihn and myself that
- our own wives would never have known us. Our skins were of the
- same lemon color as his own, and great, black beards and mustaches
- had been deftly affixed to our smooth faces. The trappings of
- warriors of Okar aided in the deception; and for wear beyond the
- hothouse cities we each had suits of the black- and yellow-striped orluk.
-
- Talu gave us careful directions for the journey to Kadabra, the
- capital city of the Okar nation, which is the racial name of the
- yellow men. This good friend even accompanied us part way, and then,
- promising to aid us in any way that he found possible, bade us adieu.
-
- On parting he slipped upon my finger a curiously wrought ring set with
- a dead-black, lusterless stone, which appeared more like a bit of
- bituminous coal than the priceless Barsoomian gem which in reality it is.
-
- "There had been but three others cut from the mother stone,"
- he said, "which is in my possession. These three are worn by
- nobles high in my confidence, all of whom have been sent on secret
- missions to the court of Salensus Oll.
-
- "Should you come within fifty feet of any of these three you will
- feel a rapid, pricking sensation in the finger upon which you
- wear this ring. He who wears one of its mates will experience the
- same feeling; it is caused by an electrical action that takes place
- the moment two of these gems cut from the same mother stone come
- within the radius of each other's power. By it you will know that
- a friend is at hand upon whom you may depend for assistance
- in time of need.
-
- "Should another wearer of one of these gems call upon you for aid
- do not deny him, and should death threaten you swallow the ring
- rather than let it fall into the hands of enemies. Guard it with
- your life, John Carter, for some day it may mean more than life to you."
-
- With this parting admonition our good friend turned back
- toward Marentina, and we set our faces in the direction of the
- city of Kadabra and the court of Salensus Oll, Jeddak of Jeddaks.
-
- That very evening we came within sight of the walled and glass-roofed
- city of Kadabra. It lies in a low depression near the pole, surrounded
- by rocky, snow-clad hills. From the pass through which we entered
- the valley we had a splendid view of this great city of the north.
- Its crystal domes sparkled in the brilliant sunlight gleaming above
- the frost-covered outer wall that circles the entire one hundred miles
- of its circumference.
-
- At regular intervals great gates give entrance to the city;
- but even at the distance from which we looked upon the massive pile
- we could see that all were closed, and, in accordance with Talu's
- suggestion, we deferred attempting to enter the city until the
- following morning.
-
- As he had said, we found numerous caves in the hillsides about us,
- and into one of these we crept for the night. Our warm orluk
- skins kept us perfectly comfortable, and it was only after a most
- refreshing sleep that we awoke shortly after daylight on the
- following morning.
-
- Already the city was astir, and from several of the gates we saw
- parties of yellow men emerging. Following closely each detail
- of the instructions given us by our good friend of Marentina, we
- remained concealed for several hours until one party of some half
- dozen warriors had passed along the trail below our hiding place
- and entered the hills by way of the pass along which we had come
- the previous evening.
-
- After giving them time to get well out of sight of our cave,
- Thuvan Dihn and I crept out and followed them, overtaking them
- when they were well into the hills.
-
- When we had come almost to them I called aloud to their leader,
- when the whole party halted and turned toward us.
- The crucial test had come. Could we but deceive these men
- the rest would be comparatively easy.
-
- "Kaor!" I cried as I came closer to them.
-
- "Kaor!" responded the officer in charge of the party.
-
- "We be from Illall," I continued, giving the name of the most remote
- city of Okar, which has little or no intercourse with Kadabra.
- "Only yesterday we arrived, and this morning the captain of
- the gate told us that you were setting out to hunt orluks,
- which is a sport we do not find in our own neighborhood. We have
- hastened after you to pray that you allow us to accompany you."
-
- The officer was entirely deceived, and graciously permitted us
- to go with them for the day. The chance guess that they were bound
- upon an orluk hunt proved correct, and Talu had said that the
- chances were ten to one that such would be the mission of any party
- leaving Kadabra by the pass through which we entered the valley,
- since that way leads directly to the vast plains frequented by this
- elephantine beast of prey.
-
- In so far as the hunt was concerned, the day was a failure,
- for we did not see a single orluk; but this proved more than
- fortunate for us, since the yellow men were so chagrined by their
- misfortune that they would not enter the city by the same gate by
- which they had left it in the morning, as it seemed that they had
- made great boasts to the captain of that gate about their skill at
- this dangerous sport.
-
- We, therefore, approached Kadabra at a point several miles
- from that at which the party had quitted it in the morning,
- and so were relieved of the danger of embarrassing questions
- and explanations on the part of the gate captain, whom we had
- said had directed us to this particular hunting party.
-
- We had come quite close to the city when my attention was
- attracted toward a tall, black shaft that reared its head several
- hundred feet into the air from what appeared to be a tangled mass
- of junk or wreckage, now partially snow-covered.
-
- I did not dare venture an inquiry for fear of arousing suspicion
- by evident ignorance of something which as a yellow man I should
- have known; but before we reached the city gate I was to learn
- the purpose of that grim shaft and the meaning of the mighty
- accumulation beneath it.
-
- We had come almost to the gate when one of the party called to
- his fellows, at the same time pointing toward the distant
- southern horizon. Following the direction he indicated, my eyes
- descried the hull of a large flier approaching rapidly from above
- the crest of the encircling hills.
-
- "Still other fools who would solve the mysteries of the
- forbidden north," said the officer, half to himself.
- "Will they never cease their fatal curiosity?"
-
- "Let us hope not," answered one of the warriors, "for then
- what should we do for slaves and sport?"
-
- "True; but what stupid beasts they are to continue to come to
- a region from whence none of them ever has returned."
-
- "Let us tarry and watch the end of this one," suggested one of the men.
-
- The officer looked toward the city.
-
- "The watch has seen him," he said; "we may remain, for we may be needed."
-
- I looked toward the city and saw several hundred warriors issuing
- from the nearest gate. They moved leisurely, as though there
- were no need for haste--nor was there, as I was presently to learn.
-
- Then I turned my eyes once more toward the flier. She was
- moving rapidly toward the city, and when she had come close enough
- I was surprised to see that her propellers were idle.
-
- Straight for that grim shaft she bore. At the last minute I
- saw the great blades move to reverse her, yet on she came as though
- drawn by some mighty, irresistible power.
-
- Intense excitement prevailed upon her deck, where men were
- running hither and thither, manning the guns and preparing to
- launch the small, one-man fliers, a fleet of which is part of the
- equipment of every Martian war vessel. Closer and closer to the
- black shaft the ship sped. In another instant she must strike, and
- then I saw the familiar signal flown that sends the lesser boats in
- a great flock from the deck of the mother ship.
-
- Instantly a hundred tiny fliers rose from her deck, like a
- swarm of huge dragon flies; but scarcely were they clear of the
- battleship than the nose of each turned toward the shaft, and they,
- too, rushed on at frightful speed toward the same now seemingly
- inevitable end that menaced the larger vessel.
-
- A moment later the collision came. Men were hurled in every
- direction from the ship's deck, while she, bent and crumpled,
- took the last, long plunge to the scrap-heap at the shaft's base.
-
- With her fell a shower of her own tiny fliers, for each of
- them had come in violent collision with the solid shaft.
-
- I noticed that the wrecked fliers scraped down the shaft's side,
- and that their fall was not as rapid as might have been expected;
- and then suddenly the secret of the shaft burst upon me,
- and with it an explanation of the cause that prevented a flier
- that passed too far across the ice-barrier ever returning.
-
- The shaft was a mighty magnet, and when once a vessel came within
- the radius of its powerful attraction for the aluminum steel
- that enters so largely into the construction of all Barsoomian craft,
- no power on earth could prevent such an end as we had just witnessed.
-
- I afterward learned that the shaft rests directly over the magnetic pole
- of Mars, but whether this adds in any way to its incalculable power of
- attraction I do not know. I am a fighting man, not a scientist.
-
- Here, at last, was an explanation of the long absence of
- Tardos Mors and Mors Kajak. These valiant and intrepid warriors
- had dared the mysteries and dangers of the frozen north to search
- for Carthoris, whose long absence had bowed in grief the head of
- his beautiful mother, Dejah Thoris, Princess of Helium.
-
- The moment that the last of the fliers came to rest at the
- base of the shaft the black-bearded, yellow warriors swarmed over
- the mass of wreckage upon which they lay, making prisoners of those
- who were uninjured and occasionally despatching with a sword-thrust
- one of the wounded who seemed prone to resent their taunts and insults.
-
- A few of the uninjured red men battled bravely against their
- cruel foes, but for the most part they seemed too overwhelmed by
- the horror of the catastrophe that had befallen them to do more than
- submit supinely to the golden chains with which they were manacled.
-
- When the last of the prisoners had been confined, the party
- returned to the city, at the gate of which we met a pack of fierce,
- gold-collared apts, each of which marched between two warriors,
- who held them with strong chains of the same metal as their collars.
-
- Just beyond the gate the attendants loosened the whole terrible herd,
- and as they bounded off toward the grim, black shaft I did not need
- to ask to know their mission. Had there not been those within the
- cruel city of Kadabra who needed succor far worse than the poor
- unfortunate dead and dying out there in the cold upon the bent
- and broken carcasses of a thousand fliers I could not have
- restrained my desire to hasten back and do battle with those horrid
- creatures that had been despatched to rend and devour them.
-
- As it was I could but follow the yellow warriors, with bowed head,
- and give thanks for the chance that had given Thuvan Dihn and me
- such easy ingress to the capital of Salensus Oll.
-
- Once within the gates, we had no difficulty in eluding our friends
- of the morning, and presently found ourselves in a Martian hostelry.
-
-
-
-
- IN DURANCE
-
-
- The public houses of Barsoom, I have found, vary but little.
- There is no privacy for other than married couples.
-
- Men without their wives are escorted to a large chamber,
- the floor of which is usually of white marble or heavy glass,
- kept scrupulously clean. Here are many small, raised platforms
- for the guest's sleeping silks and furs, and if he have none of
- his own clean, fresh ones are furnished at a nominal charge.
-
- Once a man's belongings have been deposited upon one of these
- platforms he is a guest of the house, and that platform his own
- until he leaves. No one will disturb or molest his belongings,
- as there are no thieves upon Mars.
-
- As assassination is the one thing to be feared, the proprietors
- of the hostelries furnish armed guards, who pace back and forth
- through the sleeping-rooms day and night. The number of guards
- and gorgeousness of their trappings quite usually denote the
- status of the hotel.
-
- No meals are served in these houses, but generally a public eating
- place adjoins them. Baths are connected with the sleeping chambers,
- and each guest is required to bathe daily or depart from the hotel.
-
- Usually on a second or third floor there is a large sleeping-
- room for single women guests, but its appointments do not vary
- materially from the chamber occupied by men. The guards who watch
- the women remain in the corridor outside the sleeping chamber,
- while female slaves pace back and forth among the sleepers within,
- ready to notify the warriors should their presence be required.
-
- I was surprised to note that all the guards with the hotel at
- which we stopped were red men, and on inquiring of one of them I
- learned that they were slaves purchased by the proprietors of the
- hotels from the government. The man whose post was past my sleeping
- platform had been commander of the navy of a great Martian nation;
- but fate had carried his flagship across the ice-barrier
- within the radius of power of the magnetic shaft, and now
- for many tedious years he had been a slave of the yellow men.
-
- He told me that princes, jeds, and even jeddaks of the outer world,
- were among the menials who served the yellow race; but when I
- asked him if he had heard of the fate of Mors Kajak or Tardos
- Mors he shook his head, saying that he never had heard of their
- being prisoners here, though he was very familiar with the
- reputations and fame they bore in the outer world.
-
- Neither had he heard any rumor of the coming of the Father of
- Therns and the black dator of the First Born, but he hastened to
- explain that he knew little of what took place within the palace.
- I could see that he wondered not a little that a yellow man should
- be so inquisitive about certain red prisoners from beyond the ice-
- barrier, and that I should be so ignorant of customs and conditions
- among my own race.
-
- In fact, I had forgotten my disguise upon discovering a red
- man pacing before my sleeping platform; but his growing expression
- of surprise warned me in time, for I had no mind to reveal my
- identity to any unless some good could come of it, and I did not
- see how this poor fellow could serve me yet, though I had it in my
- mind that later I might be the means of serving him and all the
- other thousands of prisoners who do the bidding of their stern
- masters in Kadabra.
-
- Thuvan Dihn and I discussed our plans as we sat together among
- our sleeping silks and furs that night in the midst of the hundreds
- of yellow men who occupied the apartment with us. We spoke in low
- whispers, but, as that is only what courtesy demands in a public
- sleeping place, we roused no suspicion.
-
- At last, determining that all must be but idle speculation until
- after we had had a chance to explore the city and attempt to put
- into execution the plan Talu had suggested, we bade each other
- good night and turned to sleep.
-
- After breakfasting the following morning we set out to see Kadabra,
- and as, through the generosity of the prince of Marentina, we were
- well supplied with the funds current in Okar we purchased a handsome
- ground flier. Having learned to drive them while in Marentina,
- we spent a delightful and profitable day exploring the city,
- and late in the afternoon at the hour Talu told us we would
- find government officials in their offices, we stopped before
- a magnificent building on the plaza opposite the royal
- grounds and the palace.
-
- Here we walked boldly in past the armed guard at the door, to
- be met by a red slave within who asked our wishes.
-
- "Tell Sorav, your master, that two warriors from Illall wish
- to take service in the palace guard," I said.
-
- Sorav, Talu had told us, was the commander of the forces of
- the palace, and as men from the further cities of Okar--and
- especially Illall--were less likely to be tainted with the germ of
- intrigue which had for years infected the household of Salensus Oll,
- he was sure that we would be welcomed and few questions asked us.
-
- He had primed us with such general information as he thought would be
- necessary for us to pass muster before Sorav, after which we would
- have to undergo a further examination before Salensus Oll that he
- might determine our physical fitness and our ability as warriors.
-
- The little experience we had had with the strange hooked sword
- of the yellow man and his cuplike shield made it seem rather
- unlikely that either of us could pass this final test, but there
- was the chance that we might be quartered in the palace of Salensus
- Oll for several days after being accepted by Sorav before the
- Jeddak of Jeddaks would find time to put us to the final test.
-
- After a wait of several minutes in an ante-chamber we were summoned
- into the private office of Sorav, where we were courteously greeted
- by this ferocious-appearing, black-bearded officer. He asked us our
- names and stations in our own city, and having received replies that
- were evidently satisfactory to him, he put certain questions to us
- that Talu had foreseen and prepared us for.
-
- The interview could not have lasted over ten minutes when
- Sorav summoned an aid whom he instructed to record us properly,
- and then escort us to the quarters in the palace which are set
- aside for aspirants to membership in the palace guard.
-
- The aid took us to his own office first, where he measured
- and weighed and photographed us simultaneously with a machine
- ingeniously devised for that purpose, five copies being
- instantly reproduced in five different offices of the government,
- two of which are located in other cities miles distant.
- Then he led us through the palace grounds to the main guardroom
- of the palace, there turning us over to the officer in charge.
