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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Astounding Stories of Super-Science,
+December 1930, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Astounding Stories of Super-Science, December 1930
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: December 17, 2009 [EBook #30691]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ASTOUNDING STORIES, DEC. 1930 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Katherine Ward, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+ASTOUNDING STORIES OF SUPER-SCIENCE
+
+
+_On Sale the First Thursday of Each Month_
+
+ W. M. CLAYTON, Publisher
+ HARRY BATES, Editor
+ DR. DOUGLAS M. DOLD, Consulting Editor
+
+The Clayton Standard on a Magazine Guarantees
+
+_That_ the stories therein are clean, interesting, vivid, by leading
+writers of the day and purchased under conditions approved by the
+Authors' League of America;
+
+_That_ such magazines are manufactured in Union shops by American
+workmen;
+
+_That_ each newsdealer and agent is insured a fair profit;
+
+_That_ an intelligent censorship guards their advertising pages.
+
+
+_The other Clayton magazines are_:
+
+ACE-HIGH MAGAZINE, RANCH ROMANCES, COWBOY STORIES, CLUES, FIVE NOVELS
+MONTHLY, ALL STAR DETECTIVE STORIES, RANGELAND LOVE STORY MAGAZINE,
+WESTERN ADVENTURES, and WESTERN LOVE STORIES.
+
+_More than Two Million Copies Required to Supply the Monthly Demand for
+Clayton Magazines._
+
+
+ VOL. IV, No. 3 CONTENTS DECEMBER, 1930
+
+ COVER DESIGN H. W. WESSOLOWSKI
+
+ _Painted in Oils from a Scene in "The Ape-Men of Xlotli."_
+
+ SLAVES OF THE DUST SOPHIE WENZEL ELLIS 295
+
+ _Fate's Retribution Was Adequate. There Emerged a Rat with a
+ Man's Head and Face._
+
+ THE PIRATE PLANET CHARLES W. DIFFIN 310
+
+ _It is War. Interplanetary War. And on Far-Distant Venus Two
+ Fighting Earthlings Stand Up Against a Whole Planet Run Amuck._
+ (Part Two of a Four-Part Novel.)
+
+ THE SEA TERROR CAPTAIN S. P. MEEK 336
+
+ _The Trail of Mystery Gold Leads Carnes and Dr. Bird to a
+ Tremendous Monster of the Deep._
+
+ GRAY DENIM HARL VINCENT 354
+
+ _The Blood of the Van Dorn's Ran in Karl's Veins. He Rode
+ the Skies Like an Avenging God._
+
+ THE APE-MEN OF XLOTLI DAVID R. SPARKS 370
+
+ _A Beautiful Face in the Depths of a Geyser--and Kirby Plunges
+ into a Desperate Mid-Earth Conflict with the Dreadful
+ Feathered Serpent._ (A Complete Novelette.)
+
+ THE READERS' CORNER ALL OF US 421
+
+ _A Meeting place for Readers of Astounding Stories._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Single Copies, 20 Cents (In Canada, 25 Cents)
+ Yearly Subscription, $2.00
+
+Issued monthly by Readers' Guild, Inc., 80 Lafayette St., New York, N.Y.
+W. M. Clayton, President; Francis P. Pace, Secretary. Entered as
+second-class matter December 7, 1929, at the Post Office at New York.
+N.Y., under Act of March 3. 1879. Title registered as a Trade Mark in
+the U.S. Patent Office. Member Newsstand Group--Men's List. For
+advertising rates address E. R. Crow & Co., Inc., 25 Vanderbilt Ave.,
+New York; or 225 North Michigan Ave., Chicago.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Slaves of the Dust
+
+_By Sophie Wenzel Ellis_
+
+ Fate's retribution was adequate. There emerged a rat with a man's
+ head and face.
+
+ _It's a poor science that would hide from us the great, deep,
+ sacred infinitude of Nescience, whither we can never penetrate, on
+ which all science swims as mere superficial film._
+
+ --_Carlyle_.
+
+[Illustration: _Sir Basil showed his teeth in his ugly smile. "A creator
+is never merciful."_]
+
+
+The two _batalões_ turned from the open waters of the lower Tapajos
+River into the _igarapé_, the lily-smothered shallows that often mark an
+Indian settlement in the jungles of Brazil. One of the two half-breed
+rubber-gatherers suddenly stopped his _batalõe_ by thrusting a paddle
+against a giant clump of lilies. In a corruption of the Tupi dialect, he
+called over to the white man occupying the other frail craft.
+
+"We dare go no farther, master. The country of the Ungapuks is
+bewitched. It is too dangerous."
+
+Fearfully he stared over his shoulder toward a spot in the slimy water
+where a dim bulk moved, which was only an alligator hunting for his
+breakfast.
+
+Hale Oakham, as long and lanky and level-eyed as Charles Lindbergh, ran
+despairing fingers through his damp hair and groaned.
+
+"But how can I find this jungle village without a guide?"
+
+The _caboclo_ shrugged. "The village will find you. It is bewitched,
+master. But you will soon see the path through the _matto_."
+
+"Can't you stay by me until time to land? I don't like the looks of
+these alligators."
+
+"It is better for a white man to face an alligator than for a _caboclo_
+to face an Ungapuk. Once they used to kill and eat us for our strength.
+Now--" Again his shrug was eloquent.
+
+"Now?" Hale prompted impatiently.
+
+"The white god who put a spell on these one-time cannibals will bewitch
+us and make us wash and rejoice when it is time to die."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He shuddered and spat at a cayman that was lumbering away from his
+_batalõe._
+
+Hale Oakham laughed, a hearty boyish laugh for a rather learned young
+professor.
+
+"Is that all they do to you?" he asked.
+
+"No. All who enter this magic _matto_ die soon, rejoicing. Before the
+last breath comes, it is said their bodies turn into a handful of silver
+dust--poof!--like that." He snapped his dirty fingers. "Then the life
+that leaves them goes into rocks that walk."
+
+Hale sighed resignedly. There wasn't any use to argue.
+
+"Unload your _batalõe_," he ordered testily, "and get your filthy
+carcasses away."
+
+The half-breeds obeyed readily. As the departing _batalõe_ turned from
+the _igarapé_ into the open water of the river, the young man repressed
+a sudden lifting of his scalp. He was in for it now!
+
+His long body sprawled out in the _batalõe_, he paddled about aimlessly
+for several minutes until he found an aisle through the jungle--the path
+that led to the jungle village which he was visiting in the name of
+science, and for a certain award.
+
+Before plunging into that waiting tangle where life and death carried on
+a visible, unceasing struggle, he hesitated. Instinctively he shrank
+from losing himself in that mad green world.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He had first heard of the Ungapuks at the convention of the Nescience
+Club in New York, that body of scientists, near-scientists and
+adventurers linked together for the purpose of awarding the yearly
+Woolman prizes for the most spectacular addition of empiric facts to
+various branches of science. One of the members of the club, an
+explorer, had told a wild yarn about a tribe of Brazilian Indians,
+headed by Sir Basil Addington, an English scientist, who was conducting
+secret experiments in biochemistry in his jungle laboratory. The
+explorer had said that the scientist, half-crazed by a powerful
+narcotic, had seemingly discovered some secret of life which enabled him
+to produce monsters in his laboratory and to change the physical
+characteristics of the Ungapuk Indians, who, in five years, had been
+transformed from cannibals into cultured men and women.
+
+And now Hale Oakham, hoping to win one of the Woolman prizes, was here
+in the country of the Ungapuks, entering the jungle path that lead to
+the unknown.
+
+Fifty feet from the _igarapé_, the path curved sharply away from a giant
+tree. Hale approached the bend with his hand on his gun. Just before he
+reached it, he stopped suddenly to listen.
+
+A woman's voice had suddenly broken forth in a wild, incredibly sweet
+song. Hale stood entranced, drinking in the heady sounds that stirred
+his emotions like _masata_, the jungle intoxicant. The singer
+approached the bend in the path, while the young man waited eagerly.
+
+The first sight of her made him gasp. He had expected to see an Indian
+girl. No sane traveler would imagine a white woman in the Amazon jungle,
+with skin as amazingly pale as the great, fleshy victoria regia lilies
+in the _igarapé_.
+
+When she saw Hale, she stopped instantly. With a quick, practiced twist,
+she reached for the bow flung across her shoulders and fitted a barbed
+arrow to the string.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She was a beautiful barbarian, standing quivering before him. In the
+thick dull gold braids hanging over her bare shoulders flamed two
+enormous scarlet flowers, no redder than her own lips pouted in alarm.
+There was a savage brevity to her clothing, which consisted only of a
+short skirt of rough native grass and breastplates of beaten gold, held
+in place by strings of colored seeds.
+
+The girl held out an imperious hand and, in perfect English, said:
+
+"Go back!"
+
+Hale drew his long body up to its slim height, folded his arms, and gave
+her his most winning smile. His insolence added to his wholesome good
+looks.
+
+"Why?" he exclaimed. "I've come a couple of thousand miles to call on
+you."
+
+He saw that the eyes which held his levelly were pure and limpid, and of
+an astonishing orchid-blue.
+
+"Who are you?" Her throaty, vibrant voice was a thing of the flesh,
+whipping Hale's senses to sudden madness.
+
+"I'm Hale Oakham," he said, a little tremulously, "a lone, would-be
+scientist knocking about the jungle. Won't you tell me your name?"
+
+She nodded gravely. "I am Aña. I, too, am white." Her rich voice was
+quietly proud. "Come; I'll see if Aimu will receive you."
+
+With surprising, childlike trust, she held out her little hand to him.
+The gesture was so delightfully natural that Hale, grinning boyishly,
+took her hand and held it as they walked down the jungle path.
+
+"Sing for me," he demanded abruptly. "Sing the song you sang just now."
+
+"That?" asked the girl, turning the virgin-blue fire of her eyes on him.
+"That was my death-song that I practice each day. Perhaps soon I shall
+be released from this." She passed her hands over her beautiful,
+half-clothed body.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hale's warm glance swept over her. "Do you want to die?"
+
+"Yes; don't you? But you do not, or you would not have retreated from my
+poisoned arrow."
+
+"No, Aña; I want to live."
+
+"To live--and be a slave of _this_?" Again her hand went over her slim
+body. "A slave of a pile of flesh that you must feed and protect from
+the agonies that attack it on every side? Bah! But I am hoping that my
+turn will come next."
+
+"Your turn for what, Aña?"
+
+"To enter the Room of Release. Perhaps, if Aimu approves of you, you,
+too, may taste of death." Her gentle smile was beatific.
+
+"Do you speak of Sir Basil Addington?"
+
+"He was called that once, before he came to us. Now he has no name. We
+can find none holy enough for him; and so we call him Aimu, which means
+good friend." Her beautiful face was sweet with reverence.
+
+And now, in the distance, Hale saw that the path led into a large
+clearing. He slowed his pace, for he wanted to know this lovely girl
+better before he joined the Ungapuks.
+
+"Who are you, Aña?" he asked suddenly, bending closer to the crinkled,
+dull-gold hair.
+
+"I am Aña, a white woman." She looked at him frankly.
+
+"But who are your parents, and how did you get among the Ungapuks?"
+
+Aña's red lips curved into a dewy smile. "I thought all white men were
+wise, like Aimu. But you are stupid. How do you think a white woman
+could appear in a tribe of Indians who live in the jungle, many weeks'
+journey from what you call civilization?"
+
+Hale looked a little blank and more than a little disconcerted.
+
+"I suppose I am stupid," he said dryly. "But tell me, Aña, how did you
+get here?"
+
+"Why," she exclaimed, "he made me!"
+
+"Made you? Good Lord! What do you mean?"
+
+"Just what I said, Hale Oakham. If he can take a few grains of dust and
+make a shoot that will grow into a giant tree like yonder monster
+itauba, don't you think he can create a small white girl like me?" Her
+orchid-blue eyes glowed innocently into his.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The eager questions that he would have asked froze upon his lips, for a
+party of Indians approached.
+
+The six nearly naked red men came close and surveyed him, toying
+nervously with their primitive, feather-decorated weapons.
+
+A tall, handsome young fellow who possessed something of the picturesque
+perfection of the North American plains' Indian stepped forward and, in
+perfect English, said:
+
+"Good morning, white stranger. What is it you wish of the Ungapuks?"
+
+"I came to see your white _cacique_," said Hale.
+
+"Aimu? What is it you wish of Aimu? He is ours, white stranger."
+
+"Yes, he is yours. I come as a friend, perhaps to help him in his great
+work."
+
+"Perhaps!" The young Indian folded his bronze, muscular arms over his
+broad chest and continued his cool survey of Hale. "White men before you
+have come: spies and thieves. Some we poisoned with curari. Others Aimu
+took into the Room of Release."
+
+He turned to Aña, who was still standing by Hale, and his expression
+softened.
+
+"What shall we do with him, Aña?" he asked the question, a fleeting look
+of hunger swept his fine, flashing eyes.
+
+Aña flushed beautifully, and, moving closer to Hale, with an impulsive,
+almost childish gesture, slipped her arm through his.
+
+"Let us take him to our village, Unani Assu!" she suggested. "I like
+him."
+
+It was Hale's turn to flush, which he did like a schoolboy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Unani Assu's brows drew together in a scowl. The hand holding his
+blow-pipe jerked convulsively.
+
+"Aña! Come away!" he growled. "You mustn't touch a stranger!"
+
+Aña's blue eyes stretched with astonishment. "But I like to touch him,
+Unani Assu!"
+
+The tall Indian, with a half comical gesture of despair, said:
+
+"Don't misunderstand her, stranger. She is young, very young, ah! And
+she has known only the reborn men of the Ungapuks."
+
+He stepped firmly over to Aña, and, taking the girl by the arm, drew her
+away.
+
+"Run ahead," he commanded, "and tell Aimu that we come."
+
+Aña, her feathered bamboo anklets clicking together, sped away.
+
+Unani Assu bowed courteously to Hale.
+
+"Come, stranger. If you are an enemy, it is you who must fear." He
+motioned for him to proceed down the jungle path.
+
+The path ended at a clearing studded with _moloccas_, the Indian grass
+huts made of plaited straw. Altogether the scene was peaceful and sane
+and far removed from the strange tales that Hale had heard concerning
+the Ungapuks.
+
+Hale was conducted to a long, low stone building, where, in the
+doorway, stood a tall and emaciated white man.
+
+"Aimu!" said the Indians reverently, and bowed themselves.
+
+Over the bare, brown backs, the white man looked at Hale.
+
+"Sir Basil Addington?" asked the young man.
+
+"Yes. You are welcome. Come in."
+
+Hale entered the building.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He was in a book-filled study, furnished with hand-made chairs and a
+desk. Sir Basil asked him to be seated. He offered the young man long,
+brown native cigarettes and a very good drink made from yucca.
+
+After several minutes of conversation, Sir Basil suddenly changed his
+manner.
+
+"And now," he shot out, eyeing the young man through narrowed lids,
+"will you please state the purpose of this visit?"
+
+Hale looked squarely at his questioner. "Frankly, Sir Basil, I have
+called on you because I am so intensely interested in your work among
+the Ungapuks that I wish to offer my services."
+
+He gave in detail his family history, his education, and his experience
+as a teacher and a scientist.
+
+Sir Basil tapped his teeth thoughtfully with a pencil.
+
+"But why do you think you can be of assistance to me?"
+
+"That, of course, is for you to decide."
+
+Hale thought that the scientist looked like a huge, starved crow in his
+loose-fitting coat. He was so fleshless that, when the light fell
+strongly on his face as it now did, the bones of his head and hands
+showed through the skin with horrible clearness.
+
+Hale, under Sir Basil's scrutiny, decided instantly that he did not like
+him.
+
+"I need a helper," the scientist went on, with the air of talking to
+himself. "A white assistant who neither loves nor fears me. Unani Assu
+is good enough in his way, but I need a helper who has had technical
+training." Suddenly he wheeled on Hale and asked sharply, "How are your
+nerves, young man?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hale started, but managed to answer calmly. "Excellent. My war record
+isn't half bad, and that was surely backed with good nerves."
+
+"And you say you have no close relatives, no ties of any sort to
+interfere with work that is dangerous--and something else?"
+
+"Not a soul would care if I passed out to-day, Sir Basil."
+
+"Good! And now tell me this: are you one of those scientists whose minds
+are so mechanical, so mathematically made, as it were, that your entire
+outlook on science is based on old, established beliefs, or do you
+belong to that rare but modern type of trained thinker and dreamer who
+refuse to permit yesterday's convictions to influence to-day's
+visions?"
+
+Hale smiled quietly. "I recently lost my chair in a famous university
+because of my so-called unscientific teachings regarding ether-drift."
+
+Expressing himself in purely scientific terms, he went into an
+elaboration of his revolutionary theory. When he had finished, Sir Basil
+reached out his clawlike hand to him.
+
+"Good!" he approved. "You have dared to think originally. Now listen to
+my theory of mind-electrons which has grown into the established fact
+that I have discovered the secret of life and death."
+
+The long, thin hands reached into a pocket for a box of pills. He
+swallowed one greedily, and immediately his emaciated face seemed
+charged with new virility.
+
+He spoke out suddenly. "Our world, you know, is made up of three powers:
+matter, energy and what you call life. I might really say that there are
+but two powers, for matter, in its last analysis, is a form of energy.
+And what is life? You can't call it a form of energy, for every
+inorganic atom has energy without having life. Life, Mr. Oakham, is
+mind or consciousness."
+
+He began pacing the floor restlessly. "Everything that lives has this
+consciousness, and I say this in defiance of some fixed scientific
+views. The amoeba in a stagnant pool, a thallophyte on a bit of old
+bread, any of the myriads of trees and plants that you see in the jungle
+all have consciousness as well as you. And why?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He brought his fist down upon the table. "Because they issue from the
+same source as you and I, the almighty mind, eternal, indestructible,
+which has permitted itself to be enslaved by matter. You are Hale
+Oakham. I am Basil Addington, yet we are one and the same. Let me
+illustrate."
+
+He seized a glass and poured it full of _masata_. "Look! Two portions of
+_masata_. But I pour what is in the glass back into the bottle. The
+molecules cohere and the two portions become one again. Some day you and
+I--our individual consciousnesses--will flow back to the Whole. That
+sounds mystical, but listen.
+
+"We scientists hold that the electron explains nearly all the physical
+and chemical phenomena. I go further and say that it explains _all_.
+Matter, electricity, light, heat, magnetism--all can be reduced to the
+ultimate unit. So, Mr. Oakham, I am going to make clear to you how life
+itself is electronic."
+
+His long finger touched Hale's arm. "You, I, yonder mosquito on your
+sleeve, even one of the germs that is causing my malaria, all being
+individual living things, are the ultimate units of what I shall
+personify as the Mind. When I say _you_ I do not speak of that mound of
+flesh in which you exist, and which can be reduced to the same familiar
+basic elements and compounds as make up inorganic structures; I speak of
+your mind, your consciousness--for that is the real you. Are you
+following me?"
+
+"Perfectly, Sir Basil." Hale reached for another drink. "But do you
+mean to say that you and I are no more than a mosquito, a malaria
+protozoan, or even one of those trees in the jungle?"
+
+Sir Basil's dry skin slipped back into a long smile. "Startling,
+isn't it? You, I, and all other living organisms are nothing but
+matter, energy and consciousness. You and I have a larger share of
+consciousness, because our organic structure permits the mind-electrons
+greater freedom over the matter than composes our bodies. We are more
+acutely aware of the universe about us, have a greater facility for
+enjoyment and suffering, a more intricate brain and nervous system.
+Yet when our bodies die and our consciousness is released, the
+mind-electrons enslaved by our atoms go back to the elemental Whole.
+This holds good for the protozoan, the tree, the man--for all things
+that live."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hale was drinking again. "You mean, Sir Basil, that there is a sort of
+war waged against what you personify as the Mind by matter; that matter
+is constantly seeking to enslave mind-electrons, so that it may become
+an organism which, for awhile, may enjoy what we call life?"