-
- This individual again questioned us briefly, and finally
- despatched a soldier to guide us to our quarters. These we found
- located upon the second floor of the palace in a semi-detached
- tower at the rear of the edifice.
-
- When we asked our guide why we were quartered so far from the
- guardroom he replied that the custom of the older members of the
- guard of picking quarrels with aspirants to try their metal had
- resulted in so many deaths that it was found difficult to maintain
- the guard at its full strength while this custom prevailed.
- Salensus Oll had, therefore, set apart these quarters for aspirants,
- and here they were securely locked against the danger of attack
- by members of the guard.
-
- This unwelcome information put a sudden check to all our well-
- laid plans, for it meant that we should virtually be prisoners in
- the palace of Salensus Oll until the time that he should see fit
- to give us the final examination for efficiency.
-
- As it was this interval upon which we had banked to accomplish
- so much in our search for Dejah Thoris and Thuvia of Ptarth, our
- chagrin was unbounded when we heard the great lock click behind our
- guide as he had quitted us after ushering us into the chambers we
- were to occupy.
-
- With a wry face I turned to Thuvan Dihn. My companion but shook
- his head disconsolately and walked to one of the windows upon
- the far side of the apartment.
-
- Scarcely had he gazed beyond them than he called to me in a
- tone of suppressed excitement and surprise. In an instant I
- was by his side.
-
- "Look!" said Thuvan Dihn, pointing toward the courtyard below.
-
- As my eyes followed the direction indicated I saw two women
- pacing back and forth in an enclosed garden.
-
- At the same moment I recognized them--they were Dejah Thoris
- and Thuvia of Ptarth!
-
- There were they whom I had trailed from one pole to another,
- the length of a world. Only ten feet of space and a few metal bars
- separated me from them.
-
- With a cry I attracted their attention, and as Dejah Thoris
- looked up full into my eyes I made the sign of love that the
- men of Barsoom make to their women.
-
- To my astonishment and horror her head went high, and as a
- look of utter contempt touched her finely chiseled features she
- turned her back full upon me. My body is covered with the scars of
- a thousand conflicts, but never in all my long life have I suffered
- such anguish from a wound, for this time the steel of a woman's
- look had entered my heart.
-
- With a groan I turned away and buried my face in my arms. I
- heard Thuvan Dihn call aloud to Thuvia, but an instant later his
- exclamation of surprise betokened that he, too, had been repulsed
- by his own daughter.
-
- "They will not even listen," he cried to me. "They have put
- their hands over their ears and walked to the farther end of the
- garden. Ever heard you of such mad work, John Carter? The two
- must be bewitched."
-
- Presently I mustered the courage to return to the window, for
- even though she spurned me I loved her, and could not keep my eyes
- from feasting upon her divine face and figure, but when she saw me
- looking she again turned away.
-
- I was at my wit's end to account for her strange actions, and
- that Thuvia, too, had turned against her father seemed incredible.
- Could it be that my incomparable princess still clung to the
- hideous faith from which I had rescued her world? Could it be that
- she looked upon me with loathing and contempt because I had
- returned from the Valley Dor, or because I had desecrated the
- temples and persons of the Holy Therns?
-
- To naught else could I ascribe her strange deportment, yet it
- seemed far from possible that such could be the case, for the love
- of Dejah Thoris for John Carter had been a great and wondrous love--
- far above racial distinctions, creed, or religion.
-
- As I gazed ruefully at the back of her haughty, royal head a
- gate at the opposite end of the garden opened and a man entered.
- As he did so he turned and slipped something into the hand of the
- yellow guardsman beyond the gate, nor was the distance too great
- that I might not see that money had passed between them.
-
- Instantly I knew that this newcomer had bribed his way within
- the garden. Then he turned in the direction of the two women,
- and I saw that he was none other than Thurid, the black dator
- of the First Born.
-
- He approached quite close to them before he spoke, and as they
- turned at the sound of his voice I saw Dejah Thoris shrink from him.
-
- There was a nasty leer upon his face as he stepped close to her and
- spoke again. I could not hear his words, but her answer came clearly.
-
- "The granddaughter of Tardos Mors can always die," she said,
- "but she could never live at the price you name."
-
- Then I saw the black scoundrel go upon his knees beside her,
- fairly groveling in the dirt, pleading with her. Only part of what
- he said came to me, for though he was evidently laboring under the
- stress of passion and excitement, it was equally apparent that he
- did not dare raise his voice for fear of detection.
-
- "I would save you from Matai Shang," I heard him say. "You know
- the fate that awaits you at his hands. Would you not choose
- me rather than the other?"
-
- "I would choose neither," replied Dejah Thoris, "even were I
- free to choose, as you know well I am not."
-
- "You ARE free!" he cried. "John Carter, Prince of Helium, is dead."
-
- "I know better than that; but even were he dead, and I must
- needs choose another mate, it should be a plant man or a great
- white ape in preference to either Matai Shang or you, black calot,"
- she answered with a sneer of contempt.
-
- Of a sudden the vicious beast lost all control of himself,
- as with a vile oath he leaped at the slender woman, gripping her
- tender throat in his brute clutch. Thuvia screamed and sprang to
- aid her fellow-prisoner, and at the same instant I, too, went mad,
- and tearing at the bars that spanned my window I ripped them from
- their sockets as they had been but copper wire.
-
- Hurling myself through the aperture I reached the garden,
- but a hundred feet from where the black was choking the life
- from my Dejah Thoris, and with a single great bound I was upon him.
- I spoke no word as I tore his defiling fingers from that beautiful
- throat, nor did I utter a sound as I hurled him twenty feet from me.
-
- Foaming with rage, Thurid regained his feet and charged me
- like a mad bull.
-
- "Yellow man," he shrieked, "you knew not upon whom you had
- laid your vile hands, but ere I am done with you, you will
- know well what it means to offend the person of a First Born."
-
- Then he was upon me, reaching for my throat, and precisely as
- I had done that day in the courtyard of the Temple of Issus I did
- here in the garden of the palace of Salensus Oll. I ducked beneath
- his outstretched arms, and as he lunged past me I planted a
- terrific right upon the side of his jaw.
-
- Just as he had done upon that other occasion he did now. Like a top
- he spun round, his knees gave beneath him, and he crumpled to the
- ground at my feet. Then I heard a voice behind me.
-
- It was the deep voice of authority that marks the ruler of men,
- and when I turned to face the resplendent figure of a giant
- yellow man I did not need to ask to know that it was Salensus Oll.
- At his right stood Matai Shang, and behind them a score of guardsmen.
-
- "Who are you," he cried, "and what means this intrusion within
- the precincts of the women's garden? I do not recall your face.
- How came you here?"
-
- But for his last words I should have forgotten my disguise
- entirely and told him outright that I was John Carter,
- Prince of Helium; but his question recalled me to myself.
- I pointed to the dislodged bars of the window above.
-
- "I am an aspirant to membership in the palace guard," I said,
- "and from yonder window in the tower where I was confined awaiting
- the final test for fitness I saw this brute attack the this woman.
- I could not stand idly by, O Jeddak, and see this thing done within
- the very palace grounds, and yet feel that I was fit to serve and
- guard your royal person."
-
- I had evidently made an impression upon the ruler of Okar by my
- fair words, and when he had turned to Dejah Thoris and Thuvia of
- Ptarth, and both had corroborated my statements it began to look
- pretty dark for Thurid.
-
- I saw the ugly gleam in Matai Shang's evil eyes as Dejah Thoris
- narrated all that had passed between Thurid and herself, and
- when she came to that part which dealt with my interference with
- the dator of the First Born her gratitude was quite apparent,
- though I could see by her eyes that something puzzled her strangely.
-
- I did not wonder at her attitude toward me while others were present;
- but that she should have denied me while she and Thuvia were the only
- occupants of the garden still cut me sorely.
-
- As the examination proceeded I cast a glance at Thurid
- and startled him looking wide-eyed and wonderingly at me,
- and then of a sudden he laughed full in my face.
-
- A moment later Salensus Oll turned toward the black.
-
- "What have you to say in explanation of these charges?" he asked
- in a deep and terrible voice. "Dare you aspire to one whom
- the Father of Therns has chosen--one who might even be a fit mate
- for the Jeddak of Jeddaks himself?"
-
- And then the black-bearded tyrant turned and cast a sudden
- greedy look upon Dejah Thoris, as though with the words a new
- thought and a new desire had sprung up within his mind and breast.
-
- Thurid had been about to reply and, with a malicious grin upon
- his face, was pointing an accusing finger at me, when Salensus
- Oll's words and the expression of his face cut him short.
-
- A cunning look crept into his eyes, and I knew from the expression of
- his face that his next words were not the ones he had intended to speak.
-
- "O Mightiest of Jeddaks," he said, "the man and the women do not
- speak the truth. The fellow had come into the garden to assist
- them to escape. I was beyond and overheard their conversation,
- and when I entered, the woman screamed and the man sprang upon
- me and would have killed me.
-
- "What know you of this man? He is a stranger to you, and I
- dare say that you will find him an enemy and a spy. Let him be put
- on trial, Salensus Oll, rather than your friend and guest, Thurid,
- Dator of the First Born."
-
- Salensus Oll looked puzzled. He turned again and looked upon
- Dejah Thoris, and then Thurid stepped quite close to him and
- whispered something in his ear--what, I know not.
-
- Presently the yellow ruler turned to one of his officers.
-
- "See that this man be securely confined until we have time to
- go deeper into this affair," he commanded, "and as bars alone seem
- inadequate to restrain him, let chains be added."
-
- Then he turned and left the garden, taking Dejah Thoris with
- him--his hand upon her shoulder. Thurid and Matai Shang went also,
- and as they reached the gateway the black turned and laughed again
- aloud in my face.
-
- What could be the meaning of his sudden change toward me?
- Could he suspect my true identity? It must be that, and the thing
- that had betrayed me was the trick and blow that had laid him low
- for the second time.
-
- As the guards dragged me away my heart was very sad and bitter indeed,
- for now to the two relentless enemies that had hounded her for so long
- another and a more powerful one had been added, for I would have been
- but a fool had I not recognized the sudden love for Dejah Thoris that had
- just been born in the terrible breast of Salensus Oll, Jeddak of Jeddaks,
- ruler of Okar.
-
-
-
-
- THE PIT OF PLENTY
-
-
- I did not languish long within the prison of Salensus Oll.
- During the short time that I lay there, fettered with chains of gold,
- I often wondered as to the fate of Thuvan Dihn, Jeddak of Ptarth.
-
- My brave companion had followed me into the garden as I attacked Thurid,
- and when Salensus Oll had left with Dejah Thoris and the others,
- leaving Thuvia of Ptarth behind, he, too, had remained in the garden
- with his daughter, apparently unnoticed, for he was appareled
- similarly to the guards.
-
- The last I had seen of him he stood waiting for the warriors
- who escorted me to close the gate behind them, that he might be
- alone with Thuvia. Could it be possible that they had escaped?
- I doubted it, and yet with all my heart I hoped that it might be true.
-
- The third day of my incarceration brought a dozen warriors to
- escort me to the audience chamber, where Salensus Oll himself was
- to try me. A great number of nobles crowded the room, and among
- them I saw Thurid, but Matai Shang was not there.
-
- Dejah Thoris, as radiantly beautiful as ever, sat upon a small
- throne beside Salensus Oll. The expression of sad hopelessness
- upon her dear face cut deep into my heart.
-
- Her position beside the Jeddak of Jeddaks boded ill for her and me,
- and on the instant that I saw her there, there sprang to my mind
- the firm intention never to leave that chamber alive if I must
- leave her in the clutches of this powerful tyrant.
-
- I had killed better men than Salensus Oll, and killed them
- with my bare hands, and now I swore to myself that I should kill
- him if I found that the only way to save the Princess of Helium.
- That it would mean almost instant death for me I cared not, except
- that it would remove me from further efforts in behalf of Dejah
- Thoris, and for this reason alone I would have chosen another way,
- for even though I should kill Salensus Oll that act would not
- restore my beloved wife to her own people. I determined to
- wait the final outcome of the trial, that I might learn all that I
- could of the Okarian ruler's intentions, and then act accordingly.
-
- Scarcely had I come before him than Salensus Oll summoned Thurid also.
-
- "Dator Thurid," he said, "you have made a strange request of me;
- but, in accordance with your wishes and your promise that it will
- result only to my interests, I have decided to accede.
-
- "You tell me that a certain announcement will be the means of
- convicting this prisoner and, at the same time, open the way to the
- gratification of my dearest wish."
-
- Thurid nodded.
-
- "Then shall I make the announcement here before all my nobles,"
- continued Salensus Oll. "For a year no queen has sat upon the
- throne beside me, and now it suits me to take to wife one who
- is reputed the most beautiful woman upon Barsoom. A statement
- which none may truthfully deny.
-
- "Nobles of Okar, unsheathe your swords and do homage to Dejah
- Thoris, Princess of Helium and future Queen of Okar, for at the end
- of the allotted ten days she shall become the wife of Salensus Oll."
-
- As the nobles drew their blades and lifted them on high, in
- accordance with the ancient custom of Okar when a jeddak announces
- his intention to wed, Dejah Thoris sprang to her feet and, raising
- her hand aloft, cried in a loud voice that they desist.
-
- "I may not be the wife of Salensus Oll," she pleaded, "for
- already I be a wife and mother. John Carter, Prince of Helium,
- still lives. I know it to be true, for I overheard Matai Shang
- tell his daughter Phaidor that he had seen him in Kaor, at the
- court of Kulan Tith, Jeddak. A jeddak does not wed a married
- woman, nor will Salensus Oll thus violate the bonds of matrimony."
-
- Salensus Oll turned upon Thurid with an ugly look.
-
- "Is this the surprise you held in store for me?" he cried.
- "You assured me that no obstacle which might not be easily
- overcome stood between me and this woman, and now I find that
- the one insuperable obstacle intervenes. What mean you, man?
- What have you to say?"
-
- "And should I deliver John Carter into your hands, Salensus Oll,
- would you not feel that I had more than satisfied the promise
- that I made you?" answered Thurid.
-
- "Talk not like a fool," cried the enraged jeddak. "I am no
- child to be thus played with."
-
- "I am talking only as a man who knows," replied Thurid.
- "Knows that he can do all that he claims."
-
- "Then turn John Carter over to me within ten days or yourself
- suffer the end that I should mete out to him were he in my power!"
- snapped the Jeddak of Jeddaks, with an ugly scowl.
-
- "You need not wait ten days, Salensus Oll," replied Thurid;
- and then, turning suddenly upon me as he extended a pointing
- finger, he cried: "There stands John Carter, Prince of Helium!"
-
- "Fool!" shrieked Salensus Oll. "Fool! John Carter is a white man.
- This fellow be as yellow as myself. John Carter's face is
- smooth--Matai Shang has described him to me. This prisoner has a
- beard and mustache as large and black as any in Okar. Quick,
- guardsmen, to the pits with the black maniac who wishes to throw
- his life away for a poor joke upon your ruler!"
-
- "Hold!" cried Thurid, and springing forward before I could guess
- his intention, he had grasped my beard and ripped the whole false
- fabric from my face and head, revealing my smooth, tanned skin
- beneath and my close-cropped black hair.