+
+Sir Basil pushed back his tufted hair and looked happy. "Yes! And it's
+Nature's supreme blunder! In the end, the Mind always conquers and gains
+its release, yet the eternal chain of enslavement goes on and on, and
+will continue to go on as long as there is a living organism in the
+world to bind mind to matter."
+
+Hale was excited now, as much from the fiery intoxicant as from the
+scientist's weird revelation. "I get you," he said, rather inelegantly
+for a professor. "You mean that if every living thing in the world
+should pass out, every man, every plant, every animal, even down to
+microscopic infusoria, the Mind would collect all its electrons, and
+through some more jealous law of, er, cohesion hold these electrons
+inviolate from matter and energy?"
+
+"Right! And again, as in the beginning, the Mind would rule supreme. By
+what I have proved, you and I and all other creatures that now have life
+may, as separate unfleshed electrons, enjoy eternal consciousness as a
+part of the Mind." A new passion leaped to his dark eyes. "When I have
+finished my mission, no more need we be slaves of the dust, subject to
+all the frightful sufferings of this dunghill of flesh."
+
+He brought his fist down upon his skinny leg with a resounding blow.
+
+"But you cannot reduce your theory to fact, Sir Basil!"
+
+"No?" Again came that frightful grin to his cadaverous face. "Can you
+withstand shock?"
+
+"If you mean shock to the eye, let me remind you that I served two years
+in the big fight."
+
+"Then come to my laboratory. Better take another drink."
+
+While Hale helped himself again from the _masata_ bottle, Sir Basil
+swallowed another pellet.
+
+Then the two went into the adjoining apartment.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sir Basil, his hand over the doorknob, paused.
+
+"Before we go in," he said, "I want you to remember that we call natural
+that which is characteristic of the physical world. Everything alive in
+this laboratory was produced by nature. I merely made available the
+materials, or, rather, I made the conditions under which matter was able
+to enslave mind-electrons."
+
+He opened the door, slipped his body through, and, with his ugly,
+teeth-revealing grin, gestured for Hale to follow him.
+
+Hale steeled himself and looked around half fearfully. The first glance
+took in a large and well-equipped laboratory, somewhat fetid with animal
+odors. The second lingered here and there on cages, aquariums,
+incubators, and other containers where creatures moved.
+
+Suddenly, as something scuttled across the floor and disappeared into a
+hole in the wall, Hale cried out and covered his eyes with a hand.
+
+Sir Basil laughed aloud. "Why didn't you examine it closer?"
+
+Hale looked nauseated. "My God, Sir Basil! A rat with a man's head and
+face!"
+
+Sir Basil's voice was sharp, decisive. "Before you leave this
+laboratory, you're going to come out of your foolish belief that man is
+a creature apart from other living organisms. You--the conscious you--is
+no greater, no more important in the final balance than the spark of
+consciousness in that rat. When your body and the rat's body give up
+their atoms to nature's laboratory, the little enslaved mind-electron
+that is you and the one that is the rat will be identical."
+
+Again Hale shivered and turned away from that cold, too-thin face.
+
+The scientist was speaking. "Step around to all those cages and pens. I
+want you to see all my slaves of the dust."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But long before Hale had encircled the room, he was so disturbed at what
+he saw that he could scarcely complete his frightful inspection. In
+every enclosure he viewed a monstrosity that in some way resembled a
+human. Every reptile, every insect, every queer, misshapen animal not
+only looked human in some shocking manner, but also seemed to possess
+human characteristics. It seemed as though some demented creator with a
+perverted sense of humor had attempted to mock man by calling forth
+monsters in his image.
+
+At last the young man cried out: "How did you breed these freaks?"
+
+"They are not freaks, and I did not breed them. They are nature's
+parentless products whose basic elements were brought together in
+this laboratory, and, by a scientific reproduction of the functions
+of creation, endowed with the life principle, which is merely
+mind-electrons." He smoothed his long tuft of hair nervously. "Would
+you like to see how life springs from a wedding of matter, energy,
+and consciousness?"
+
+"I suspect I can stand anything now," Hale admitted.
+
+"Then come and peep into a very remarkable group of apparatus I have
+developed, where you can watch atoms building molecules and molecules
+building living organisms."
+
+"You say I can see atoms?"
+
+"Not directly, of course. The light waves will forever prevent us from
+actually seeing the atom. But I have perfected a system of photography
+which magnifies particles smaller than light waves, and, separating
+their images from the light waves, renders detail clear in the moving
+pictures."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He went to a huge machine or series of machines which took up all the
+center floor space of the laboratory, where he busied himself in an
+intricate network of wires, mirrors, electrodes, ray projectors, and
+traveling metal compartments. Presently he called out to Hale.
+
+"Let me remind you, Oakham, that while any scientist can break up any of
+the various proteid molecules which are the basis of all living cells,
+animal and vegetable, no scientist before me has been able to compound
+the atoms and build them into a proteid molecule."
+
+He bared his teeth in the smile that Hale hated.
+
+"I am proud to tell you that the proteid molecule can be built up only
+when the third element of nature's trinity is added--the mind-electron.
+I have found a means of capturing the mind-electron and of bringing it
+in contact with proteid elements. And now it is possible to bring forth
+life in the laboratory. Come closer and watch proteid forming
+protoplasm, protoplasm forming a cell, and the cell evolving into--well,
+what do you want, an animal, plant, or an insect?"
+
+Hale had fallen under the scientist's spell. He did not feel foolish
+when he said:
+
+"Let's have a rat!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hale became so absorbed in the wonders of the laboratory that when lunch
+time came, Sir Basil had food brought to them. While they were eating a
+very good vegetable stew, farina, and luscious tropical fruits, a
+sudden, agonized scream rang out, followed by other screams and wails.
+
+Sir Basil opened the door and looked out. Aña came running forward. Her
+blue eyes were flooded with tears.
+
+"Oh, Aimu!" she moaned. "A tree fell on Unani Assu."
+
+She buried her beautiful face in her hands and sobbed aloud.
+
+Sir Basil frowned heavily.
+
+"I can't lose Unani Assu yet," he declared. "He is a wonderful help
+around the laboratory. Is he dead?"
+
+"No. We should rejoice if his time of release had come. But his legs,
+Aimu! No one wants to suffer and be crippled."
+
+Even in her distress, the girl's voice was rich and vibrant, and every
+tone moved Hale curiously.
+
+"Hurry!" cried the scientist. "Have them bring him here before he
+dies."
+
+The girl leaped to her feet and sped away.
+
+"Come, Oakham," continued Sir Basil. "Here is a rare opportunity for you
+to see how completely I have mastered the laws that govern organic
+matter. Help me prepare."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For several minutes, Hale worked under the scientist's sharply spoken
+directions. By the time the injured man was brought to the laboratory,
+Sir Basil was ready for him.
+
+Unani Assu was still conscious, but his pale face indicated that he had
+lost much blood. When the improvised stretcher was lowered to the floor,
+Sir Basil sent all the Indians away.
+
+Unani Assu opened his eyes and called feebly, "Aña!"
+
+"Be still!" ordered Sir Basil. "Aña is not here."
+
+"Please!" gasped the dying man. "I want her--my Aña!"
+
+Sir Basil sucked in his breath sharply. "What's this? Have you been
+making love to Aña again, after my warning to you?"
+
+The sufferer stirred uneasily. "No!" he panted. "But perhaps my hour of
+release has come, and I want to look at her--once more."
+
+The scientist smiled unpleasantly as he eyed the magnificent body which
+looked like a broken statue in bronze.
+
+"Some human characteristics are strange," he muttered. "In spite of
+everything I do, this fellow continues to love Aña: Aña whom I intend
+for myself."
+
+He stepped to the apparatus and swiftly changed one of the adjustments.
+
+"Perhaps," he resumed, with a gleam in his eyes that chilled Hale, "this
+will forever cure him."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In another moment, the still, half-dead body was lifted and gently
+slipped into a compartment.
+
+Before Hale's horrified gaze fastened on the eye-piece which revealed
+moving pictures of every process that went on within, Unani Assu's body
+was reduced almost instantly to a fine, silvery dust.
+
+"Good God!" he cried. "You have killed him."
+
+The scientist's teeth showed in his wide smile. "Think so? Does a woman
+destroy a dress when she rips it up to make it over?"
+
+"Do you mean me to understand that you can reduce a living body to its
+basic elements and then rebuild these elements into a remade man?"
+
+"Watch!" warned the scientist.
+
+Hale looked again and saw the silver dust that was once a living body
+being whirled into a tiny, grublike thing. He saw the grub expand into
+an embryo, and the embryo develop into a foetus. From now on the
+development was slower, and he often stopped to talk with Sir Basil.
+
+Once he asked: "If this man had died naturally, could you have brought
+him back to life?"
+
+Sir Basil shook his head. "No. When once the mind-electron is completely
+freed from its enslavement by matter, it is forever beyond recall by the
+body it has just vacated. Like atomic electrons, whose equilibrium
+disturbed break away from their planetary system and go dashing off into
+space, only to be drawn into another planetary system, the mind-electron
+may be enslaved almost immediately by extraneous matter. Had Unani Assu
+died, his liberated mind-electron might at once have been captured by a
+jungle flower going to seed. Immediately a new seed would be started.
+And now the former Unani Assu would be a seed of a jungle flower, later
+to find new life as a plant."
+
+Suddenly the scientist threw up his hand and cried: "You see? The Mind
+will be eternally enslaved as long as there is life! Oh, for the time of
+deliverance!" He gazed fanatically into space, as though he dreamed
+magnificently.
+
+Hale observed him thoughtfully. When that great brain weakened, the
+consequences would be frightful.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sir Basil, as though he had made a sudden decision, went over to that
+part of his machine which he called the molecule-disintegrator.
+
+"Oakham!" he called out. "I have taken you partly into my confidence.
+Now I want to show you something. Come here."
+
+Hale obeyed with misgivings. The scientist pointed out the window to a
+group of Indians, anxious relatives of Unani Assu.
+
+"Watch!" he ordered.