-
- Instantly pandemonium reigned in the audience chamber of Salensus Oll.
- Warriors pressed forward with drawn blades, thinking that I might be
- contemplating the assassination of the Jeddak of Jeddaks; while others,
- out of curiosity to see one whose name was familiar from pole to pole,
- crowded behind their fellows.
-
- As my identity was revealed I saw Dejah Thoris spring to her feet--
- amazement writ large upon her face--and then through that jam of
- armed men she forced her way before any could prevent. A moment
- only and she was before me with outstretched arms and eyes filled
- with the light of her great love.
-
- "John Carter! John Carter!" she cried as I folded her to my breast,
- and then of a sudden I knew why she had denied me in the garden
- beneath the tower.
-
- What a fool I had been! Expecting that she would penetrate the marvelous
- disguise that had been wrought for me by the barber of Marentina!
- She had not known me, that was all; and when she saw the sign of love
- from a stranger she was offended and righteously indignant. Indeed,
- but I had been a fool.
-
- "And it was you," she cried, "who spoke to me from the tower!
- How could I dream that my beloved Virginian lay behind that fierce
- beard and that yellow skin?"
-
- She had been wont to call me her Virginian as a term of endearment,
- for she knew that I loved the sound of that beautiful name,
- made a thousand times more beautiful and hallowed by her dear lips,
- and as I heard it again after all those long years my eyes
- became dimmed with tears and my voice choked with emotion.
-
- But an instant did I crush that dear form to me ere Salensus Oll,
- trembling with rage and jealousy, shouldered his way to us.
-
- "Seize the man," he cried to his warriors, and a hundred ruthless
- hands tore us apart.
-
- Well it was for the nobles of the court of Okar that John Carter
- had been disarmed. As it was, a dozen of them felt the weight
- of my clenched fists, and I had fought my way half up the
- steps before the throne to which Salensus Oll had carried Dejah
- Thoris ere ever they could stop me.
-
- Then I went down, fighting, beneath a half-hundred warriors; but
- before they had battered me into unconsciousness I heard that from
- the lips of Dejah Thoris that made all my suffering well worth while.
-
- Standing there beside the great tyrant, who clutched her by the arm,
- she pointed to where I fought alone against such awful odds.
-
- "Think you, Salensus Oll, that the wife of such as he is," she cried,
- "would ever dishonor his memory, were he a thousand times dead,
- by mating with a lesser mortal? Lives there upon any world such
- another as John Carter, Prince of Helium? Lives there another
- man who could fight his way back and forth across a warlike planet,
- facing savage beasts and hordes of savage men, for the love of a woman?
-
- "I, Dejah Thoris, Princess of Helium, am his. He fought for me and won me.
- If you be a brave man you will honor the bravery that is his, and you will
- not kill him. Make him a slave if you will, Salensus Oll; but spare his life.
- I would rather be a slave with such as he than be Queen of Okar."
-
- "Neither slave nor queen dictates to Salensus Oll," replied the
- Jeddak of Jeddaks. "John Carter shall die a natural death in the
- Pit of Plenty, and the day he dies Dejah Thoris shall become my queen."
-
- I did not hear her reply, for it was then that a blow upon my
- head brought unconsciousness, and when I recovered my senses only
- a handful of guardsmen remained in the audience chamber with me.
- As I opened my eyes they goaded me with the points of their swords
- and bade me rise.
-
- Then they led me through long corridors to a court far toward the
- center of the palace.
-
- In the center of the court was a deep pit, near the edge of which stood
- half a dozen other guardsmen, awaiting me. One of them carried a long
- rope in his hands, which he commenced to make ready as we approached.
-
- We had come to within fifty feet of these men when I felt a
- sudden strange and rapid pricking sensation in one of my fingers.
-
- For a moment I was nonplused by the odd feeling, and then there
- came to me recollection of that which in the stress of my adventure
- I had entirely forgotten--the gift ring of Prince Talu of Marentina.
-
- Instantly I looked toward the group we were nearing, at the
- same time raising my left hand to my forehead, that the ring might
- be visible to one who sought it. Simultaneously one of the waiting
- warriors raised his left hand, ostensibly to brush back his hair,
- and upon one of his fingers I saw the duplicate of my own ring.
-
- A quick look of intelligence passed between us, after which I kept
- my eyes turned away from the warrior and did not look at him again,
- for fear that I might arouse the suspicion of the Okarians.
- When we reached the edge of the pit I saw that it was very deep,
- and presently I realized I was soon to judge just how far it
- extended below the surface of the court, for he who held the rope
- passed it about my body in such a way that it could be released
- from above at any time; and then, as all the warriors grasped it,
- he pushed me forward, and I fell into the yawning abyss.
-
- After the first jerk as I reached the end of the rope that
- had been paid out to let me fall below the pit's edge they
- lowered me quickly but smoothly. The moment before the plunge,
- while two or three of the men had been assisting in adjusting the
- rope about me, one of them had brought his mouth close to my cheek,
- and in the brief interval before I was cast into the forbidding
- hole he breathed a single word into my ear:
-
- "Courage!"
-
- The pit, which my imagination had pictured as bottomless, proved to be
- not more than a hundred feet in depth; but as its walls were smoothly
- polished it might as well have been a thousand feet, for I could never
- hope to escape without outside assistance.
-
- For a day I was left in darkness; and then, quite suddenly,
- a brilliant light illumined my strange cell. I was reasonably
- hungry and thirsty by this time, not having tasted food or drink
- since the day prior to my incarceration.
-
- To my amazement I found the sides of the pit, that I had
- thought smooth, lined with shelves, upon which were the most
- delicious viands and liquid refreshments that Okar afforded.
-
- With an exclamation of delight I sprang forward to partake of
- some of the welcome food, but ere ever I reached it the light
- was extinguished, and, though I groped my way about the chamber,
- my hands came in contact with nothing beside the smooth, hard wall
- that I had felt on my first examination of my prison.
-
- Immediately the pangs of hunger and thirst began to assail me.
- Where before I had had but a mild craving for food and drink,
- I now actually suffered for want of it, and all because of the
- tantalizing sight that I had had of food almost within my grasp.
-
- Once more darkness and silence enveloped me, a silence that was
- broken only by a single mocking laugh.
-
- For another day nothing occurred to break the monotony of my
- imprisonment or relieve the suffering superinduced by hunger
- and thirst. Slowly the pangs became less keen, as suffering
- deaded the activity of certain nerves; and then the light
- flashed on once again, and before me stood an array of new
- and tempting dishes, with great bottles of clear water and
- flagons of refreshing wine, upon the outside of which the
- cold sweat of condensation stood.
-
- Again, with the hunger madness of a wild beast, I sprang
- forward to seize those tempting dishes; but, as before,
- the light went out and I came to a sudden stop against a hard wall.
-
- Then the mocking laugh rang out for a second time.
-
- The Pit of Plenty!
-
- Ah, what a cruel mind must have devised this exquisite,
- hellish torture! Day after day was the thing repeated,
- until I was on the verge of madness; and then, as I had
- done in the pits of the Warhoons, I took a new, firm hold
- upon my reason and forced it back into the channels of sanity.
-
- By sheer will-power I regained control over my tottering mentality,
- and so successful was I that the next time that the light came I sat
- quite still and looked indifferently at the fresh and tempting food
- almost within my reach. Glad I was that I had done so, for it gave me
- an opportunity to solve the seeming mystery of those vanishing banquets.
-
- As I made no move to reach the food, the torturers left the light
- turned on in the hope that at last I could refrain no longer from
- giving them the delicious thrill of enjoyment that my former futile
- efforts to obtain it had caused.
-
- And as I sat scrutinizing the laden shelves I presently saw
- how the thing was accomplished, and so simple was it that I
- wondered I had not guessed it before. The wall of my prison was of
- clearest glass--behind the glass were the tantalizing viands.
-
- After nearly an hour the light went out, but this time there was
- no mocking laughter--at least not upon the part of my tormentors;
- but I, to be at quits with them, gave a low laugh that none might
- mistake for the cackle of a maniac.
-
- Nine days passed, and I was weak from hunger and thirst, but no
- longer suffering--I was past that. Then, down through the
- darkness above, a little parcel fell to the floor at my side.
-
- Indifferently I groped for it, thinking it but some new
- invention of my jailers to add to my sufferings.
-
- At last I found it--a tiny package wrapped in paper, at the
- end of a strong and slender cord. As I opened it a few lozenges
- fell to the floor. As I gathered them up, feeling of them and
- smelling of them, I discovered that they were tablets of
- concentrated food such as are quite common in all parts of Barsoom.
-
- Poison! I thought.
-
- Well, what of it? Why not end my misery now rather than drag out
- a few more wretched days in this dark pit? Slowly I raised one
- of the little pellets to my lips.
-
- "Good-bye, my Dejah Thoris!" I breathed. "I have lived for
- you and fought for you, and now my next dearest wish is to be
- realized, for I shall die for you," and, taking the morsel
- in my mouth, I devoured it.
-
- One by one I ate them all, nor ever did anything taste better
- than those tiny bits of nourishment, within which I knew must lie
- the seeds of death--possibly of some hideous, torturing death.
-
- As I sat quietly upon the floor of my prison, waiting for the end,
- my fingers by accident came in contact with the bit of paper
- in which the things had been wrapped; and as I idly played with it,
- my mind roaming far back into the past, that I might live again for
- a few brief moments before I died some of the many happy moments of
- a long and happy life, I became aware of strange protuberances upon
- the smooth surface of the parchment-like substance in my hands.
-
- For a time they carried no special significance to my mind--I
- merely was mildly wondrous that they were there; but at last they
- seemed to take form, and then I realized that there was but a
- single line of them, like writing.
-
- Now, more interestedly, my fingers traced and retraced them.
- There were four separate and distinct combinations of raised lines.
- Could it be that these were four words, and that they were intended
- to carry a message to me?
-
- The more I thought of it the more excited I became, until my
- fingers raced madly back and forth over those bewildering
- little hills and valleys upon that bit of paper.
-
- But I could make nothing of them, and at last I decided
- that my very haste was preventing me from solving the mystery.
- Then I took it more slowly. Again and again my forefinger
- traced the first of those four combinations.
-
- Martian writing is rather difficult to explain to an Earth man--
- it is something of a cross between shorthand and picture-writing,
- and is an entirely different language from the spoken language of Mars.
-
- Upon Barsoom there is but a single oral language.
-
- It is spoken today by every race and nation, just as it was at
- the beginning of human life upon Barsoom. It has grown with the
- growth of the planet's learning and scientific achievements, but so
- ingenious a thing it is that new words to express new thoughts or
- describe new conditions or discoveries form themselves--no other
- word could explain the thing that a new word is required for other
- than the word that naturally falls to it, and so, no matter how far
- removed two nations or races, their spoken languages are identical.
-
- Not so their written languages, however. No two nations have the
- same written language, and often cities of the same nation have
- a written language that differs greatly from that of the nation
- to which they belong.
-
- Thus it was that the signs upon the paper, if in reality they
- were words, baffled me for some time; but at last I made out
- the first one.
-
- It was "courage," and it was written in the letters of Marentina.
-
- Courage!
-
- That was the word the yellow guardsman had whispered in my ear
- as I stood upon the verge of the Pit of Plenty.
-
- The message must be from him, and he I knew was a friend.
-
- With renewed hope I bent my every energy to the deciphering of
- the balance of the message, and at last success rewarded my
- endeavor--I had read the four words:
-
- "Courage! Follow the rope."
-
-
-
-
- "FOLLOW THE ROPE"
-
-
- What could it mean?
-
- "Follow the rope." What rope?
-
- Presently I recalled the cord that had been attached to the
- parcel when it fell at my side, and after a little groping my hand
- came in contact with it again. It depended from above, and when I
- pulled upon it I discovered that it was rigidly fastened, possibly
- at the pit's mouth.
-
- Upon examination I found that the cord, though small, was amply able
- to sustain the weight of several men. Then I made another discovery--
- there was a second message knotted in the rope at about the height
- of my head. This I deciphered more easily, now that the key was mine.
-
- "Bring the rope with you. Beyond the knots lies danger."
-
- That was all there was to this message. It was evidently
- hastily formed--an afterthought.
-
- I did not pause longer than to learn the contents of the
- second message, and, though I was none too sure of the
- meaning of the final admonition, "Beyond the knots lies danger,"
- yet I was sure that here before me lay an avenue of escape,
- and that the sooner I took advantage of it the more likely
- was I to win to liberty.
-
- At least, I could be but little worse off than I had been in
- the Pit of Plenty.
-
- I was to find, however, ere I was well out of that damnable
- hole that I might have been very much worse off had I been
- compelled to remain there another two minutes.
-
- It had taken me about that length of time to ascend some fifty
- feet above the bottom when a noise above attracted my attention.
- To my chagrin I saw that the covering of the pit was being removed
- far above me, and in the light of the courtyard beyond I saw a
- number of yellow warriors.
-
- Could it be that I was laboriously working my way into some new trap?
- Were the messages spurious, after all? And then, just as my hope and
- courage had ebbed to their lowest, I saw two things.
-
- One was the body of a huge, struggling, snarling apt being lowered
- over the side of the pit toward me, and the other was an aperture
- in the side of the shaft--an aperture larger than a man's body,
- into which my rope led.
-
- Just as I scrambled into the dark hole before me the apt passed me,
- reaching out with his mighty hands to clutch me, and snapping, growling,
- and roaring in a most frightful manner.
-
- Plainly now I saw the end for which Salensus Oll had destined me.
- After first torturing me with starvation he had caused this
- fierce beast to be lowered into my prison to finish the work that
- the jeddak's hellish imagination had conceived.
-
- And then another truth flashed upon me--I had lived nine days
- of the allotted ten which must intervene before Salensus Oll could
- make Dejah Thoris his queen. The purpose of the apt was to insure
- my death before the tenth day.
-
- I almost laughed aloud as I thought how Salensus Oll's measure
- of safety was to aid in defeating the very end he sought, for when
- they discovered that the apt was alone in the Pit of Plenty they
- could not know but that he had completely devoured me, and so no
- suspicion of my escape would cause a search to be made for me.
-
- Coiling the rope that had carried me thus far upon my strange
- journey, I sought for the other end, but found that as I followed
- it forward it extended always before me. So this was the meaning
- of the words: "Follow the rope."
-
- The tunnel through which I crawled was low and dark. I had followed
- it for several hundred yards when I felt a knot beneath my fingers.
- "Beyond the knots lies danger."
-
- Now I went with the utmost caution, and a moment later a sharp
- turn in the tunnel brought me to an opening into a large,
- brilliantly lighted chamber.
-
- The trend of the tunnel I had been traversing had been slightly upward,
- and from this I judged that the chamber into which I now found myself
- looking must be either on the first floor of the palace or directly
- beneath the first floor.
-
- Upon the opposite wall were many strange instruments and devices,
- and in the center of the room stood a long table, at which two men
- were seated in earnest conversation.
-
- He who faced me was a yellow man--a little, wizened-up,
- pasty-faced old fellow with great eyes that showed the
- white round the entire circumference of the iris.