+
+Turning one of the projectors on the machine toward the window, he
+sighted carefully and pressed a button.
+
+Immediately one of the Indians fell to the ground and struggled. His
+companions began dancing around him in evident joy. Faintly to the
+laboratory came a familiar chant, which Hale recognized as Aña's death
+song.
+
+ Dust to dust
+ Mind to Mind--
+ He will shed his body
+ As the green snake sheds his skin.
+
+As Hale watched, the struggling Indian's body seemed to shrink, and
+then, instantly, it disappeared.
+
+"Watch them scatter the dust!" said the scientist.
+
+One of the Indians stooped and blew upon the grass.
+
+"What have you done!" Hale gasped. "You've killed this one. Oh, I see
+now! These poor devils are totally ignorant that you are killing them
+for practice. They worship you while you turn them to--silver dust!" He
+turned angrily on the scientist as though he longed to strike him.
+
+"Keep cool, young man!" Sir Basil held up his fleshless hand. "There is
+no death! Change, yes; but no permanent blotting out of consciousness.
+Can't you see the horror of it as nature works? When your time for
+release comes, as it inevitably will, your mind-electron might find new
+enslavement in a worm!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hale's reply came hotly. "If that is true, why do you murder these poor
+devils deliberately!"
+
+"My dear Oakham, perhaps you are not so brilliant as I had hoped! All
+that I have done thus far is only child's play, in preparation for my
+real work. Haven't you guessed by now what I am getting ready to do?"
+
+"No; I'm a poor guesser."
+
+The scientist made a gesture of mock despair. "Then let me tell you. The
+molecule-disintegrator is active only on organic structures. When I
+concentrate it so"--he reached out again, sighted the projector on some
+point beyond the window and pressed a button--"one single living
+organism passes out. See that jupati tree by the rock disappear?"
+
+Before Hale's eyes, the tall, slender tree melted into air.
+
+"But," continued Sir Basil, "if I should _broadcast_ my
+molecule-disintegrator on electron magnetic waves, destruction would
+pass out in all directions, following the curve of the earth's surface,
+penetrating earth, air, water." He wet his lips carefully. "You
+understand?"
+
+Hale stiffened suddenly. "I understand. No life could survive these
+vibrations of destruction? Through every corner of the earth where life
+lurks, they would reach?"
+
+"Yes!" cried Sir Basil. "There would be not a blade of grass, not a
+living spore, not a hidden egg! Think of it, Oakham! No more would the
+clean air and the sweet earth reek with life, and at last the ultimate
+mind-electron would be released forever."
+
+He was breathing fast, and his emaciated face burned with two red
+spots.
+
+Hale thought rapidly. He was convinced now that the fate of all life lay
+within that diabolical network of chemical apparatus.
+
+At last he said: "And what of you and I, Sir Basil? Shall we, too, be
+caught in this wholesale destruction?"
+
+"Not immediately," replied the scientist. "Of course, I want to
+remain in the flesh long enough to be sure that my purpose has been
+accomplished. I have provided a way for my own safety. If you desire,
+you may remain with me." He smiled craftily. "I have planned to keep
+Aña also, the woman whom I called into life and made as I wished."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+His words pounded against Hale's tortured ears with almost physical
+force. With a supreme effort, the young man controlled his rage and
+despair. Aña needed him too much now for him to risk defeat by showing
+his emotions.
+
+To Sir Basil he said: "But if all life disappears from the earth, what
+shall we do for food--you, Aña, and I?"
+
+Sir Basil lifted his brows. "You don't think I overlooked that, do you?
+What is food? Various combinations of the basic elements. I who have
+conquered the atom need never worry about starving to death."
+
+All this time, the machinery had been humming, and now the humming
+changed its note to a shrill whistle. Sir Basil went to the eye-piece
+and looked into it. Opening a door in the machinery, he disappeared
+inside. He came out soon, flushed and evidently elated.
+
+"Bring the stretcher, Oakham," he ordered.
+
+Hale brought the stretcher, placing it close to the machine. Then Sir
+Basil opened a metal door and gently eased out a human body.
+
+It was Unani Assu, unconscious but alive and breathing. Hale, helping
+the scientist to get the man on the stretcher, noticed that the crushed
+legs were perfectly healed. Together they bore him to a long seat. The
+Indian's eyes were still closed, but his even breathing indicated that
+he was only sleeping.
+
+Suddenly Hale pointed a finger and cried out. "My God, Sir Basil, look
+at his hands and feet!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Unani Assu, still lying like a recumbent bronze statue sculptured by a
+master, was perfect from shoulder to wrist, from thigh to ankle. But,
+somewhere in that diabolical machine through which he had passed, his
+hands and feet had undergone a hideous metamorphism which had
+transformed them from the well-formed extremities of a splendid young
+Indian into the hairy paws of a giant rat!
+
+Hale turned away his head, sick with disgust.
+
+Sir Basil cut the silence triumphantly:
+
+"Now he'll never again face Aña with love in his eyes!"
+
+"What!" broke in Hale. "Did you plan this monstrous thing?"
+
+"Of course! I told you I should forever cure him of his mad
+infatuation."
+
+"But why didn't you kill him, as you killed the others? It would have
+been the most merciful way."
+
+Sir Basil showed his teeth in his ugly smile. "A creator is never
+merciful."
+
+A quiver passed through the Indian's body and presently, he sighed
+deeply and opened his eyes. He seemed dazed, puzzled. He looked from
+Hale to the scientist, and turned seeking eyes to other parts of the
+laboratory.
+
+"Aña!" he called weakly. "Where is Aña?"
+
+He pulled himself a little unsteadily to his feet--to the spatulated,
+hairy _rodent_ feet that had come out of the life-machine. Staggering,
+he would have fallen, had he not thrown out his arm to steady himself.
+Instinctively he tried to grasp something for support, and then, for the
+first time, he discovered his deformity.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hale was never to forget that expression of horror and disgust that
+swept over the Indian's face as he spread open his revolting extremities
+and stared at them.
+
+A sudden, wild roar of despair rang through the room. "Aimu! My hands!"
+
+The scientist smiled with evident amusement. "You are a grotesque sight,
+Unani Assu. Do you want to see Aña now?"
+
+The fright and horror faded from the Indian's face, for now he glared
+with hate into the mad, mocking eyes.
+
+"You did it!" the Indian ground out. "You've made me into a thing from
+which Aña will run screaming."
+
+Through the quiet rage of the perfectly spoken English ran a thread of
+sorrow. "Aimu, whom we considered too holy to name!"
+
+Choking, he hobbled away to the door, which he unbolted. As he passed
+out into the open, Sir Basil went over to the machine and began sighting
+the projector which cast forth the ray of destruction.
+
+"No!" cried Hale. "You've done enough murder for to-day."
+
+The scientist paused. "I was trying to be merciful. And then, I wonder
+if it is safe to let him go, hating me? Oh, well!" He shrugged his
+narrow shoulders. "I seldom leave the laboratory, and certainly nothing
+can harm me here." He touched the death-projector significantly.
+
+Hale made a mental decision. "I must find out how the damned thing works
+and put it out of commission."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+With this determination uppermost in his mind, he assumed a more intense
+interest in the strange laboratory. For the next two days, he assisted
+Sir Basil so assiduously that he learned much about the operation of the
+life-machine. And gradually he stopped being horrified as the
+fascination of producing life in the laboratory grew upon him.
+
+After he had assisted the scientist in building living organisms from
+basic elements, he ceased to cringe when he remembered that perhaps it
+was true that Aña was created in the mysterious life-machine.
+
+Once the scientist declared, "She is untainted with inheritance. She is
+the perfect mate that I called into life so that before I pass from the
+flesh I may taste that one human emotion I've never experienced--love."
+
+That very night Hale kept a secret tryst with Aña after the village
+slept. Sweet, virginal Aña, who knew less of the world than a civilized
+child of twelve--what a sensation she would create in New York with her
+beauty, her culture, her natural fascination! With her in his arms and
+an orange tropical moon hanging low in the hot, black sky, he ceased to
+care that she had no ancestors, for now his one passionate desire was to
+save her from Sir Basil and to hold her forever for himself.
+
+He might have been content to go on like this for months, tampering with
+creation in the day time, courting Aña in secret at night, had not Unani
+Assu come back for revenge.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the fourth night after Unani Assu had disappeared into the jungle,
+Hale went to the _igarapé_ to meet Aña. He had gone only half the
+distance when he encountered her, running frantically up the path toward
+him.
+
+"Hale!" she gasped, falling into his opened arms, where she lay panting
+and exhausted.
+
+Hale gently patted the long braids, shimmering in silver tangles under
+the moonlight, and, crushing the soft little trembling body close, he
+murmured:
+
+"What's the matter, darling?"
+
+She dug her face deeper into the bend of his arm. "Oh, Hale! I saw Unani
+Assu a few minutes ago." For several moments she was unable to go on,
+for sudden sobs cut off her breath. "It's terrible, Hale, what Aimu did
+to his hands and feet, but what Unani's going to do to Aimu is still
+more terrible."
+
+Hale placed his hand gently under her chin and tilted up her small,
+pale, tear-drenched face.
+
+"Be calm, Aña, and tell me plainly."
+
+Still clinging to him, she went on. "He told me that Aimu is a devil,
+Hale. He showed me his hands and asked me if I could ever get used to
+them and be--his squaw." The round gold breastplates and the necklace of
+painted seeds clinked together over her panting bosom. "I told him about
+you, Hale. And then he seemed to go mad. He said he'd kill Aimu
+to-night."
+
+"But, Aña! Why did he let you go, knowing that you would give the
+alarm?"
+
+"He didn't let me go." Her petaled lips parted in a faint smile. "I
+escaped. Unani Assu tied me to a tree by the _igarapé_. Because he
+doesn't ... hate me, he could not bear to tie me too tightly."
+
+"Then he must be close to the laboratory now. If he breaks in upon
+Aimu--oh, my God!"
+
+Hale remembered the death-projector. If Sir Basil were in danger of
+attack, he would not hesitate to touch the waiting button that would
+broadcast death throughout the world.
+
+He seized Aña's little hand and cried out: "Run, Aña! The only safe
+place now is Aimu's laboratory. Run!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As they dashed on madly, Hale opened wide his nostrils to scent the
+heavy, flower-laden air of the jungle. Any moment all this sweet, rich
+life might vanish instantly. He had a horrible vision of a world devoid
+of life, a world of bare rocks, dry sand, odorless, dead waters. For it
+was life that greened the landscape, roughened the stones with moss and
+lichen, thickened the ocean with ooze, and turned the dry sand into
+loam--life that swarmed underfoot, overhead, all around!
+
+And now, just as they reached the laboratory door, panting and frantic,
+a hoarse shriek broke forth. Dragging Aña after him, Hale dashed
+forward, conscious of two masculine voices raised in passion.
+
+The door to the room where the life-machine performed its vile work was
+locked. Hale pounded against it and called out to Sir Basil, but only
+curses and the sound of tumbling bodies came from beyond the door.
+Although originally the door had been thick and strong, the destructive
+forces of the tropics had pitted and rotted the wood. A few blows of
+Hale's shoulder broke it down.
+
+Under the brilliant electric light, Sir Basil and Unani Assu were
+fighting upon the blood-spattered floor. The struggle was uneven: the
+scientist's emaciated body was no match for the splendid strength of the
+young Indian.
+
+"Help Aimu!" cried Aña, pushing Hale forward.
+
+Aimu was being choked to death.
+
+Hale acted fantastically but efficiently. Catching up a bottle of
+ammonia, he moistened a handkerchief and clapped it against Unani Assu's
+nose. Instantly the Indian choked, released Sir Basil, and fell back,
+gasping for breath.
+
+Hale thrust the handkerchief into his pocket.
+
+"Get out!" he ordered Unani Assu. "Quick!" He threatened him with the
+ammonia bottle.
+
+But Unani Assu was not looking at the bottle. "Aimu!" he screamed,
+pointing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When Hale saw and understood, he leaped across the room to plant his
+body in front of Aña; for Sir Basil was behind the life-machine,
+reaching for the controls of the ray projector.
+
+Suddenly, from behind Hale, a silver streak shot across the room. Sir
+Basil groaned and sank to the floor of the laboratory.
+
+A keen-bladed dissecting knife, thrown by Aña, stuck out from his left
+breast.
+
+Aña ran forward, sobbing wildly. "Oh, Aimu! I'm sorry! I didn't mean for
+it to strike you there. Only your hand, Aimu! I didn't want Hale to die,
+Aimu. I didn't--oh!"
+
+She was on her knees by the scientist's side, his head held in her
+slender arms.
+
+"He's breathing!" she rejoiced. "Some _masata_, Hale, quick!"
+
+Hale found a bottle of good brandy which he had contributed from his own
+supplies. Soon Sir Basil gasped and opened his eyes. He stared about him
+wildly, then gasped:
+
+"I'm dying, Hale Oakham! Quick, the life-machine, before my mind-electron
+escapes."
+
+He tried to pull his body up, but fell back, weak and panting.
+
+Hale hesitated, looking doubtfully at Aña.
+
+"For God's sake, quick!" screamed Sir Basil. "I'm dying, I say! I must
+have--rebirth. Lift me to the disintegrator. Hurry!..." His voice
+trailed off faintly.
+
+"He is dying," snapped Hale. "We might as well try it." He jerked open
+the door to the disintegrator. "Here, Unani Assu! Lend a hand!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Instantly the Indian came forward, a peculiar, pleased expression on his
+handsome face. In a moment, Sir Basil's body was inside, and the machine
+began its weird humming, the humming that indicated the transformation
+of a human body into dust.
+
+"Now!" cried Unani Assu exultingly, going behind the machine. "I have
+helped him enough to understand that if one changes this--and this--and
+this"--he made some rapid adjustments on the machine--"something that is
+not pleasant will happen."
+
+"Stop!" cried Hale. "What did you change?"
+
+The Indian laughed mockingly. "Wouldn't you like to know? But, yet, you
+should not worry. You have no cause to love him, have you?"
+
+"I can't be a traitor, Unani Assu! Arrange the machine as it was
+originally, and I give you my word of honor than when Sir Basil comes
+out, I'll wreck the damned thing beyond repair. See, Unani Assu? You and
+I together will smash it."
+
+The Indian folded his arms so that the repulsive things that should have
+been hands were hidden.
+
+"It's too late now," he admitted, shaking his head. "Yet I've done no
+more to him than he did to me."
+
+Hale went to the eye-piece in the machine and started to look inside.
+Unani Assu stepped forward, tapped him on the shoulder, and, fingering
+significantly the dissecting knife which he had picked up, said:
+
+"I am operating the machine. Will you sit over there by Aña and wait? It
+won't be long. And, white stranger, remember this: I am your friend. I
+am turned against none but our common enemy." He pointed significantly
+to the machine.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Two hours passed, long, silent hours for the watchers in the laboratory.
+Aña fell asleep, in a sweet, childish bundle upon the piled cushions,
+her golden hair, still decorated with the red flowers which she always
+wore, crushed and withered now. Several times Hale caught Unani Assu
+gazing at her sadly, and his own look saddened when it rested on the
+Indian's strong, outraged body.
+
+The humming of the machine changed to a whistle. Placing his fingers on
+his lips in a signal of quiet, Unani Assu whispered:
+
+"Let Aña sleep. She mustn't see this."
+
+Opening a door in the machine, his handsome face lighted with a grim
+smile, he whispered exultingly:
+
+"Watch!"
+
+A scuttling sound issued forth and then, half drunkenly, an enormous rat
+tumbled out--one of those horrible rats with the hairless, humanlike
+faces that had so frequently come from the life-machine.
+
+Hale could not crush back the cry that issued from his throat.
+
+"Where is Sir Basil?" he gasped.
+
+"There!" cried the Indian, pointing to the kicking rat, which was fast
+gaining strength.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hale staggered back. "No! You don't mean it, do you?"
+
+Unani Assu turned the rat over with a contemptuous toe. "Yes, I mean it.
+Behold Aimu, the man who thought himself creator and destroyer--the man
+who said that a human being was no higher than a rat! Perhaps he was
+right, for see this thing that was once a man!"
+
+Hale buried his face in his hands. "Kill it, Unani Assu! Kill it!"
+
+Unani Assu's low laugh was metallic. "You kill it."
+
+Hale uncovered his face. "Open the disintegrator." Gingerly he reached
+for the rat's tail.
+
+But his hand never touched the animal. The hairless face turned for a
+second, and the little, beady eyes blinked up at Hale with an expression
+that his fevered imagination thought almost human. Then, like a dark
+shadow, the rat dashed away. Once around the room it scampered, hunting
+for an exit. Hale started in pursuit. He was almost upon the animal
+again, when, leaping up from his grasp, it landed on a low shelf where
+chemicals were stored. Several bottles fell, filling the room with
+fumes.
+
+Another bottle fell, and, suddenly, amid a thunderous roar, the ceiling
+and walls began falling. Some highly explosive chemical had been stored
+in one of the bottles.
+
+Hale was thrown violently against the couch. His hand touched Aña's
+body. One last shred of consciousness enabled him to pick her up and
+drag her out. In the open, he fell, aware, before blackness descended,
+that flames leaped high over the laboratory building and that Unani Assu
+lay dead within.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hale and Aña, leaning over the deck-rail of a small steam launch, gazed
+into the dark waters of the Amazon.
+
+"We ought to reach Para by morning," said Hale, "and then, dearest,
+we're off for New York!"
+
+Aña, wearing one of the first civilized dresses she had ever donned, and
+looking as smart as any débutante, slipped her little hand into her
+husband's.
+
+"Isn't it a shame, Hale," she moaned, "that the fire burned all the
+animals and insects, the machinery, and even your notes?" Her beautiful
+face saddened. "Just one or two specimens might have been proof enough
+for your What-You-Call-It Club!"
+
+"The Nescience Club, darling. No, I can't expect to win the Woolman
+prize, but I've won a prize worth far more." He squeezed her little hand
+and looked devotedly into her blue eyes. "And, Aña, I've reasoned out
+something concerning mind-electrons which even Sir Basil overlooked."
+
+"What is it, Hale?"
+
+"He maintained that matter seeks always to enslave mind-electrons, but I
+am convinced that mind-electrons seek to enslave matter. Understand?
+It's creation, Aña! Had Sir Basil succeeded in broadcasting death
+throughout the world, the freed mind-electrons, as in the beginning,
+would have started again to vitalize inorganic atoms. And, in a few
+million years, which is no time to the Mind, the world would be humming
+with a new civilization. Large thought, eh, sweetheart?"
+
+
+
+
+A SIGNAL TO THE MOON
+
+The idea of a radio signal to the moon may sound fantastic, but is
+easily within the range of possibility, says Dr. A. Hoyt Taylor, Chief
+of the Radio Division of the United States Naval Research Laboratories
+at Washington, who plans such an attempt in the near future.
+
+"We have reason to expect a good chance of getting the signal back in a
+time interval of slightly less than three seconds," said Dr. Taylor.
+
+To be exact, a radio signal should be reflected back to earth in a time
+interval of 2.8 seconds, this being the necessary elapsed time for it to
+carry the 250,000 miles to the moon and return at its speed of 300,000
+kilometers, or 186,000 miles per second.
+
+The signal would be very weak, Dr. Taylor points out, but not impossible
+of detection with the present refinement of receiving instruments,
+provided no great absorption took place in interstellar space.
+
+A high frequency wave will be used, as such a wave penetrates readily
+the earth's atmosphere and probably goes far beyond. The frequency of
+the wave will range between 20,000 and 30,000 kilocycles. Twenty
+kilowats of power will be used, enough to furnish current for about
+forty flatirons.
+
+The value of a radio signal to the moon lies in the confirmation of
+whether there is or not heavy absorption of waves in the upper levels of
+our own atmosphere. If successful it would indicate a reasonably good
+reflection coefficient at the surface of the moon--the power of the
+moon's surface to act as a joint agent in the perfection of the signal.