-
- His companion was a black man, and I did not need to see his
- face to know that it was Thurid, for there was no other of the
- First Born north of the ice-barrier.
-
- Thurid was speaking as I came within hearing of the men's voices.
-
- "Solan," he was saying, "there is no risk and the reward is great.
- You know that you hate Salensus Oll and that nothing would
- please you more than to thwart him in some cherished plan.
- There be nothing that he more cherishes today than the idea
- of wedding the beautiful Princess of Helium; but I, too,
- want her, and with your help I may win her.
-
- "You need not more than step from this room for an instant
- when I give you the signal. I will do the rest, and then, when I
- am gone, you may come and throw the great switch back into its place,
- and all will be as before. I need but an hour's start to be safe
- beyond the devilish power that you control in this hidden chamber
- beneath the palace of your master. See how easy," and with
- the words the black dator rose from his seat and, crossing the
- room, laid his hand upon a large, burnished lever that protruded
- from the opposite wall.
-
- "No! No!" cried the little old man, springing after him, with a
- wild shriek. "Not that one! Not that one! That controls the
- sunray tanks, and should you pull it too far down, all Kadabra
- would be consumed by heat before I could replace it. Come away!
- Come away! You know not with what mighty powers you play.
- This is the lever that you seek. Note well the symbol inlaid
- in white upon its ebon surface."
-
- Thurid approached and examined the handle of the lever.
-
- "Ah, a magnet," he said. "I will remember. It is settled
- then I take it," he continued.
-
- The old man hesitated. A look of combined greed and
- apprehension overspread his none too beautiful features.
-
- "Double the figure," he said. "Even that were all too small
- an amount for the service you ask. Why, I risk my life by even
- entertaining you here within the forbidden precincts of my station.
- Should Salensus Oll learn of it he would have me thrown to the apts
- before the day was done."
-
- "He dare not do that, and you know it full well, Solan,"
- contradicted the black. "Too great a power of life and death
- you hold over the people of Kadabra for Salensus Oll ever to risk
- threatening you with death. Before ever his minions could lay
- their hands upon you, you might seize this very lever from which
- you have just warned me and wipe out the entire city."
-
- "And myself into the bargain," said Solan, with a shudder.
-
- "But if you were to die, anyway, you would find the nerve to do it,"
- replied Thurid.
-
- "Yes," muttered Solan, "I have often thought upon that very thing.
- Well, First Born, is your red princess worth the price I ask for my
- services, or will you go without her and see her in the arms of
- Salensus Oll tomorrow night?"
-
- "Take your price, yellow man," replied Thurid, with an oath.
- "Half now and the balance when you have fulfilled your contract."
-
- With that the dator threw a well-filled money-pouch upon the table.
-
- Solan opened the pouch and with trembling fingers counted its contents.
- His weird eyes assumed a greedy expression, and his unkempt beard
- and mustache twitched with the muscles of his mouth and chin.
- It was quite evident from his very mannerism that Thurid had
- keenly guessed the man's weakness--even the clawlike, clutching
- movement of the fingers betokened the avariciousness of the miser.
-
- Having satisfied himself that the amount was correct, Solan
- replaced the money in the pouch and rose from the table.
-
- "Now," he said, "are you quite sure that you know the way to
- your destination? You must travel quickly to cover the ground
- to the cave and from thence beyond the Great Power, all within
- a brief hour, for no more dare I spare you."
-
- "Let me repeat it to you," said Thurid, "that you may see if
- I be letter-perfect."
-
- "Proceed," replied Solan.
-
- "Through yonder door," he commenced, pointing to a door at the
- far end of the apartment, "I follow a corridor, passing three
- diverging corridors upon my right; then into the fourth right-hand
- corridor straight to where three corridors meet; here again I
- follow to the right, hugging the left wall closely to avoid the pit.
-
- "At the end of this corridor I shall come to a spiral runway,
- which I must follow down instead of up; after that the way
- is along but a single branchless corridor. Am I right?"
-
- "Quite right, Dator," answered Solan; "and now begone. Already
- have you tempted fate too long within this forbidden place."
-
- "Tonight, or tomorrow, then, you may expect the signal," said Thurid,
- rising to go.
-
- "Tonight, or tomorrow," repeated Solan, and as the door closed
- behind his guest the old man continued to mutter as he turned
- back to the table, where he again dumped the contents of the
- money-pouch, running his fingers through the heap of shining metal;
- piling the coins into little towers; counting, recounting, and fondling
- the wealth the while he muttered on and on in a crooning undertone.
-
- Presently his fingers ceased their play; his eyes popped wider than ever
- as they fastened upon the door through which Thurid had disappeared.
- The croon changed to a querulous muttering, and finally to an ugly growl.
-
- Then the old man rose from the table, shaking his fist at the closed door.
- Now he raised his voice, and his words came distinctly.
-
- "Fool!" he muttered. "Think you that for your happiness Solan
- will give up his life? If you escaped, Salensus Oll would
- know that only through my connivance could you have succeeded.
- Then would he send for me. What would you have me do? Reduce the
- city and myself to ashes? No, fool, there is a better way--a better
- way for Solan to keep thy money and be revenged upon Salensus Oll."
-
- He laughed in a nasty, cackling note.
-
- "Poor fool! You may throw the great switch that will give you
- the freedom of the air of Okar, and then, in fatuous security,
- go on with thy red princess to the freedom of--death. When you have
- passed beyond this chamber in your flight, what can prevent Solan
- replacing the switch as it was before your vile hand touched it?
- Nothing; and then the Guardian of the North will claim you and your
- woman, and Salensus Oll, when he sees your dead bodies, will never
- dream that the hand of Solan had aught to do with the thing."
-
- Then his voice dropped once more into mutterings that I could
- not translate, but I had heard enough to cause me to guess a
- great deal more, and I thanked the kind Providence that had led
- me to this chamber at a time so filled with importance to Dejah
- Thoris and myself as this.
-
- But how to pass the old man now! The cord, almost invisible
- upon the floor, stretched straight across the apartment to a door
- upon the far side.
-
- There was no other way of which I knew, nor could I afford to
- ignore the advice to "follow the rope." I must cross this room,
- but however I should accomplish it undetected with that old man
- in the very center of it baffled me.
-
- Of course I might have sprung in upon him and with my bare hands
- silenced him forever, but I had heard enough to convince me that
- with him alive the knowledge that I had gained might serve me
- at some future moment, while should I kill him and another be
- stationed in his place Thurid would not come hither with Dejah
- Thoris, as was quite evidently his intention.
-
- As I stood in the dark shadow of the tunnel's end racking my
- brain for a feasible plan the while I watched, catlike, the old
- man's every move, he took up the money-pouch and crossed to one
- end of the apartment, where, bending to his knees, he fumbled with
- a panel in the wall.
-
- Instantly I guessed that here was the hiding place in which he
- hoarded his wealth, and while he bent there, his back toward me, I
- entered the chamber upon tiptoe, and with the utmost stealth
- essayed to reach the opposite side before he should complete his
- task and turn again toward the room's center.
-
- Scarcely thirty steps, all told, must I take, and yet it
- seemed to my overwrought imagination that that farther wall was
- miles away; but at last I reached it, nor once had I taken my eyes
- from the back of the old miser's head.
-
- He did not turn until my hand was upon the button that controlled
- the door through which my way led, and then he turned away
- from me as I passed through and gently closed the door.
-
- For an instant I paused, my ear close to the panel, to learn
- if he had suspected aught, but as no sound of pursuit came from
- within I wheeled and made my way along the new corridor, following
- the rope, which I coiled and brought with me as I advanced.
-
- But a short distance farther on I came to the rope's end at
- a point where five corridors met. What was I to do? Which
- way should I turn? I was nonplused.
-
- A careful examination of the end of the rope revealed the fact
- that it had been cleanly cut with some sharp instrument. This fact
- and the words that had cautioned me that danger lay beyond the
- KNOTS convinced me that the rope had been severed since my friend
- had placed it as my guide, for I had but passed a single knot,
- whereas there had evidently been two or more in the entire length
- of the cord.
-
- Now, indeed, was I in a pretty fix, for neither did I know
- which avenue to follow nor when danger lay directly in my path;
- but there was nothing else to be done than follow one of the corridors,
- for I could gain nothing by remaining where I was.
-
- So I chose the central opening, and passed on into its gloomy
- depths with a prayer upon my lips.
-
- The floor of the tunnel rose rapidly as I advanced, and a
- moment later the way came to an abrupt end before a heavy door.
-
- I could hear nothing beyond, and, with my accustomed rashness,
- pushed the portal wide to step into a room filled with yellow
- warriors.
-
- The first to see me opened his eyes wide in astonishment, and
- at the same instant I felt the tingling sensation in my finger
- that denoted the presence of a friend of the ring.
-
- Then others saw me, and there was a concerted rush to lay hands upon me,
- for these were all members of the palace guard--men familiar with my face.
-
- The first to reach me was the wearer of the mate to my strange ring,
- and as he came close he whispered: "Surrender to me!" then in a
- loud voice shouted: "You are my prisoner, white man," and menaced
- me with his two weapons.
-
- And so John Carter, Prince of Helium, meekly surrendered to a
- single antagonist. The others now swarmed about us, asking many
- questions, but I would not talk to them, and finally my captor
- announced that he would lead me back to my cell.
-
- An officer ordered several other warriors to accompany him,
- and a moment later we were retracing the way I had just come.
- My friend walked close beside me, asking many silly questions
- about the country from which I had come, until finally his
- fellows paid no further attention to him or his gabbling.
-
- Gradually, as he spoke, he lowered his voice, so that presently he was
- able to converse with me in a low tone without attracting attention.
- His ruse was a clever one, and showed that Talu had not misjudged
- the man's fitness for the dangerous duty upon which he was detailed.
-
- When he had fully assured himself that the other guardsmen were
- not listening, he asked me why I had not followed the rope,
- and when I told him that it had ended at the five corridors he said
- that it must have been cut by someone in need of a piece of rope,
- for he was sure that "the stupid Kadabrans would never have guessed
- its purpose."
-
- Before we had reached the spot from which the five corridors
- diverge my Marentinian friend had managed to drop to the rear of
- the little column with me, and when we came in sight of the
- branching ways he whispered:
-
- "Run up the first upon the right. It leads to the watchtower upon
- the south wall. I will direct the pursuit up the next corridor,"
- and with that he gave me a great shove into the dark mouth of
- the tunnel, at the same time crying out in simulated pain
- and alarm as he threw himself upon the floor as though I had
- felled him with a blow.
-
- From behind the voices of the excited guardsmen came
- reverberating along the corridor, suddenly growing fainter as
- Talu's spy led them up the wrong passageway in fancied pursuit.
-
- As I ran for my life through the dark galleries beneath the palace
- of Salensus Oll I must indeed have presented a remarkable appearance
- had there been any to note it, for though death loomed large about me,
- my face was split by a broad grin as I thought of the resourcefulness
- of the nameless hero of Marentina to whom I owed my life.
-
- Of such stuff are the men of my beloved Helium, and when I meet another
- of their kind, of whatever race or color, my heart goes out to him as
- it did now to my new friend who had risked his life for me simply
- because I wore the mate to the ring his ruler had put upon his finger.
-
- The corridor along which I ran led almost straight for
- a considerable distance, terminating at the foot of a
- spiral runway, up which I proceeded to emerge presently
- into a circular chamber upon the first floor of a tower.
-
- In this apartment a dozen red slaves were employed polishing
- or repairing the weapons of the yellow men. The walls of the
- room were lined with racks in which were hundreds of straight and
- hooked swords, javelins, and daggers. It was evidently an armory.
- There were but three warriors guarding the workers.
-
- My eyes took in the entire scene at a glance. Here were weapons
- in plenty! Here were sinewy red warriors to wield them!
-
- And here now was John Carter, Prince of Helium, in need both
- of weapons and warriors!
-
- As I stepped into the apartment, guards and prisoners saw me
- simultaneously.
-
- Close to the entrance where I stood was a rack of straight
- swords, and as my hand closed upon the hilt of one of them my eyes
- fell upon the faces of two of the prisoners who worked side by side.
-
- One of the guards started toward me. "Who are you?" he demanded.
- "What do you here?"
-
- "I come for Tardos Mors, Jeddak of Helium, and his son, Mors Kajak,"
- I cried, pointing to the two red prisoners, who had now
- sprung to their feet, wide-eyed in astonished recognition.
-
- "Rise, red men! Before we die let us leave a memorial in the
- palace of Okar's tyrant that will stand forever in the annals of
- Kadabra to the honor and glory of Helium," for I had seen that all
- the prisoners there were men of Tardos Mors's navy.
-
- Then the first guardsman was upon me and the fight was on,
- but scarce did we engage ere, to my horror, I saw that the
- red slaves were shackled to the floor.
-
-
-
-
- THE MAGNET SWITCH
-
-
- The guardsmen paid not the slightest attention to their wards,
- for the red men could not move over two feet from the great rings
- to which they were padlocked, though each had seized a weapon upon
- which he had been engaged when I entered the room, and stood ready
- to join me could they have but done so.
-
- The yellow men devoted all their attention to me, nor were they long
- in discovering that the three of them were none too many to defend the
- armory against John Carter. Would that I had had my own good long-sword
- in my hand that day; but, as it was, I rendered a satisfactory account
- of myself with the unfamiliar weapon of the yellow man.
-
- At first I had a time of it dodging their villainous hook-swords,
- but after a minute or two I had succeeded in wresting a second straight
- sword from one of the racks along the wall, and thereafter, using it
- to parry the hooks of my antagonists, I felt more evenly equipped.
-
- The three of them were on me at once, and but for a lucky
- circumstance my end might have come quickly. The foremost
- guardsman made a vicious lunge for my side with his hook after the
- three of them had backed me against the wall, but as I sidestepped
- and raised my arm his weapon but grazed my side, passing into a
- rack of javelins, where it became entangled.
-
- Before he could release it I had run him through, and then,
- falling back upon the tactics that have saved me a hundred times
- in tight pinches, I rushed the two remaining warriors, forcing them
- back with a perfect torrent of cuts and thrusts, weaving my sword
- in and out about their guards until I had the fear of death upon them.
-
- Then one of them commenced calling for help, but it was too late
- to save them.
-
- They were as putty in my hands now, and I backed them about the
- armory as I would until I had them where I wanted them--within
- reach of the swords of the shackled slaves. In an instant
- both lay dead upon the floor. But their cries had not been
- entirely fruitless, for now I heard answering shouts and the
- footfalls of many men running and the clank of accouterments
- and the commands of officers.
-
- "The door! Quick, John Carter, bar the door!" cried Tardos Mors.
-
- Already the guard was in sight, charging across the open court
- that was visible through the doorway.
-
- A dozen seconds would bring them into the tower. A single
- leap carried me to the heavy portal. With a resounding bang I
- slammed it shut.
-
- "The bar!" shouted Tardos Mors.
-
- I tried to slip the huge fastening into place, but it defied
- my every attempt.
-
- "Raise it a little to release the catch," cried one of the red men.