+
+The signal might have some bearing also on whether the moon has an
+atmosphere--something pretty much settled already by astronomical
+observation. It would also lead to the possibility of fairly accurate
+determination of wave velocity in free space, all of interest to
+science, either confirming existing theories or establishing new ones.
+
+
+
+
+The Pirate Planet
+
+PART TWO OF A FOUR-PART NOVEL
+
+_By Charles W. Diffin_
+
+ It is war. Interplanetary war. And on far distant Venus two
+ fighting Earthlings stand up against a whole planet run amuck.
+
+
+WHAT HAS GONE BEFORE
+
+A flash of light on Venus!--and at Maricopa Flying Field Lieutenant
+McGuire and Captain Blake laugh at its possible meaning until the
+radio's weird call and the sight of a giant ship in the night sky prove
+their wildest thoughts are facts. "Big as an ocean liner," it hangs in
+midair, then turns and shoots upward at incredible speed until it
+disappears entirely, in space!
+
+McGuire goes to Mount Lawson observatory, and there he sees the flash on
+Venus repeated. Professor Sykes, who had observed the first flash,
+confirms it and sees still more. He sees the enveloping clouds of Venus
+torn asunder, and beneath them an identifying mark, a continent shaped
+like the letter "L."
+
+And then the great ship comes again. It hovers above the observatory and
+settles slowly down.
+
+[Illustration: "Hold them off as long as you can!"]
+
+Back at Maricopa Field, Captain Blake has tested a new plane for
+altitude, and is now prepared to interview the stranger in the higher
+levels. McGuire's frantic phone call sends him out into the night with
+the 91st Squadron of planes in support. It is their last flight, for all
+but Blake. The invader smothers them in a great sphere of gas, but
+Blake, with his oxygen flasks, flies through to crash beside the
+observatory. Only Blake survives to see the enemy land, while strange
+man-shapes loot the buildings and carry off McGuire and Sykes.
+
+A bombardment with giant shells dispels the last doubt of the earth
+being under attack. The flashes from Venus at regular intervals spout
+death and destruction upon the earth; a mammoth gun, sunk into the
+planet itself, bears once upon the earth at every revolution, until the
+changing position of the globes take the target out of range.
+
+In less than a year and a half the planets must meet again. It is war to
+the death; a united world against an enemy unknown--an enemy who has
+conquered space. And there is less than a year and a half in which to
+prepare!
+
+Far out in the blackness of space McGuire and Sykes are captives in the
+giant ship. Their stupor leaves them; they find themselves immersed in
+clouds. The clouds part; their ship drops through; and below them is a
+strange continent shaped like the letter "L." Captives of inhuman but
+man-shaped things, they are landing upon a strange globe--upon the
+planet Venus itself!
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+Miles underneath the great ship, from which Lieutenant McGuire and
+Professor Sykes were now watching through a floor-window of thick glass,
+was a glittering expanse of water--a great ocean. The flickering gold
+expanse that reflected back the color of the sunlit clouds passed to one
+side as the ship took its station above the island, a continent in size,
+that had shown by its shape like a sharply formed "L" an identifying
+mark to the astronomer.
+
+They were high in the air; the thick clouds that surrounded this new
+world were miles from its surface, and the things of the world that
+awaited were tiny and blurred.
+
+Airships passed and repassed far below. Large, some of them--as bulky
+as the transport they were on; others were small flashing cylinders, but
+all went swiftly on their way.
+
+It must have come--some ethereal vibration to warn others from the
+path--for layer after layer of craft were cleared for the descent. A
+brilliant light flashed into view, a dazzling pin-point on the shore
+below, and the great ship fell suddenly beneath them. Swiftly it dropped
+down the pathway of light; on even keel it fell down and still down,
+till McGuire, despite his experience in the air, was sick and giddy.
+
+The light blinked out at their approach. It was some minutes before the
+watching eyes recovered from the brilliance to see what mysteries might
+await, and then the surface was close and the range of vision small.
+
+A vast open space--a great court paved with blocks of black and white--a
+landing field, perhaps, for about it in regular spacing other huge
+cylinders were moored. Directly beneath in a clear space was a giant
+cradle of curved arms; it was a mammoth structure, and the men knew at a
+glance that this was the bed where their great ship would lie.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The smooth pavement seemed slowly rising to meet them as their ship
+settled close. Now the cradle was below, its arms curved and waiting.
+The ship entered their grasp, and the arms widened, then closed to draw
+the monster to its rest. Their motion ceased. They were finally, beyond
+the last faint doubt, at anchor on a distant world.
+
+A shrill cackle of sound recalled them from the thrill of this
+adventure, and the attenuated and lanky figure, with its ashen,
+blotchy face that glared at them from the doorway, reminded them that
+this excursion into space was none of their desire. They were
+prisoners--captives from a foreign land.
+
+A long hand moved its sinuous fingers to motion them to follow, and
+McGuire regarded his companion with a hopeless look and a despondent
+shrug of his shoulders.
+
+"No use putting up a fight," he said; "I guess we'd better be good."
+
+He followed where the figure was stepping through a doorway into a
+corridor beyond. They moved, silent and depressed, along the dimly
+lighted way; the touch of cold metal walls was as chilling to their
+spirits as to their flesh.
+
+But the mood could not last: the first ray of light from the outside
+world sent shivers of anticipation along their spines. They were
+landing, in very fact, upon a new world; their feet were to walk where
+never man had stood; their eyes would see what mortal eyes had never
+visioned.
+
+Fears were forgotten, and the men clung to each other not for the human
+touch but because of an ecstasy of intoxicating, soul-filling joy in the
+sheer thrill of adventure.
+
+They were gripping each other's hand, round-eyed as a couple of
+children, as they stepped forward into the light.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Before them was a scene whose blazing beauty of color struck them to
+frozen silence; their exclamations of wonder died unspoken on their
+lips. They were in a city of the stars, and to their eyes it seemed as
+if all the brilliance of the heavens had been gathered for its
+building.
+
+The spacious, open court itself stood high in the air among the masses
+of masonry, and beyond were countless structures. Some towered skyward;
+others were lower; and all were topped with bulbous towers and graceful
+minarets that made a forest of gleaming opal light. Opalescence
+everywhere!--it flashed in red and gold and delicate blues from every
+wall and cornice and roof.
+
+"Quartz?" marveled Sykes after one long drawn breath. "Quartz or
+glass?--what are they made of? It is fairyland!"
+
+A jewelled city! Garish, it might have been, and tawdry, in the full
+light of the sun. But on these weirdly unreal structures the sun's rays
+never shone; they were illumined only by the soft golden glow that
+diffused across this world from the cloud masses far above.
+
+McGuire looked up at that uniform, glowing, golden mass that paled
+toward the horizon and faded to the gray of banked clouds. His eyes came
+slowly back to the ramp that led downward to the checkered black and
+white of the court. Beyond an open portion the pavement was solidly
+massed with people.
+
+"People!--we might as well call them that," McGuire had told Sykes;
+"they are people of a sort, I suppose. We'll have to give them credit
+for brains: they've beaten us a hundred years in their inventions."
+
+He was trying to see everything, understand everything, at once. There
+was not time to single out the new impressions that were crowding upon
+him. The air--it was warm to the point of discomfort; it explained the
+loose, light garments of the people; it came to the two men laden with
+strange scents and stranger sounds.
+
+McGuire's eyes held with hungry curiosity upon the dwellers in this
+other world; he stared at the gaping throng from which came a bedlam of
+shrill cries. Lean colorless hands gesticulated wildly and pointed with
+long fingers at the two men.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The din ceased abruptly at a sharp, whistled order from their captor. He
+stood aside with a guard that had followed from the ship, and he
+motioned the two before him down the gangway. It was the same scarlet
+one who had faced them before, the one whom McGuire had attacked in a
+frenzy of furious fighting, only to go down to blackness and defeat
+before the slim cylinder of steel and its hissing gas. And the slanting
+eyes stared wickedly in cold triumph as he ordered them to go before
+him in his march of victory.
+
+McGuire passed down toward the masses of color that were the ones who
+waited. There were many in the dull red of the ship's crew; others in
+sky-blue, in gold and pink and combinations of brilliance that blended
+their loose garments to kaleidoscopic hues. But the figures were similar
+in one unvarying respect: they were repulsive and ghastly, and their
+faces showed bright blotches of blood vessels and blue markings of veins
+through their parchment-gray skins.
+
+The crowd parted to a narrow, living lane, and lean fingers clutched
+writhingly to touch them as they passed between the solid ranks.
+
+McGuire had only a vague impression of a great building beyond, of lower
+stories decorated in barbaric colors, of towers above in strange forms
+of the crystal, colorful beauty they had seen. He walked toward it
+unseeing; his thoughts were only of the creatures round about.
+
+"What damned beasts!" he said. Then, like his companion, he set his
+teeth to restrain all show of feeling as they made their way through the
+lane of incredible living things.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+They followed their captor through a doorway into an empty room--empty
+save for one blue-clad individual who stood beside an instrument board
+let into the wall. Beyond was a long wall, where circular openings
+yawned huge and black.
+
+The one at the instrument panel received a curt order: the weird voice
+of the man in red repeated a word that stood out above his curious,
+wordless tone. "Torg," he said, and again McGuire heard him repeat the
+syllable.
+
+The operator touched here and there among his instruments, and tiny
+lights flashed; he threw a switch, and from one of the black openings
+like a deep cave came a rushing roar of sound. It dropped to silence as
+the end of a cylindrical car protruded into the room. A door in the
+metal car opened, and their guard hustled them roughly inside. The one
+in red followed while behind him the door clanged shut.
+
+Inside the car was light, a diffused radiance from no apparent source,
+the whole air was glowing about them. And beneath their feet the car
+moved slowly but with a constant acceleration that built up to
+tremendous speed. Then that slackened, and Sykes and McGuire clung to
+each other for support while the car that had been shot like a
+projectile came to rest.
+
+"Whew!" breathed the lieutenant; "that was quick delivery." Sykes made
+no reply, and McGuire, too, fell silent to study the tremendous room
+into which they were led. Here, seemingly, was the stage for their next
+experience.