-
- I could hear the yellow warriors leaping along the flagging just
- beyond the door. I raised the bar and shot it to the right
- just as the foremost of the guardsmen threw himself against the
- opposite side of the massive panels.
-
- The barrier held--I had been in time, but by the fraction of
- a second only.
-
- Now I turned my attention to the prisoners. To Tardos Mors I
- went first, asking where the keys might be which would unfasten
- their fetters.
-
- "The officer of the guard has them," replied the Jeddak of Helium,
- "and he is among those without who seek entrance. You will have
- to force them."
-
- Most of the prisoners were already hacking at their bonds with
- the swords in their hands. The yellow men were battering at the
- door with javelins and axes.
-
- I turned my attention to the chains that held Tardos Mors.
- Again and again I cut deep into the metal with my sharp blade,
- but ever faster and faster fell the torrent of blows upon the portal.
-
- At last a link parted beneath my efforts, and a moment later
- Tardos Mors was free, though a few inches of trailing chain still
- dangled from his ankle.
-
- A splinter of wood falling inward from the door announced the
- headway that our enemies were making toward us.
-
- The mighty panels trembled and bent beneath the furious onslaught
- of the enraged yellow men.
-
- What with the battering upon the door and the hacking of the
- red men at their chains the din within the armory was appalling.
- No sooner was Tardos Mors free than he turned his attention to
- another of the prisoners, while I set to work to liberate Mors Kajak.
-
- We must work fast if we would have all those fetters cut before
- the door gave way. Now a panel crashed inward upon the floor,
- and Mors Kajak sprang to the opening to defend the way until
- we should have time to release the others.
-
- With javelins snatched from the wall he wrought havoc among
- the foremost of the Okarians while we battled with the insensate
- metal that stood between our fellows and freedom.
-
- At length all but one of the prisoners were freed, and then
- the door fell with a mighty crash before a hastily improvised
- battering-ram, and the yellow horde was upon us.
-
- "To the upper chambers!" shouted the red man who was still
- fettered to the floor. "To the upper chambers! There you may
- defend the tower against all Kadabra. Do not delay because of me,
- who could pray for no better death than in the service of
- Tardos Mors and the Prince of Helium."
-
- But I would have sacrificed the life of every man of us rather
- than desert a single red man, much less the lion-hearted hero who
- begged us to leave him.
-
- "Cut his chains," I cried to two of the red men, "while the
- balance of us hold off the foe."
-
- There were ten of us now to do battle with the Okarian guard,
- and I warrant that that ancient watchtower never looked down upon
- a more hotly contested battle than took place that day within
- its own grim walls.
-
- The first inrushing wave of yellow warriors recoiled from the
- slashing blades of ten of Helium's veteran fighting men. A dozen
- Okarian corpses blocked the doorway, but over the gruesome barrier
- a score more of their fellows dashed, shouting their hoarse and
- hideous war-cry.
-
- Upon the bloody mound we met them, hand to hand, stabbing where
- the quarters were too close to cut, thrusting when we could push
- a foeman to arm's length; and mingled with the wild cry of the
- Okarian there rose and fell the glorious words: "For Helium!
- For Helium!" that for countless ages have spurred on the bravest of
- the brave to those deeds of valor that have sent the fame of Helium's
- heroes broadcast throughout the length and breadth of a world.
-
- Now were the fetters struck from the last of the red men,
- and thirteen strong we met each new charge of the soldiers
- of Salensus Oll. Scarce one of us but bled from a score
- of wounds, yet none had fallen.
-
- From without we saw hundreds of guardsmen pouring into the courtyard,
- and along the lower corridor from which I had found my way to the
- armory we could hear the clank of metal and the shouting of men.
-
- In a moment we should be attacked from two sides, and with
- all our prowess we could not hope to withstand the unequal odds
- which would thus divide our attention and our small numbers.
-
- "To the upper chambers!" cried Tardos Mors, and a moment later
- we fell back toward the runway that led to the floors above.
-
- Here another bloody battle was waged with the force of yellow
- men who charged into the armory as we fell back from the doorway.
- Here we lost our first man, a noble fellow whom we could ill spare;
- but at length all had backed into the runway except myself, who
- remained to hold back the Okarians until the others were safe above.
-
- In the mouth of the narrow spiral but a single warrior could
- attack me at a time, so that I had little difficulty in holding
- them all back for the brief moment that was necessary. Then,
- backing slowly before them, I commenced the ascent of the spiral.
-
- All the long way to the tower's top the guardsmen pressed me closely.
- When one went down before my sword another scrambled over the dead man to
- take his place; and thus, taking an awful toll with each few feet gained,
- I came to the spacious glass-walled watchtower of Kadabra.
-
- Here my companions clustered ready to take my place, and for a
- moment's respite I stepped to one side while they held the enemy off.
-
- From the lofty perch a view could be had for miles in every direction.
- Toward the south stretched the rugged, ice-clad waste to the edge of
- the mighty barrier. Toward the east and west, and dimly toward the
- north I descried other Okarian cities, while in the immediate foreground,
- just beyond the walls of Kadabra, the grim guardian shaft reared its
- somber head.
-
- Then I cast my eyes down into the streets of Kadabra, from which
- a sudden tumult had arisen, and there I saw a battle raging,
- and beyond the city's walls I saw armed men marching in great
- columns toward a near-by gate.
-
- Eagerly I pressed forward against the glass wall of the observatory,
- scarce daring to credit the testimony of my own eyes. But at last
- I could doubt no longer, and with a shout of joy that rose strangely
- in the midst of the cursing and groaning of the battling men at the
- entrance to the chamber, I called to Tardos Mors.
-
- As he joined me I pointed down into the streets of Kadabra and
- to the advancing columns beyond, above which floated bravely in
- the arctic air the flags and banners of Helium.
-
- An instant later every red man in the lofty chamber had seen
- the inspiring sight, and such a shout of thanksgiving arose as I
- warrant never before echoed through that age-old pile of stone.
-
- But still we must fight on, for though our troops had entered Kadabra,
- the city was yet far from capitulation, nor had the palace been
- even assaulted. Turn and turn about we held the top of the runway
- while the others feasted their eyes upon the sight of our valiant
- countrymen battling far beneath us.
-
- Now they have rushed the palace gate! Great battering-rams
- are dashed against its formidable surface. Now they are repulsed
- by a deadly shower of javelins from the wall's top!
-
- Once again they charge, but a sortie by a large force of Okarians
- from an intersecting avenue crumples the head of the column,
- and the men of Helium go down, fighting, beneath an overwhelming force.
-
- The palace gate flies open and a force of the jeddak's own guard,
- picked men from the flower of the Okarian army, sallies forth
- to shatter the broken regiments. For a moment it looks as
- though nothing could avert defeat, and then I see a noble figure
- upon a mighty thoat--not the tiny thoat of the red man, but one of
- his huge cousins of the dead sea bottoms.
-
- The warrior hews his way to the front, and behind him rally the
- disorganized soldiers of Helium. As he raises his head aloft
- to fling a challenge at the men upon the palace walls I see
- his face, and my heart swells in pride and happiness as the
- red warriors leap to the side of their leader and win back
- the ground that they had but just lost--the face of him upon
- the mighty thoat is the face of my son--Carthoris of Helium.
-
- At his side fights a huge Martian war-hound, nor did I need a
- second look to know that it was Woola--my faithful Woola who had
- thus well performed his arduous task and brought the succoring
- legions in the nick of time.
-
- "In the nick of time?"
-
- Who yet might say that they were not too late to save, but surely
- they could avenge! And such retribution as that unconquered army
- would deal out to the hateful Okarians! I sighed to think that I
- might not be alive to witness it.
-
- Again I turned to the windows. The red men had not yet forced
- the outer palace wall, but they were fighting nobly against the
- best that Okar afforded--valiant warriors who contested every inch
- of the way.
-
- Now my attention was caught by a new element without the city wall--
- a great body of mounted warriors looming large above the red men.
- They were the huge green allies of Helium--the savage hordes from
- the dead sea bottoms of the far south.
-
- In grim and terrible silence they sped on toward the gate,
- the padded hoofs of their frightful mounts giving forth no sound.
- Into the doomed city they charged, and as they wheeled across the
- wide plaza before the palace of the Jeddak of Jeddaks I saw, riding at
- their head, the mighty figure of their mighty leader--Tars Tarkas,
- Jeddak of Thark.
-
- My wish, then, was to be gratified, for I was to see my old friend
- battling once again, and though not shoulder to shoulder with him,
- I, too, would be fighting in the same cause here in the high tower of Okar.
-
- Nor did it seem that our foes would ever cease their stubborn attacks,
- for still they came, though the way to our chamber was often clogged
- with the bodies of their dead. At times they would pause long enough
- to drag back the impeding corpses, and then fresh warriors would forge
- upward to taste the cup of death.
-
- I had been taking my turn with the others in defending the
- approach to our lofty retreat when Mors Kajak, who had been
- watching the battle in the street below, called aloud in
- sudden excitement. There was a note of apprehension in his voice
- that brought me to his side the instant that I could turn my place
- over to another, and as I reached him he pointed far out across the
- waste of snow and ice toward the southern horizon.
-
- "Alas!" he cried, "that I should be forced to witness cruel fate
- betray them without power to warn or aid; but they be past either now."
-
- As I looked in the direction he indicated I saw the cause of
- his perturbation. A mighty fleet of fliers was approaching
- majestically toward Kadabra from the direction of the ice-barrier.
- On and on they came with ever increasing velocity.
-
- "The grim shaft that they call the Guardian of the North is
- beckoning to them," said Mors Kajak sadly, "just as it beckoned to
- Tardos Mors and his great fleet; see where they lie, crumpled and
- broken, a grim and terrible monument to the mighty force of
- destruction which naught can resist."
-
- I, too, saw; but something else I saw that Mors Kajak did not;
- in my mind's eye I saw a buried chamber whose walls were lined with
- strange instruments and devices.
-
- In the center of the chamber was a long table, and before it sat a
- little, pop-eyed old man counting his money; but, plainest of all,
- I saw upon the wall a great switch with a small magnet inlaid
- within the surface of its black handle.
-
- Then I glanced out at the fast-approaching fleet. In five minutes
- that mighty armada of the skies would be bent and worthless scrap,
- lying at the base of the shaft beyond the city's wall, and yellow
- hordes would be loosed from another gate to rush out upon the few
- survivors stumbling blindly down through the mass of wreckage;
- then the apts would come. I shuddered at the thought, for I could
- vividly picture the whole horrible scene.
-
- Quick have I always been to decide and act. The impulse
- that moves me and the doing of the thing seem simultaneous;
- for if my ind goes through the tedious formality of reasoning,
- it must be a subconscious act of which I am not objectively aware.
- Psychologists tell me that, as the subconscious does not reason,
- too close a scrutiny of my mental activities might prove anything
- but flattering; but be that as it may, I have often won success
- while the thinker would have been still at the endless task of
- comparing various judgments.
-
- And now celerity of action was the prime essential to the
- success of the thing that I had decided upon.
-
- Grasping my sword more firmly in my hand, I called to the red man
- at the opening to the runway to stand aside.
-
- "Way for the Prince of Helium!" I shouted; and before the
- astonished yellow man whose misfortune it was to be at the fighting
- end of the line at that particular moment could gather his wits
- together my sword had decapitated him, and I was rushing like a
- mad bull down upon those behind him.
-
- "Way for the Prince of Helium!" I shouted as I cut a path
- through the astonished guardsmen of Salensus Oll.
-
- Hewing to right and left, I beat my way down that warrior-choked
- spiral until, near the bottom, those below, thinking that an army
- was descending upon them, turned and fled.
-
- The armory at the first floor was vacant when I entered it,
- the last of the Okarians having fled into the courtyard, so none
- saw me continue down the spiral toward the corridor beneath.
-
- Here I ran as rapidly as my legs would carry me toward the
- five corners, and there plunged into the passageway that led
- to the station of the old miser.
-
- Without the formality of a knock, I burst into the room.
- There sat the old man at his table; but as he saw me he
- sprang to his feet, drawing his sword.
-
- With scarce more than a glance toward him I leaped for the great switch;
- but, quick as I was, that wiry old fellow was there before me.
-
- How he did it I shall never know, nor does it seem credible
- that any Martian-born creature could approximate the marvelous
- speed of my earthly muscles.
-
- Like a tiger he turned upon me, and I was quick to see why
- Solan had been chosen for this important duty.
-
- Never in all my life have I seen such wondrous swordsmanship
- and such uncanny agility as that ancient bag of bones displayed.
- He was in forty places at the same time, and before I had half a chance
- to awaken to my danger he was like to have made a monkey of me,
- and a dead monkey at that.
-
- It is strange how new and unexpected conditions bring out
- unguessed ability to meet them.
-
- That day in the buried chamber beneath the palace of Salensus Oll
- I learned what swordsmanship meant, and to what heights of sword
- mastery I could achieve when pitted against such a wizard of the
- blade as Solan.
-
- For a time he liked to have bested me; but presently the latent
- possibilities that must have been lying dormant within me for a
- lifetime came to the fore, and I fought as I had never dreamed
- a human being could fight.
-
- That that duel-royal should have taken place in the dark recesses
- of a cellar, without a single appreciative eye to witness it has
- always seemed to me almost a world calamity--at least from
- the viewpoint Barsoomian, where bloody strife is the first
- and greatest consideration of individuals, nations, and races.
-
- I was fighting to reach the switch, Solan to prevent me;
- and, though we stood not three feet from it, I could not win
- an inch toward it, for he forced me back an inch for the
- first five minutes of our battle.
-
- I knew that if I were to throw it in time to save the oncoming
- fleet it must be done in the next few seconds, and so I tried my
- old rushing tactics; but I might as well have rushed a brick wall
- for all that Solan gave way.
-
- In fact, I came near to impaling myself upon his point for my pains;
- but right was on my side, and I think that that must give a man
- greater confidence than though he knew himself to be battling
- in a wicked cause.
-
- At least, I did not want in confidence; and when I next rushed
- Solan it was to one side with implicit confidence that he must turn
- to meet my new line of attack, and turn he did, so that now we
- fought with our sides towards the coveted goal--the great switch
- stood within my reach upon my right hand.
-
- To uncover my breast for an instant would have been to court
- sudden death, but I saw no other way than to chance it, if by so
- doing I might rescue that oncoming, succoring fleet; and so, in the
- face of a wicked sword-thrust, I reached out my point and caught
- the great switch a sudden blow that released it from its seating.
-
- So surprised and horrified was Solan that he forgot to finish
- his thrust; instead, he wheeled toward the switch with a loud shriek--
- a shriek which was his last, for before his hand could touch the
- lever it sought, my sword's point had passed through his heart.
-
-
-
-
- THE TIDE OF BATTLE
-
-
- But solan's last loud cry had not been without effect, for a
- moment later a dozen guardsmen burst into the chamber, though not
- before I had so bent and demolished the great switch that it could
- not be again used to turn the powerful current into the mighty
- magnet of destruction it controlled.
-
- The result of the sudden coming of the guardsmen had been to compel
- me to seek seclusion in the first passageway that I could find,
- and that to my disappointment proved to be not the one with which
- I was familiar, but another upon its left.
-
- They must have either heard or guessed which way I went, for I had
- proceeded but a short distance when I heard the sound of pursuit.
- I had no mind to stop and fight these men here when there was
- fighting aplenty elsewhere in the city of Kadabra--fighting
- that could be of much more avail to me and mine than useless
- life-taking far below the palace.
-
- But the fellows were pressing me; and as I did not know the way
- at all, I soon saw that they would overtake me unless I found a
- place to conceal myself until they had passed, which would then give
- me an opportunity to return the way I had come and regain the tower,
- or possibly find a way to reach the city streets.
-
- The passageway had risen rapidly since leaving the apartment
- of the switch, and now ran level and well lighted straight into the
- distance as far as I could see. The moment that my pursuers
- reached this straight stretch I would be in plain sight of them,
- with no chance to escape from the corridor undetected.
-
- Presently I saw a series of doors opening from either side of
- the corridor, and as they all looked alike to me I tried the first
- one that I reached. It opened into a small chamber, luxuriously
- furnished, and was evidently an ante-chamber off some office or
- audience chamber of the palace.
-
- On the far side was a heavily curtained doorway beyond which
- I heard the hum of voices. Instantly I crossed the small chamber,
- and, parting the curtains, looked within the larger apartment.
-
- Before me were a party of perhaps fifty gorgeously clad nobles
- of the court, standing before a throne upon which sat Salensus Oll.
- The Jeddak of Jeddaks was addressing them.
-
- "The allotted hour has come," he was saying as I entered the apartment;
- "and though the enemies of Okar be within her gates, naught may stay the
- will of Salensus Oll. The great ceremony must be omitted that no single
- man may be kept from his place in the defenses other than the fifty that
- custom demands shall witness the creation of a new queen in Okar.
-
- "In a moment the thing shall have been done and we may return
- to the battle, while she who is now the Princess of Helium looks
- down from the queen's tower upon the annihilation of her former
- countrymen and witnesses the greatness which is her husband's."
-
- Then, turning to a courtier, he issued some command in a low voice.
-
- The addressed hastened to a small door at the far end of the
- chamber and, swinging it wide, cried: "Way for Dejah Thoris,
- future Queen of Okar!"
-
- Immediately two guardsmen appeared dragging the unwilling bride
- toward the altar. Her hands were still manacled behind her,
- evidently to prevent suicide.
-
- Her disheveled hair and panting bosom betokened that, chained though
- she was, still had she fought against the thing that they would do to her.
-
- At sight of her Salensus Oll rose and drew his sword, and the sword
- of each of the fifty nobles was raised on high to form an arch,
- beneath which the poor, beautiful creature was dragged toward her doom.
-
- A grim smile forced itself to my lips as I thought of the rude
- awakening that lay in store for the ruler of Okar, and my itching
- fingers fondled the hilt of my bloody sword.
-
- As I watched the procession that moved slowly toward the throne--
- a procession which consisted of but a handful of priests,
- who followed Dejah Thoris and the two guardsmen--I caught a
- fleeting glimpse of a black face peering from behind the
- draperies that covered the wall back of the dais upon which
- stood Salensus Oll awaiting his bride.
-
- Now the guardsmen were forcing the Princess of Helium up the
- few steps to the side of the tyrant of Okar, and I had no eyes
- and no thoughts for aught else. A priest opened a book and,
- raising his hand, commenced to drone out a sing-song ritual.
- Salensus Oll reached for the hand of his bride.
-
- I had intended waiting until some circumstance should give me
- a reasonable hope of success; for, even though the entire ceremony
- should be completed, there could be no valid marriage while I lived.
- What I was most concerned in, of course, was the rescuing of
- Dejah Thoris--I wished to take her from the palace of Salensus Oll,
- if such a thing were possible; but whether it were accomplished
- before or after the mock marriage was a matter of secondary import.
-
- When, however, I saw the vile hand of Salensus Oll reach out for
- the hand of my beloved princess I could restrain myself no longer,
- and before the nobles of Okar knew that aught had happened I had
- leaped through their thin line and was upon the dais beside
- Dejah Thoris and Salensus Oll.
-
- With the flat of my sword I struck down his polluting hand;
- and grasping Dejah Thoris round the waist, I swung her behind
- me as, with my back against the draperies of the dais, I faced
- the tyrant of the north and his roomful of noble warriors.
-
- The Jeddak of Jeddaks was a great mountain of a man--a coarse,
- brutal beast of a man--and as he towered above me there, his fierce
- black whiskers and mustache bristling in rage, I can well imagine
- that a less seasoned warrior might have trembled before him.
-
- With a snarl he sprang toward me with naked sword, but whether
- Salensus Oll was a good swordsman or a poor I never learned;
- for with Dejah Thoris at my back I was no longer human--I was
- a superman, and no man could have withstood me then.
-
- With a single, low: "For the Princess of Helium!" I ran my
- blade straight through the rotten heart of Okar's rotten ruler,
- and before the white, drawn faces of his nobles Salensus Oll rolled,
- grinning in horrible death, to the foot of the steps below his
- marriage throne.
-
- For a moment tense silence reigned in the nuptial-room. Then the
- fifty nobles rushed upon me. Furiously we fought, but the
- advantage was mine, for I stood upon a raised platform above them,
- and I fought for the most glorious woman of a glorious race,
- and I fought for a great love and for the mother of my boy.
-
- And from behind my shoulder, in the silvery cadence of that
- dear voice, rose the brave battle anthem of Helium which the
- nation's women sing as their men march out to victory.
-
- That alone was enough to inspire me to victory over even
- greater odds, and I verily believe that I should have bested the
- entire roomful of yellow warriors that day in the nuptial chamber
- of the palace at Kadabra had not interruption come to my aid.
-
- Fast and furious was the fighting as the nobles of Salensus Oll sprang,
- time and again, up the steps before the throne only to fall back before
- a sword hand that seemed to have gained a new wizardry from its
- experience with the cunning Solan.
-
- Two were pressing me so closely that I could not turn when I heard
- a movement behind me, and noted that the sound of the battle
- anthem had ceased. Was Dejah Thoris preparing to take her place
- beside me?
-
- Heroic daughter of a heroic world! It would not be unlike her
- to have seized a sword and fought at my side, for, though the women
- of Mars are not trained in the arts of war, the spirit is theirs,
- and they have been known to do that very thing upon countless occasions.
-
- But she did not come, and glad I was, for it would have doubled
- my burden in protecting her before I should have been able to
- force her back again out of harm's way. She must be contemplating
- some cunning strategy, I thought, and so I fought on secure in the
- belief that my divine princess stood close behind me.
-
- For half an hour at least I must have fought there against the
- nobles of Okar ere ever a one placed a foot upon the dais where
- I stood, and then of a sudden all that remained of them formed below
- me for a last, mad, desperate charge; but even as they advanced the
- door at the far end of the chamber swung wide and a wild-eyed
- messenger sprang into the room.
-
- "The Jeddak of Jeddaks!" he cried. "Where is the Jeddak of Jeddaks?
- The city has fallen before the hordes from beyond the barrier, and but
- now the great gate of the palace itself has been forced and the
- warriors of the south are pouring into its sacred precincts.
-
- "Where is Salensus Oll? He alone may revive the flagging courage
- of our warriors. He alone may save the day for Okar. Where is
- Salensus Oll?"
-
- The nobles stepped back from about the dead body of their ruler,
- and one of them pointed to the grinning corpse.
-
- The messenger staggered back in horror as though from a blow in the face.
-
- "Then fly, nobles of Okar!" he cried, "for naught can save you. Hark!
- They come!"
-
- As he spoke we heard the deep roar of angry men from the
- corridor without, and the clank of metal and the clang of swords.
-
- Without another glance toward me, who had stood a spectator of
- the tragic scene, the nobles wheeled and fled from the apartment
- through another exit.
-
- Almost immediately a force of yellow warriors appeared in the
- doorway through which the messenger had come. They were backing
- toward the apartment, stubbornly resisting the advance of a handful
- of red men who faced them and forced them slowly but inevitably back.
-
- Above the heads of the contestants I could see from my elevated
- station upon the dais the face of my old friend Kantos Kan.
- He was leading the little party that had won its way into
- the very heart of the palace of Salensus Oll.
-
- In an instant I saw that by attacking the Okarians from the
- rear I could so quickly disorganize them that their further
- resistance would be short-lived, and with this idea in mind I
- sprang from the dais, casting a word of explanation to Dejah Thoris
- over my shoulder, though I did not turn to look at her.
-
- With myself ever between her enemies and herself, and with
- Kantos Kan and his warriors winning to the apartment, there could
- be no danger to Dejah Thoris standing there alone beside the throne.
-
- I wanted the men of Helium to see me and to know that their
- beloved princess was here, too, for I knew that this knowledge
- would inspire them to even greater deeds of valor than they had
- performed in the past, though great indeed must have been those
- which won for them a way into the almost impregnable palace of
- the tyrant of the north.
-
- As I crossed the chamber to attack the Kadabrans from the rear
- a small doorway at my left opened, and, to my surprise, revealed
- the figures of Matai Shang, Father of Therns and Phaidor,
- his daughter, peering into the room.
-
- A quick glance about they took. Their eyes rested for a moment,
- wide in horror, upon the dead body of Salensus Oll, upon the blood
- that crimsoned the floor, upon the corpses of the nobles who had
- fallen thick before the throne, upon me, and upon the battling
- warriors at the other door.
-
- They did not essay to enter the apartment, but scanned its
- every corner from where they stood, and then, when their eyes had
- sought its entire area, a look of fierce rage overspread the
- features of Matai Shang, and a cold and cunning smile touched the
- lips of Phaidor.
-
- Then they were gone, but not before a taunting laugh was thrown
- directly in my face by the woman.
-
- I did not understand then the meaning of Matai Shang's rage or
- Phaidor's pleasure, but I knew that neither boded good for me.
-
- A moment later I was upon the backs of the yellow men,
- and as the red men of Helium saw me above the shoulders of
- their antagonists a great shout rang through the corridor,
- and for a moment drowned the noise of battle.
-
- "For the Prince of Helium!" they cried. "For the Prince of Helium!"
- and, like hungry lions upon their prey, they fell once more upon
- the weakening warriors of the north.
-
- The yellow men, cornered between two enemies, fought with the
- desperation that utter hopelessness often induces. Fought as I
- should have fought had I been in their stead, with the determination
- to take as many of my enemies with me when I died as lay within the
- power of my sword arm.
-
- It was a glorious battle, but the end seemed inevitable,
- when presently from down the corridor behind the red men
- came a great body of reenforcing yellow warriors.
-
- Now were the tables turned, and it was the men of Helium who
- seemed doomed to be ground between two millstones. All were
- compelled to turn to meet this new assault by a greatly
- superior force, so that to me was left the remnants of
- the yellow men within the throneroom.
-
- They kept me busy, too; so busy that I began to wonder if
- indeed I should ever be done with them. Slowly they pressed me
- back into the room, and when they had all passed in after me,
- one of them closed and bolted the door, effectually barring the
- way against the men of Kantos Kan.
-
- It was a clever move, for it put me at the mercy of a dozen
- men within a chamber from which assistance was locked out, and it
- gave the red men in the corridor beyond no avenue of escape should
- their new antagonists press them too closely.
-
- But I have faced heavier odds myself than were pitted against
- me that day, and I knew that Kantos Kan had battled his way from
- a hundred more dangerous traps than that in which he now was.
- So it was with no feelings of despair that I turned my attention
- to the business of the moment.
-
- Constantly my thoughts reverted to Dejah Thoris, and I longed for
- the moment when, the fighting done, I could fold her in my arms,
- and hear once more the words of love which had been denied me for
- so many years.
-
- During the fighting in the chamber I had not even a single
- chance to so much as steal a glance at her where she stood behind
- me beside the throne of the dead ruler. I wondered why she no
- longer urged me on with the strains of the martial hymn of Helium;
- but I did not need more than the knowledge that I was battling for
- her to bring out the best that is in me.
-
- It would be wearisome to narrate the details of that bloody struggle;
- of how we fought from the doorway, the full length of the room to the
- very foot of the throne before the last of my antagonists fell with
- my blade piercing his heart.
-
- And then, with a glad cry, I turned with outstretched arms to seize
- my princess, and as my lips smothered hers to reap the reward that
- would be thrice ample payment for the bloody encounters through which
- I had passed for her dear sake from the south pole to the north.
-
- The glad cry died, frozen upon my lips; my arms dropped limp
- and lifeless to my sides; as one who reels beneath the burden of a
- mortal wound I staggered up the steps before the throne.
-
- Dejah Thoris was gone.
-
-
-
-
- REWARDS
-
-
- With the realization that Dejah Thoris was no longer within the
- throneroom came the belated recollection of the dark face that I
- had glimpsed peering from behind the draperies that backed the
- throne of Salensus Oll at the moment that I had first come so
- unexpectedly upon the strange scene being enacted within the chamber.
-
- Why had the sight of that evil countenance not warned me to
- greater caution? Why had I permitted the rapid development of
- new situations to efface the recollection of that menacing danger?
- But, alas, vain regret would not erase the calamity that had befallen.
-
- Once again had Dejah Thoris fallen into the clutches of that
- archfiend, Thurid, the black dator of the First Born. Again was
- all my arduous labor gone for naught. Now I realized the cause of
- the rage that had been writ so large upon the features of Matai
- Shang and the cruel pleasure that I had seen upon the face of Phaidor.
-
- They had known or guessed the truth, and the hekkador of the
- Holy Therns, who had evidently come to the chamber in the hope of
- thwarting Salensus Oll in his contemplated perfidy against the high
- priest who coveted Dejah Thoris for himself, realized that Thurid
- had stolen the prize from beneath his very nose.
-
- Phaidor's pleasure had been due to her realization of what
- this last cruel blow would mean to me, as well as to a partial
- satisfaction of her jealous hatred for the Princess of Helium.
-
- My first thought was to look beyond the draperies at the back
- of the throne, for there it was that I had seen Thurid. With a
- single jerk I tore the priceless stuff from its fastenings, and
- there before me was revealed a narrow doorway behind the throne.
-
- No question entered my mind but that here lay the opening of
- the avenue of escape which Thurid had followed, and had there been
- it would have been dissipated by the sight of a tiny, jeweled
- ornament which lay a few steps within the corridor beyond.
-
- As I snatched up the bauble I saw that it bore the device of
- the Princess of Helium, and then pressing it to my lips I dashed
- madly along the winding way that led gently downward toward the
- lower galleries of the palace.
-
- I had followed but a short distance when I came upon the room
- in which Solan formerly had held sway. His dead body still lay
- where I had left it, nor was there any sign that another had passed
- through the room since I had been there; but I knew that two had
- done so--Thurid, the black dator, and Dejah Thoris.
-
- For a moment I paused uncertain as to which of the several
- exits from the apartment would lead me upon the right path.
- I tried to recollect the directions which I had heard Thurid
- repeat to Solan, and at last, slowly, as though through a heavy fog,
- the memory of the words of the First Born came to me:
-
- "Follow a corridor, passing three diverging corridors upon the right;
- then into the fourth right-hand corridor to where three corridors meet;
- here again follow to the right, hugging the left wall closely to avoid
- the pit. At the end of this corridor I shall come to a spiral runway
- which I must follow down instead of up; after that the way is along
- but a single branchless corridor."