+
+A vast open hall with a floor of glass that was like obsidion, empty but
+for carved benches about the walls; there was room here for a mighty
+concourse of people. The walls, like those they had seen, were decorated
+crudely in glaring colors, and embellished with grotesque designs that
+proclaimed loudly the inexpert touch of the draughtsman. Yet, above
+them, the ceiling sprang lightly into vaulted, sweeping curves.
+McGuire's training had held little of architecture, yet even he felt the
+beauty of line and airy gracefulness of treatment in the structure
+itself.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The contrast between the flaunting colors and the finished artistry that
+lay beneath must have struck a discordant note to the scientist. He
+leaned closer to whisper.
+
+"It is all wrong some way--the whole world! Beauty and refinement--then
+crude vulgarity, as incongruous as the people themselves--they do not
+belong here."
+
+"Neither do we," was McGuire's reply; "it looks like a tough spot that
+we're in."
+
+He was watching toward a high, arched entrance across the room. A
+platform before it was raised some six feet above the floor, and on
+this were seats--ornate chairs, done in sweeping scrolls of scarlet and
+gold. A massive seat in the center was like the fantastic throne of a
+child's fairy tale. From the corridor beyond that entrance came a stir
+and rustling that rivetted the man's attention.
+
+A trumpet peal, vibrant and peculiar, blared forth from the ceiling
+overhead, and the red figures of the guards stood at rigid attention
+with lean arms held stiffly before them. The one in scarlet took the
+same attitude, then dropped his hands to motion the two men to give the
+same salute.
+
+"You go to hell," said Lieutenant McGuire in his gentlest tones. And the
+scarlet figure's thin lips were snarling as he turned to whip his arms
+up to their position. The first of a procession of figures was entering
+through the arch.
+
+Sykes, the scientist, was paying little attention. "It isn't true," he
+was muttering aloud; "it can't be true. Venus! Twenty-six million miles
+at inferior conjunction!"
+
+He seemed lost in silent communion with his own thoughts; then: "But
+I said there was every probability of life; I pointed out the
+similarities--"
+
+"Hush!" warned McGuire. The eyes of the scarlet man were sending wicked
+looks in their direction. Tall forms were advancing through the arch.
+They, too, were robed in scarlet, and behind them others followed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The trumpet peal from the dome above held now on a long-drawn, single
+note, while the scarlet men strode in silence across the dais and parted
+to form two lines. An inverted "V" that faced the entrance--they were an
+assembly of rigid, blazing statues whose arms were extended like those
+on the floor below.
+
+The vibrant tone from on high changed to a crashing blare that shrieked
+discordantly to send quivering protest through every nerve of the
+waiting men. Those about them were shouting, and again the name of Torg
+was heard, as, in the high arch, another character appeared to play his
+part in a strange drama.
+
+Thin like his companions, yet even taller than them, he wore the same
+brilliant robes and, an additional mark of distinction, a head-dress of
+polished gold. He acknowledged the salute with a quick raising of his
+own arms, then came swiftly forward and took his place upon the massive
+throne.
+
+Not till he was seated did the others on the platform relax their rigid
+pose and seat themselves in the semicircle of chairs. And not till then
+did they so much as glance at the men waiting there before them--the two
+Earth-men, standing in silent, impassive contemplation of the brilliant
+scene and with their arms held quiet at their sides. Then every eye
+turned full upon the captives, and if McGuire had seen deadly
+malevolence in the face of their captor he found it a hundred-fold in
+the inhuman faces that looked down upon them now.
+
+The inquiring mind of Professor Sykes did not fail to note the
+character of their reception. "But why," he asked in whispers of his
+fellow-prisoner, "--why this open hatred of us? What possible animus
+can they have against the earth or its people?"
+
+The figure on the throne voiced a curt order; the one who had brought
+them stepped forward. His voice was raised in the same discordant,
+singing tone that leaped and wandered from note to note. It conveyed
+ideas--that was apparent; it was a language that he spoke. And the
+central figure above nodded a brief assent as he finished.
+
+Their captor took an arm of each in his long fingers and pushed them
+roughly forward to stand alone before the battery of hard eyes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now the crowned figure addressed them directly. His voice quavered
+sharply in what seemed an interrogation. The men looked blankly at each
+other.
+
+Again the voice questioned them impatiently. Sykes and McGuire were
+silent. Then the young flyer took an involuntary step forward and looked
+squarely at the owner of the harsh voice.
+
+"We don't know what you are saying," he began, "and I suppose that our
+lingo makes no sense to you--" He paused in helpless wonderment as to
+what he could say. Then--
+
+"But what the devil is it all about?" he demanded explosively. "Why all
+the dirty looks? You've got us here as prisoners--now what do you expect
+us to do? Whatever it is, you'll have to quit singing it and talk
+something we can understand."
+
+He knew his words were useless, but this reception was getting on his
+nerves--and his arm still tingled where the scarlet one had gripped
+him.
+
+It seemed, though, that his meaning was not entirely lost. His words
+meant nothing to them, but his tone must have carried its own message.
+There were sharp exclamations from the seated circle. The one who had
+brought them sprang forward with outstretched, clutching hands; his face
+was a blood-red blotch. McGuire was waiting in crouching tenseness that
+made the red one pause.
+
+"You touch me again," said the waiting man, "and I'll knock you into an
+outside loop."
+
+The attacker's indecision was ended by a loud order from above. McGuire
+turned as if he had been spoken to by the leader on the throne. The thin
+figure was leaning far forward; his eye were boring into those of the
+lieutenant, and he held the motionless pose for many minutes. To the
+angry man, staring back and upward, there came a peculiar optical
+illusion.
+
+The evil face was vanishing in a shifting cloud that dissolved and
+reformed, as he watched, into pictures. He knew it was not there, the
+thing he saw; he knew he was regarding something as intangible as
+thought; but he got the significance of every detail.
+
+He saw himself and Professor Sykes; they were being crushed like ants
+beneath a tremendous heel; he knew that the foot that could grind out
+their lives was that of the one on the throne.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The cloud-stuff melted to new forms that grew clearer to show him the
+earth. A distorted Earth--and he knew the distortion came from the mind
+of the being before him who had never seen the earth at first hand; yet
+he knew it for his own world. It was turning in space; he saw oceans and
+continents; and before his mental gaze he saw the land swarming with
+these creatures of Venus. The one before him was in command; he was
+seated on an enormous throne; there were Earth people like Sykes and
+himself who crept humbly before him, while fleets of great Venusian
+ships hovered overhead.
+
+The message was plain--plain as if written in words of fire in the brain
+of the man. McGuire knew that these creatures intended that the vision
+should be true--they meant to conquer the earth. The slim, khaki-clad
+figure of Lieutenant McGuire quivered with the strength of his refusal
+to accept the truth of what he saw. He shook his head to clear it of
+these thought wraiths.
+
+"Not--in--a--million--years!" he said, and he put behind his words all
+the mental force at his command. "Try that, old top, and they'll give
+you the fight of your life--" He checked his words as he saw plainly
+that the thin cruel face that stared and stared was getting nothing from
+his reply.
+
+"Now what do you think about that?" he demanded of Professor Sykes. "He
+got an idea across to me--some form of telepathy. I saw his mind, or I
+saw what he wanted me to see of it. It's taps, he says, for us, and then
+they think they're going across and annex the world."
+
+He glanced upward again and laughed loudly for the benefit of those who
+were watching him so closely. "Fine chance!" he said; "a fat chance!"
+But in the deeper recesses of his mind he was shaken.
+
+For themselves there was no hope. Well, that was all in a lifetime. But
+the other--the conquest of the earth--he had to try with all his power
+of will to keep from his mind the pictures of destruction these beastly
+things could bring about.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The chief of this strange council made a gesture of contempt with the
+grotesque hands that were so translucent yet ashy-pale against his
+scarlet robe, and the down-drawn thin lips reflected the thoughts that
+prompted it. The open opposition of Lieutenant McGuire failed to impress
+him, it seemed. At a word the one who had brought them sprang forward.
+
+He addressed himself to the circle of men, and he harangued them
+mightily in harsh discordance. He pointed one lean hand at the two
+captives, then beat it upon his own chest. "They are mine," he was
+saying, as the men knew plainly. And they realized as if the weird talk
+came like words to their ears that this monster was demanding that the
+captives be given him.
+
+An exchange of dismayed glances, and "Not so good!" said McGuire under
+his breath; "Simon Legree is asking for his slaves. Mean, ugly devil,
+that boy!"
+
+The lean figures on the platform were bending forward, an expression of
+mirth--distorted, animal smiles--upon their flabby lips. They
+represented to the humans, so helpless before them, a race of thinking
+things in whom no last vestige of kindness or decency remained. But was
+there an exception? One of the circle was standing; the one beside them
+was sullenly silent as the other on the platform addressed their ruler.
+
+He spoke at some length, not with the fire and vehemence of the one who
+had claimed them, but more quietly and dispassionately, and his cold
+eyes, when they rested on those of McGuire and Sykes, seemed more
+crafty than actively ablaze with malevolent ill-will. Plainly it was the
+councilor now, addressing his superior. His inhuman voice was silenced
+by a reply from the one on the throne.
+
+He motioned--this gold-crowned figure of personified evil--toward the
+two men, and his hand swept on toward the one who had spoken. He intoned
+a command in harsh gutturals that ended in a sibilant shriek. And the
+two standing silent and hopeless exchanged looks of despair.
+
+They were being delivered to this other--that much was plain--but that
+it boded anything but captivity and torment they could not believe. That
+last phrase was too eloquent of hissing hate.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The creature rose, tall and ungainly, from his throne; amid the
+salutations of his followers he turned and vanished through the arch.
+The others of his council followed, all but the one. He motioned to the
+two men to come with him, and the sullen one who had demanded the men
+for himself obeyed an order from this councilor who was his superior.
+
+He snapped an order, and four of his men ranged themselves about the
+captives as a guard. Thin metal cords were whipped about the wrists of
+each; their hands were tied. The wire cut like a knife-edge if they
+strained against it.