-
- And I recalled the exit at which he had pointed as he spoke.
-
- It did not take me long to start upon that unknown way, nor did
- I go with caution, although I knew that there might be grave
- dangers before me.
-
- Part of the way was black as sin, but for the most it was
- fairly well lighted. The stretch where I must hug the left wall to
- avoid the pits was darkest of them all, and I was nearly over the
- edge of the abyss before I knew that I was near the danger spot.
- A narrow ledge, scarce a foot wide, was all that had been left
- to carry the initiated past that frightful cavity into which the
- unknowing must surely have toppled at the first step. But at last
- I had won safely beyond it, and then a feeble light made the
- balance of the way plain, until, at the end of the last corridor,
- I came suddenly out into the glare of day upon a field of snow and ice.
-
- Clad for the warm atmosphere of the hothouse city of Kadabra,
- the sudden change to arctic frigidity was anything but pleasant;
- but the worst of it was that I knew I could not endure the
- bitter cold, almost naked as I was, and that I would perish
- before ever I could overtake Thurid and Dejah Thoris.
-
- To be thus blocked by nature, who had had all the arts and
- wiles of cunning man pitted against him, seemed a cruel fate,
- and as I staggered back into the warmth of the tunnel's end
- I was as near hopelessness as I ever have been.
-
- I had by no means given up my intention of continuing the
- pursuit, for if needs be I would go ahead though I perished ere
- ever I reached my goal, but if there were a safer way it were well
- worth the delay to attempt to discover it, that I might come again
- to the side of Dejah Thoris in fit condition to do battle for her.
-
- Scarce had I returned to the tunnel than I stumbled over a portion
- of a fur garment that seemed fastened to the floor of the corridor
- close to the wall. In the darkness I could not see what held it,
- but by groping with my hands I discovered that it was wedged beneath
- the bottom of a closed door.
-
- Pushing the portal aside, I found myself upon the threshold of a
- small chamber, the walls of which were lined with hooks from which
- depended suits of the complete outdoor apparel of the yellow men.
-
- Situated as it was at the mouth of a tunnel leading from the palace,
- it was quite evident that this was the dressing-room used by the
- nobles leaving and entering the hothouse city, and that Thurid,
- having knowledge of it, had stopped here to outfit himself and
- Dejah Thoris before venturing into the bitter cold of the
- arctic world beyond.
-
- In his haste he had dropped several garments upon the floor,
- and the telltale fur that had fallen partly within the corridor had
- proved the means of guiding me to the very spot he would least have
- wished me to have knowledge of.
-
- It required but the matter of a few seconds to don the necessary
- orluk-skin clothing, with the heavy, fur-lined boots that
- are so essential a part of the garmenture of one who would
- successfully contend with the frozen trails and the icy winds
- of the bleak northland.
-
- Once more I stepped beyond the tunnel's mouth to find the
- fresh tracks of Thurid and Dejah Thoris in the new-fallen snow.
- Now, at last, was my task an easy one, for though the going was
- rough in the extreme, I was no longer vexed by doubts as to the
- direction I should follow, or harassed by darkness or hidden dangers.
-
- Through a snow-covered canyon the way led up toward the summit
- of low hills. Beyond these it dipped again into another canon,
- only to rise a quarter-mile farther on toward a pass which skirted
- the flank of a rocky hill.
-
- I could see by the signs of those who had gone before that when
- Dejah Thoris had walked she had been continually holding back,
- and that the black man had been compelled to drag her. For other
- stretches only his foot-prints were visible, deep and close
- together in the heavy snow, and I knew from these signs that then
- he had been forced to carry her, and I could well imagine that she
- had fought him fiercely every step of the way.
-
- As I came round the jutting promontory of the hill's shoulder I
- saw that which quickened my pulses and set my heart to beating high,
- for within a tiny basin between the crest of this hill and the next
- stood four people before the mouth of a great cave, and beside them
- upon the gleaming snow rested a flier which had evidently but just
- been dragged from its hiding place.
-
- The four were Dejah Thoris, Phaidor, Thurid, and Matai Shang.
- The two men were engaged in a heated argument--the Father of Therns
- threatening, while the black scoffed at him as he went about the
- work at which he was engaged.
-
- As I crept toward them cautiously that I might come as near as
- possible before being discovered, I saw that finally the men
- appeared to have reached some sort of a compromise, for with
- Phaidor's assistance they both set about dragging the resisting
- Dejah Thoris to the flier's deck.
-
- Here they made her fast, and then both again descended to the ground
- to complete the preparations for departure. Phaidor entered the
- small cabin upon the vessel's deck.
-
- I had come to within a quarter of a mile of them when Matai Shang
- espied me. I saw him seize Thurid by the shoulder, wheeling him
- around in my direction as he pointed to where I was now plainly
- visible, for the moment that I knew I had been perceived I cast aside
- every attempt at stealth and broke into a mad race for the flier.
-
- The two redoubled their efforts at the propeller at which
- they were working, and which very evidently was being replaced
- after having been removed for some purpose of repair.
-
- They had the thing completed before I had covered half the
- distance that lay between me and them, and then both made a rush
- for the boarding-ladder.
-
- Thurid was the first to reach it, and with the agility of a
- monkey clambered swiftly to the boat's deck, where a touch of the
- button controlling the buoyancy tanks sent the craft slowly upward,
- though not with the speed that marks the well-conditioned flier.
-
- I was still some hundred yards away as I saw them rising from my grasp.
-
- Back by the city of Kadabra lay a great fleet of mighty fliers--
- the ships of Helium and Ptarth that I had saved from destruction
- earlier in the day; but before ever I could reach them Thurid
- could easily make good his escape.
-
- As I ran I saw Matai Shang clambering up the swaying, swinging
- ladder toward the deck, while above him leaned the evil face of the
- First Born. A trailing rope from the vessel's stern put new hope
- in me, for if I could but reach it before it whipped too high above
- my head there was yet a chance to gain the deck by its slender aid.
-
- That there was something radically wrong with the flier was evident
- from its lack of buoyancy, and the further fact that though Thurid
- had turned twice to the starting lever the boat still hung motionless
- in the air, except for a slight drifting with a low breeze from the north.
-
- Now Matai Shang was close to the gunwale. A long, claw-like
- hand was reaching up to grasp the metal rail.
-
- Thurid leaned farther down toward his co-conspirator.
-
- Suddenly a raised dagger gleamed in the upflung hand of the black.
- Down it drove toward the white face of the Father of Therns.
- With a loud shriek of fear the Holy Hekkador grasped frantically
- at that menacing arm.
-
- I was almost to the trailing rope by now. The craft was still
- rising slowly, the while it drifted from me. Then I stumbled on
- the icy way, striking my head upon a rock as I fell sprawling but
- an arm's length from the rope, the end of which was now just
- leaving the ground.
-
- With the blow upon my head came unconsciousness.
-
- It could not have been more than a few seconds that I lay
- senseless there upon the northern ice, while all that was
- dearest to me drifted farther from my reach in the clutches of
- that black fiend, for when I opened my eyes Thurid and Matai Shang
- yet battled at the ladder's top, and the flier drifted but a
- hundred yards farther to the south--but the end of the trailing
- rope was now a good thirty feet above the ground.
-
- Goaded to madness by the cruel misfortune that had tripped me
- when success was almost within my grasp, I tore frantically across
- the intervening space, and just beneath the rope's dangling end I
- put my earthly muscles to the supreme test.
-
- With a mighty, catlike bound I sprang upward toward that slender
- strand--the only avenue which yet remained that could carry
- me to my vanishing love.
-
- A foot above its lowest end my fingers closed. Tightly as I
- clung I felt the rope slipping, slipping through my grasp.
- I tried to raise my free hand to take a second hold above my first,
- but the change of position that resulted caused me to slip more
- rapidly toward the end of the rope.
-
- Slowly I felt the tantalizing thing escaping me. In a moment all
- that I had gained would be lost--then my fingers reached a knot
- at the very end of the rope and slipped no more.
-
- With a prayer of gratitude upon my lips I scrambled upward toward
- the boat's deck. I could not see Thurid and Matai Shang now,
- but I heard the sounds of conflict and thus knew that they
- still fought--the thern for his life and the black for the
- increased buoyancy that relief from the weight of even a single
- body would give the craft.
-
- Should Matai Shang die before I reached the deck my chances of
- ever reaching it would be slender indeed, for the black dator need
- but cut the rope above me to be freed from me forever, for the
- vessel had drifted across the brink of a chasm into whose yawning
- depths my body would drop to be crushed to a shapeless pulp should
- Thurid reach the rope now.
-
- At last my hand closed upon the ship's rail and that very
- instant a horrid shriek rang out below me that sent my blood cold
- and turned my horrified eyes downward to a shrieking, hurtling,
- twisting thing that shot downward into the awful chasm beneath me.
-
- It was Matai Shang, Holy Hekkador, Father of Therns, gone to
- his last accounting.
-
- Then my head came above the deck and I saw Thurid, dagger in hand,
- leaping toward me. He was opposite the forward end of the cabin,
- while I was attempting to clamber aboard near the vessel's stern.
- But a few paces lay between us. No power on earth could raise me
- to that deck before the infuriated black would be upon me.
-
- My end had come. I knew it; but had there been a doubt in my
- mind the nasty leer of triumph upon that wicked face would have
- convinced me. Beyond Thurid I could see my Dejah Thoris, wide-eyed
- and horrified, struggling at her bonds. That she should be forced
- to witness my awful death made my bitter fate seem doubly cruel.
-
- I ceased my efforts to climb across the gunwale. Instead I took
- a firm grasp upon the rail with my left hand and drew my dagger.
-
- I should at least die as I had lived--fighting.
-
- As Thurid came opposite the cabin's doorway a new element
- projected itself into the grim tragedy of the air that was
- being enacted upon the deck of Matai Shang's disabled flier.
-
- It was Phaidor.
-
- With flushed face and disheveled hair, and eyes that betrayed
- the recent presence of mortal tears--above which this proud goddess
- had always held herself--she leaped to the deck directly before me.
-
- In her hand was a long, slim dagger. I cast a last look upon
- my beloved princess, smiling, as men should who are about to die.
- Then I turned my face up toward Phaidor--waiting for the blow.
-
- Never have I seen that beautiful face more beautiful than it
- was at that moment. It seemed incredible that one so lovely could
- yet harbor within her fair bosom a heart so cruel and relentless,
- and today there was a new expression in her wondrous eyes that I never
- before had seen there--an unfamiliar softness, and a look of suffering.
-
- Thurid was beside her now--pushing past to reach me first, and then
- what happened happened so quickly that it was all over before I could
- realize the truth of it.
-
- Phaidor's slim hand shot out to close upon the black's dagger wrist.
- Her right hand went high with its gleaming blade.
-
- "That for Matai Shang!" she cried, and she buried her blade
- deep in the dator's breast. "That for the wrong you would have done
- Dejah Thoris!" and again the sharp steel sank into the bloody flesh.
-
- "And that, and that, and that!" she shrieked, "for John Carter,
- Prince of Helium," and with each word her sharp point pierced
- the vile heart of the great villain. Then, with a vindictive
- shove she cast the carcass of the First Born from the deck to
- fall in awful silence after the body of his victim.
-
- I had been so paralyzed by surprise that I had made no move to reach
- the deck during the awe-inspiring scene which I had just witnessed,
- and now I was to be still further amazed by her next act, for Phaidor
- extended her hand to me and assisted me to the deck, where I stood
- gazing at her in unconcealed and stupefied wonderment.
-
- A wan smile touched her lips--it was not the cruel and haughty
- smile of the goddess with which I was familiar. "You wonder,
- John Carter," she said, "what strange thing has wrought this
- change in me? I will tell you. It is love--love of you,"
- and when I darkened my brows in disapproval of her words
- she raised an appealing hand.
-
- "Wait," she said. "It is a different love from mine--it is
- the love of your princess, Dejah Thoris, for you that has taught
- me what true love may be--what it should be, and how far from
- real love was my selfish and jealous passion for you.
-
- "Now I am different. Now could I love as Dejah Thoris loves,
- and so my only happiness can be to know that you and she are once
- more united, for in her alone can you find true happiness.
-
- "But I am unhappy because of the wickedness that I have wrought.
- I have many sins to expiate, and though I be deathless, life is
- all too short for the atonement.
-
- "But there is another way, and if Phaidor, daughter of the
- Holy Hekkador of the Holy Therns, has sinned she has this day
- already made partial reparation, and lest you doubt the sincerity
- of her protestations and her avowal of a new love that embraces
- Dejah Thoris also, she will prove her sincerity in the only way
- that lies open--having saved you for another, Phaidor leaves you
- to her embraces."
-
- With her last word she turned and leaped from the vessel's
- deck into the abyss below.
-
- With a cry of horror I sprang forward in a vain attempt to
- save the life that for two years I would so gladly have seen
- extinguished. I was too late.
-
- With tear-dimmed eyes I turned away that I might not see the
- awful sight beneath.
-
- A moment later I had struck the bonds from Dejah Thoris, and as
- her dear arms went about my neck and her perfect lips pressed to
- mine I forgot the horrors that I had witnessed and the suffering
- that I had endured in the rapture of my reward.
-
-
-
-
- THE NEW RULER
-
-
- The flier upon whose deck Dejah Thoris and I found ourselves
- after twelve long years of separation proved entirely useless.
- Her buoyancy tanks leaked badly. Her engine would not start.
- We were helpless there in mid air above the arctic ice.
-
- The craft had drifted across the chasm which held the corpses of
- Matai Shang, Thurid, and Phaidor, and now hung above a low hill.
- Opening the buoyancy escape valves I permitted her to come slowly
- to the ground, and as she touched, Dejah Thoris and I stepped from
- her deck and, hand in hand, turned back across the frozen waste
- toward the city of Kadabra.
-
- Through the tunnel that had led me in pursuit of them we passed,
- walking slowly, for we had much to say to each other.
-
- She told me of that last terrible moment months before when the
- door of her prison cell within the Temple of the Sun was slowly
- closing between us. Of how Phaidor had sprung upon her with
- uplifted dagger, and of Thuvia's shriek as she had realized the
- foul intention of the thern goddess.
-
- It had been that cry that had rung in my ears all the long,
- weary months that I had been left in cruel doubt as to my
- princess' fate; for I had not known that Thuvia had wrested
- the blade from the daughter of Matai Shang before it had
- touched either Dejah Thoris or herself.
-
- She told me, too, of the awful eternity of her imprisonment.
- Of the cruel hatred of Phaidor, and the tender love of Thuvia,
- and of how even when despair was the darkest those two red girls
- had clung to the same hope and belief--that John Carter would
- find a way to release them.
-
- Presently we came to the chamber of Solan. I had been proceeding
- without thought of caution, for I was sure that the city and the
- palace were both in the hands of my friends by this time.
-
- And so it was that I bolted into the chamber full into
- the midst of a dozen nobles of the court of Salensus Oll.
- They were passing through on their way to the outside world
- along the corridors we had just traversed.
-
- At sight of us they halted in their tracks, and then an ugly
- smile overspread the features of their leader.
-
- "The author of all our misfortunes!" he cried, pointing at me.
- "We shall have the satisfaction of a partial vengeance at least
- when we leave behind us here the dead and mutilated corpses of the
- Prince and Princess of Helium.
-
- "When they find them," he went on, jerking his thumb upward toward
- the palace above, "they will realize that the vengeance of the
- yellow man costs his enemies dear. Prepare to die, John Carter,
- but that your end may be the more bitter, know that I may change
- my intention as to meting a merciful death to your princess--
- possibly she shall be preserved as a plaything for my nobles."
-
- I stood close to the instrument-covered wall--Dejah Thoris at my side.
- She looked up at me wonderingly as the warriors advanced upon us with
- drawn swords, for mine still hung within its scabbard at my side,
- and there was a smile upon my lips.
-
- The yellow nobles, too, looked in surprise, and then as I made
- no move to draw they hesitated, fearing a ruse; but their leader
- urged them on. When they had come almost within sword's reach of
- me I raised my hand and laid it upon the polished surface of a
- great lever, and then, still smiling grimly, I looked my enemies
- full in the face.
-
- As one they came to a sudden stop, casting affrighted glances
- at me and at one another.
-
- "Stop!" shrieked their leader. "You dream not what you do!"
-
- "Right you are," I replied. "John Carter does not dream.
- He knows--knows that should one of you take another step toward
- Dejah Thoris, Princess of Helium, I pull this lever wide,
- and she and I shall die together; but we shall not die alone."
-
- The nobles shrank back, whispering together for a few moments.
- At last their leader turned to me.
-
- "Go your way, John Carter," he said, "and we shall go ours."
-
- "Prisoners do not go their own way," I answered, "and you are
- prisoners--prisoners of the Prince of Helium."
-
- Before they could make answer a door upon the opposite side of
- the apartment opened and a score of yellow men poured into the
- apartment. For an instant the nobles looked relieved, and then as
- their eyes fell upon the leader of the new party their faces fell,
- for he was Talu, rebel Prince of Marentina, and they knew that they
- could look for neither aid nor mercy at his hands.
-
- "Well done, John Carter," he cried. "You turn their own
- mighty power against them. Fortunate for Okar is it that you were
- here to prevent their escape, for these be the greatest villains
- north of the ice-barrier, and this one"--pointing to the leader of
- the party--"would have made himself Jeddak of Jeddaks in the place
- of the dead Salensus Oll. Then indeed would we have had a more
- villainous ruler than the hated tyrant who fell before your sword."
-
- The Okarian nobles now submitted to arrest, since nothing but
- death faced them should they resist, and, escorted by the warriors
- of Talu, we made our way to the great audience chamber that had
- been Salensus Oll's. Here was a vast concourse of warriors.
-
- Red men from Helium and Ptarth, yellow men of the north,
- rubbing elbows with the blacks of the First Born who had come
- under my friend Xodar to help in the search for me and my princess.
- There were savage, green warriors from the dead sea bottoms
- of the south, and a handful of white-skinned therns who had
- renounced their religion and sworn allegiance to Xodar.
-
- There was Tardos Mors and Mors Kajak, and tall and mighty in his
- gorgeous warrior trappings, Carthoris, my son. These three fell
- upon Dejah Thoris as we entered the apartment, and though the lives
- and training of royal Martians tend not toward vulgar demonstration,
- I thought that they would suffocate her with their embraces.
-
- And there were Tars Tarkas, Jeddak of Thark, and Kantos Kan,
- my old-time friends, and leaping and tearing at my harness
- in the exuberance of his great love was dear old Woola--
- frantic mad with happiness.
-
- Long and loud was the cheering that burst forth at sight of us;
- deafening was the din of ringing metal as the veteran warriors
- of every Martian clime clashed their blades together on high in
- token of success and victory, but as I passed among the throng
- of saluting nobles and warriors, jeds and jeddaks, my heart
- still was heavy, for there were two faces missing that I would have
- given much to have seen there--Thuvan Dihn and Thuvia of Ptarth
- were not to be found in the great chamber.
-
- I made inquiries concerning them among men of every nation,
- and at last from one of the yellow prisoners of war I learned that
- they had been apprehended by an officer of the palace as they
- sought to reach the Pit of Plenty while I lay imprisoned there.
-
- I did not need to ask to know what had sent them thither--
- the courageous jeddak and his loyal daughter. My informer
- said that they lay now in one of the many buried dungeons
- of the palace where they had been placed pending a decision
- as to their fate by the tyrant of the north.
-
- A moment later searching parties were scouring the ancient pile
- in search of them, and my cup of happiness was full when I saw
- them being escorted into the room by a cheering guard of honor.
-
- Thuvia's first act was to rush to the side of Dejah Thoris,
- and I needed no better proof of the love these two bore for
- each other than the sincerity with which they embraced.
-
- Looking down upon that crowded chamber stood the silent and
- empty throne of Okar.
-
- Of all the strange scenes it must have witnessed since that
- long-dead age that had first seen a Jeddak of Jeddaks take his
- seat upon it, none might compare with that upon which it now
- looked down, and as I pondered the past and future of that
- long-buried race of black-bearded yellow men I thought that
- I saw a brighter and more useful existence for them among
- the great family of friendly nations that now stretched
- from the south pole almost to their very doors.
-
- Twenty-two years before I had been cast, naked and a stranger,
- into this strange and savage world. The hand of every race and
- nation was raised in continual strife and warring against the men
- of every other land and color. Today, by the might of my sword and
- the loyalty of the friends my sword had made for me, black man and
- white, red man and green rubbed shoulders in peace and good-fellowship.
- All the nations of Barsoom were not yet as one, but a great stride
- forward toward that goal had been taken, and now if I could but
- cement the fierce yellow race into this solidarity of nations
- I should feel that I had rounded out a great lifework,
- and repaid to Mars at least a portion of the immense debt of
- gratitude I owed her for having given me my Dejah Thoris.
-
- And as I thought, I saw but one way, and a single man who could
- insure the success of my hopes. As is ever the way with me,
- I acted then as I always act--without deliberation and
- without consultation.
-
- Those who do not like my plans and my ways of promoting them
- have always their swords at their sides wherewith to back up their
- disapproval; but now there seemed to be no dissenting voice, as,
- grasping Talu by the arm, I sprang to the throne that had once been
- Salensus Oll's.
-
- "Warriors of Barsoom," I cried, "Kadabra has fallen, and with her
- the hateful tyrant of the north; but the integrity of Okar must
- be preserved. The red men are ruled by red jeddaks, the green
- warriors of the ancient seas acknowledge none but a green ruler,
- the First Born of the south pole take their law from black Xodar;
- nor would it be to the interests of either yellow or red man were
- a red jeddak to sit upon the throne of Okar.
-
- "There be but one warrior best fitted for the ancient and mighty
- title of Jeddak of Jeddaks of the North. Men of Okar, raise
- your swords to your new ruler--Talu, the rebel prince of Marentina!"
-
- And then a great cry of rejoicing rose among the free men of
- Marentina and the Kadabran prisoners, for all had thought that the
- red men would retain that which they had taken by force of arms,
- for such had been the way upon Barsoom, and that they should be
- ruled henceforth by an alien Jeddak.
-
- The victorious warriors who had followed Carthoris joined in the
- mad demonstration, and amidst the wild confusion and the tumult
- and the cheering, Dejah Thoris and I passed out into the gorgeous
- garden of the jeddaks that graces the inner courtyard of the
- palace of Kadabra.
-
- At our heels walked Woola, and upon a carved seat of wondrous beauty
- beneath a bower of purple blooms we saw two who had preceded us--
- Thuvia of Ptarth and Carthoris of Helium.
-
- The handsome head of the handsome youth was bent low above the
- beautiful face of his companion. I looked at Dejah Thoris,
- smiling, and as I drew her close to me I whispered: "Why not?"
-
- Indeed, why not? What matter ages in this world of perpetual youth?
-
- We remained at Kadabra, the guests of Talu, until after his
- formal induction into office, and then, upon the great fleet which
- I had been so fortunate to preserve from destruction, we sailed
- south across the ice-barrier; but not before we had witnessed the
- total demolition of the grim Guardian of the North under orders of
- the new Jeddak of Jeddaks.
-
- "Henceforth," he said, as the work was completed, "the fleets
- of the red men and the black are free to come and go across the
- ice-barrier as over their own lands.
-
- "The Carrion Caves shall be cleansed, that the green men may
- find an easy way to the land of the yellow, and the hunting of the
- sacred apt shall be the sport of my nobles until no single specimen
- of that hideous creature roams the frozen north."
-
- We bade our yellow friends farewell with real regret, as we
- set sail for Ptarth. There we remained, the guest of Thuvan Dihn,
- for a month; and I could see that Carthoris would have remained
- forever had he not been a Prince of Helium.
-
- Above the mighty forests of Kaol we hovered until word from
- Kulan Tith brought us to his single landing-tower, where all day
- and half a night the vessels disembarked their crews. At the city
- of Kaol we visited, cementing the new ties that had been formed
- between Kaol and Helium, and then one long-to-be-remembered day we
- sighted the tall, thin towers of the twin cities of Helium.
-
- The people had long been preparing for our coming. The sky
- was gorgeous with gaily trimmed fliers. Every roof within both
- cities was spread with costly silks and tapestries.
-
- Gold and jewels were scattered over roof and street and plaza,
- so that the two cities seemed ablaze with the fires of the hearts
- of the magnificent stones and burnished metal that reflected the
- brilliant sunlight, changing it into countless glorious hues.
-
- At last, after twelve years, the royal family of Helium was
- reunited in their own mighty city, surrounded by joy-mad millions
- before the palace gates. Women and children and mighty warriors
- wept in gratitude for the fate that had restored their beloved
- Tardos Mors and the divine princess whom the whole nation idolized.
- Nor did any of us who had been upon that expedition of indescribable
- danger and glory lack for plaudits.
-
- That night a messenger came to me as I sat with Dejah Thoris
- and Carthoris upon the roof of my city palace, where we had long
- since caused a lovely garden to be made that we three might find
- seclusion and quiet happiness among ourselves, far from the pomp
- and ceremony of court, to summon us to the Temple of Reward--
- "where one is to be judged this night," the summons concluded.
-
- I racked my brain to try and determine what important case
- there might be pending which could call the royal family from
- their palaces on the eve of their return to Helium after years
- of absence; but when the jeddak summons no man delays.
-
- As our flier touched the landing stage at the temple's top we
- saw countless other craft arriving and departing. In the streets
- below a great multitude surged toward the great gates of the temple.
-
- Slowly there came to me the recollection of the deferred doom that
- awaited me since that time I had been tried here in the Temple by
- Zat Arras for the sin of returning from the Valley Dor and the
- Lost Sea of Korus.
-
- Could it be possible that the strict sense of justice which
- dominates the men of Mars had caused them to overlook the
- great good that had come out of my heresy? Could they ignore the
- fact that to me, and me alone, was due the rescue of Carthoris,
- of Dejah Thoris, of Mors Kajak, of Tardos Mors?
-
- I could not believe it, and yet for what other purpose could I
- have been summoned to the Temple of Reward immediately upon the
- return of Tardos Mors to his throne?
-
- My first surprise as I entered the temple and approached the Throne
- of Righteousness was to note the men who sat there as judges.
- There was Kulan Tith, Jeddak of Kaol, whom we had but just left
- within his own palace a few days since; there was Thuvan Dihn,
- Jeddak of Ptarth--how came he to Helium as soon as we?
-
- There was Tars Tarkas, Jeddak of Thark, and Xodar, Jeddak of
- the First Born; there was Talu, Jeddak of Jeddaks of the North,
- whom I could have sworn was still in his ice-bound hothouse city
- beyond the northern barrier, and among them sat Tardos Mors and
- Mors Kajak, with enough lesser jeds and jeddaks to make up the
- thirty-one who must sit in judgment upon their fellow-man.
-
- A right royal tribunal indeed, and such a one, I warrant, as never
- before sat together during all the history of ancient Mars.
-
- As I entered, silence fell upon the great concourse of people that
- packed the auditorium. Then Tardos Mors arose.
-
- "John Carter," he said in his deep, martial voice, "take your place
- upon the Pedestal of Truth, for you are to be tried by a fair and
- impartial tribunal of your fellow-men."
-
- With level eye and high-held head I did as he bade, and as I glanced
- about that circle of faces that a moment before I could have sworn
- contained the best friends I had upon Barsoom, I saw no single
- friendly glance--only stern, uncompromising judges, there to
- do their duty.
-
- A clerk rose and from a great book read a long list of the more
- notable deeds that I had thought to my credit, covering a long
- period of twenty-two years since first I had stepped the ocher sea
- bottom beside the incubator of the Tharks. With the others he read
- of all that I had done within the circle of the Otz Mountains where
- the Holy Therns and the First Born had held sway.
-
- It is the way upon Barsoom to recite a man's virtues with his sins
- when he is come to trial, and so I was not surprised that all that
- was to my credit should be read there to my judges--who knew it
- all by heart--even down to the present moment. When the reading
- had ceased Tardos Mors arose.
-
- "Most righteous judges," he exclaimed, "you have heard recited
- all that is known of John Carter, Prince of Helium--the good
- with the bad. What is your judgment?"
-
- Then Tars Tarkas came slowly to his feet, unfolding all his mighty,
- towering height until he loomed, a green-bronze statue, far above us all.
- He turned a baleful eye upon me--he, Tars Tarkas, with whom I had fought
- through countless battles; whom I loved as a brother.
-
- I could have wept had I not been so mad with rage that I
- almost whipped my sword out and had at them all upon the spot.
-
- "Judges," he said, "there can be but one verdict. No longer may
- John Carter be Prince of Helium"--he paused--"but instead let
- him be Jeddak of Jeddaks, Warlord of Barsoom!"
-
- As the thirty-one judges sprang to their feet with drawn and
- upraised swords in unanimous concurrence in the verdict, the storm
- broke throughout the length and breadth and height of that mighty
- building until I thought the roof would fall from the thunder of
- the mad shouting.
-
- Now, at last, I saw the grim humor of the method they had adopted
- to do me this great honor, but that there was any hoax in the
- reality of the title they had conferred upon me was readily
- disproved by the sincerity of the congratulations that were
- heaped upon me by the judges first and then the nobles.
-
- Presently fifty of the mightiest nobles of the greatest courts
- of Mars marched down the broad Aisle of Hope bearing a splendid
- car upon their shoulders, and as the people saw who sat within,
- the cheers that had rung out for me paled into insignificance beside
- those which thundered through the vast edifice now, for she whom
- the nobles carried was Dejah Thoris, beloved Princess of Helium.
-
- Straight to the Throne of Righteousness they bore her, and there
- Tardos Mors assisted her from the car, leading her forward to my side.
-
- "Let a world's most beautiful woman share the honor of her husband,"
- he said.
-
- Before them all I drew my wife close to me and kissed her upon the lips.
-
-
- End of Project Gutenberg etext of "Warlord of Mars"
-
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-