+
+The new director of their destinies was vanishing through an exit at one
+side of the great hall; their guard hustled them after. A corridor
+opened before them to end in a gold-lit portal; it was daylight out
+beyond where a street was filled with hurrying figures in many colors.
+With quavering shrieks they scattered like frightened fowls as an
+airship descended between the tall buildings that reflected its passing
+in opalescent hues.
+
+It was a small craft compared with the one that had brought them, and
+it swept down to settle lightly upon the street with no least regard
+for those who might be crushed by its descent. Consideration for their
+fellows did not appear as a marked characteristic of this strange
+people, McGuire observed thoughtfully. They swarmed in endless droves,
+these multicolored beings who made of the thoroughfare an ever-changing
+kaleidoscope--and what was a life or two, more or less, among so many?
+He found no comfort for themselves in the thought.
+
+Shoulder to shoulder, the two followed where the scarlet figure of the
+councilor moved toward the waiting ship. Only the professor paid further
+heed to their surroundings; he marveled aloud at the numbers of the
+people.
+
+"Hundreds of them," he said; "thousands! They are swarming everywhere
+like rats. Horrible!" His eyes passed on to the buildings in their glory
+of delicate hues, as he added, "And the contrast they make with their
+surroundings! It is all wrong some way; I wish I knew--"
+
+They were in the ship when McGuire replied. "I hope we live long enough
+to satisfy your curiosity," he said grimly.
+
+The ship was rising beneath them; the opal and quartz of the city's
+walls were flashing swiftly down.
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+They were in a cabin at the very nose of the ship, seated on metal
+chairs, their hands unshackled and free. Their scarlet guardian reclined
+at ease somewhat to one side, but despite his apparent disregard his
+cold eyes seldom left the faces of the two men.
+
+Windows closed them in; windows on each side, in front, above them, and
+even in the floor beneath. It was a room for observation whose
+metal-latticed walls served only as a framework for the glass. And there
+was much to be observed.
+
+The golden radiance of sunlit clouds was warm above. They rose toward
+it, until, high over the buildings' tallest spires, there spread on
+every hand the bewildering beauty of that forest of minarets and sloping
+roofs and towers, whose many facets made glorious blendings of soft
+color. Aircraft at many levels swept in uniform directions throughout
+the sky. The ship they were in hung quiet for a time, then rose to a
+higher level to join the current of transportation that flowed into the
+south.
+
+"We will call it south," said Professor Sykes. "The sun-glow, you will
+observe, is not directly overhead; the sun is sinking; it is past their
+noon. What is the length of their day? Ah, this interesting--interesting!"
+The certain fate they had foreseen was forgotten; it is not often given to
+an astronomer to check at first hand his own indefinite observations.
+
+"Look!" McGuire exclaimed. "Open country! The city is ending!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ahead and below them the buildings were smaller and scattered. Their new
+master was watching with closest scrutiny the excitement of the men; he
+whispered an order into a nearby tube, and the ship slowly slanted
+toward the ground. He was studying these new specimens, as McGuire
+observed, but the lieutenant paid little attention; his eyes were too
+thoroughly occupied in resolving into recognizable units the picture
+that flowed past them so quickly. He was accustomed, this pilot of the
+army air service, to reading clearly the map that spreads beneath a
+plane, but now he was looking at an unfamiliar chart.
+
+"Fields," he said, and pointed to squared areas of pale reds and blues;
+"though what it is, heaven knows. And the trees!--if that's what they
+are." The ship went downward where an area of tropical denseness made a
+tangled mass of color and shadow.
+
+"Trees!" Lieutenant McGuire had exclaimed, but these forests were of
+tree-forms in weirdest shapes and hues. They grew to towering heights,
+and their branches and leaves that swayed and dipped in the slow-moving
+air were of delicate pastel shades.
+
+"No sunlight," said the Professor excitedly; "they have no direct rays
+of the sun. The clouds act as a screen and filter out actinic rays."
+
+McGuire did not reply. He was watching the countless dots of color that
+were people--people who swarmed here as they had in the city; people
+working at these great groves, crouching lower in the fields as the ship
+swept close; people everywhere in teeming thousands. And like the
+vegetation about them, they, too, were tall and thin, attenuated of form
+and with skin like blood-stained ash.
+
+"They need the sun," Sykes was repeating; "both vegetable and animal
+life. The plants are deficient in chlorophyl--see the pale green of the
+leaves!--and the people need vitamins. Yet they evidently have electric
+power in abundance. I could tell them of lamps--"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+His comments ceased as McGuire lurched heavily against him. The flyer
+had taken note of the tense, attentive attitude of the one in scarlet;
+the man was leaning forward, his eyes focused directly upon the
+scientist's face; he seemed absorbing both words and emotions.
+
+How much could he comprehend? What power had he to vision the
+idea-pictures in the other's mind? McGuire could not know. But "Sorry!"
+he told Sykes; "that was clumsy of me." And he added in a whisper, "Keep
+your thoughts to yourself; I think this bird is getting them."
+
+Buildings flashed under them, not massed solidly as in the city, yet
+spaced close to one another as if every foot of ground not devoted to
+their incredible agriculture were needed to house the inhabitants. The
+ground about them was alive with an equally incredible humanity that
+swarmed over all this world in appalling profusion.
+
+Their horrid flesh! Their hideous features! And their number! McGuire
+had a sudden, sickening thought. They were larvae, these crawling
+hordes--vile worm-things that infested a beautiful world--that bred here
+in millions, their numbers limited only by the space for their bodies
+and the food for their stomachs. And he, McGuire, a _man_--he and this
+other man with his clear-thinking scientific brain were prisoners to
+this horde; captives, to be used or butchered by those vile, crawling
+things!
+
+And again it was this world of contrast that drove home the conviction
+with its sickening certainty. A world of beauty, of delicate colors, of
+sweeping oceans and gleaming shores and towering cities with their grace
+and beauty and elfin splendor yet a world that shuddered beneath this
+devouring plague of grublike men.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+They swept past cities and towns and over many miles of open land before
+their craft swung eastward toward the dark horizon. The master gave
+another order into the speaking tube and their ship shot forward, faster
+and yet faster, with a speed that pressed them heavily into their seats.
+Behind them was the glory of the sunlit clouds; ahead the gloomy
+gray-black masses that must make a stygian night sky over this lonely
+world--a world cut off by that vaporous shell from all communion with
+the stars.
+
+They were over the water; before them a dark ocean reached out in
+forbidding emptiness to a darker horizon. Ahead, the only broken line in
+the vast level expanse was a mountain rising abruptly from the sea. It
+was a volcanic cone surmounting an island; the sunlight's glow reflected
+from behind them against the sombre mass that lifted toward the clouds.
+Their ship was high enough to clear it, but instead it swung, as McGuire
+watched, toward the south.
+
+The island drifted past, and again they were on their course. But to
+the flyer there were significant facts that could not pass unobserved.
+Their own ship had swung in a great circle to avoid this mountain. And
+all through the skies were others that did the same. The air above and
+about the grim sentinel peak was devoid of flying shapes.
+
+McGuire caught the eyes of the councilor, their keeper. "What is that?"
+he asked, though he knew the words were lost on the other. He nodded his
+head toward the distant peak, and his question was plainly in regard to
+the island. And for the first time since their coming to this wild
+world, he saw, flashing across the features of one of these men, a trace
+of emotion that could only be construed as fear.
+
+The slitted cat eyes lost their look of complacent superiority. They
+widened involuntarily, and the face was drained of its blotched color.
+There was fear, terror unmistakable, though it showed for but an
+instant. He had control of his features almost at once, but the flyer
+had read their story.
+
+Here was something that gave pause to this race of conquering vermin; a
+place in the expanse of this vast sea that brought panic to their
+hearts. And there came to him, as he stowed the remembrance away in his
+mind, the first glow of hope. These things could fear a mountain; it
+might be that they could be brought to fear a man.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The sky was clearing rapidly of traffic and the mountain of his
+speculations was lost astern, when another island came slanting swiftly
+up to meet them as their ship swept down from the heights. It was a tiny
+speck in the ocean's expanse, a speck that resolved itself into the
+squared fields of colored growth, orchards whose brilliant, strange
+fruits glowed crimson in the last light of day, and enormous trees,
+beyond which appeared a house.
+
+A palace, McGuire concluded, when he saw clearly the many-storied pile.
+Like the buildings they had seen, this also constructed of opalescent
+quartz. There were windows that glowed warmly in the dusk. A sudden wave
+of loneliness, almost unbearable, swept over the man.
+
+Windows and gleaming lights, the good sounds of Earth; home!... And his
+ears, as he stepped out into the cool air, were assailed with the
+strange cackle and calling of weird folk; the air brought him scents,
+from the open ground beyond, of fruits and vegetation like none he had
+ever known; and the earth, the homeland of his vain imaginings, was
+millions of empty miles away....
+
+The leader stopped, and McGuire looked dispiritedly at the unfamiliar
+landscape under dusky lowering skies. Trees towered high in the
+air--trees grotesque and weird by all Earth standards--whose limbs were
+pale green shadows in the last light of day. The foliage, too, seemed
+bleached and drained of color, but among the leaves were flashes of
+brilliance where night-blooming flowers burst open like star-shells to
+fill the air with heavy scents.
+
+Between the men and the forest growth was a row of denser vegetation,
+great ferns twenty feet and more in height, and among them at regular
+intervals stood plants of another growth--each a tremendous pod held in
+air on a thick stalk. Tendrils coiled themselves like giant springs
+beside each pod, tendrils as thick as a man's wrist. The great pods were
+ranged in a line that extended as far as McGuire could see in the dim
+light.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+His shoulders drooped as the guard herded him and his companion toward
+the building beyond. He must not be cast down--he would not! Who knew
+how much of such feeling was read by these keen-eyed observers? And the
+only thought with which he could fill his mind, the one forlorn ghost of
+a hope that he could cling to, was that of an island, a volcanic peak
+that rose from dark waters to point upward toward the heights.
+
+The guard of four was clustered about; the figures were waiting now in
+the gathering dark--waiting, while the one in scarlet listened and spoke
+alternately into a jeweled instrument that hung by a slender chain about
+his neck. He raised one lean hand to motion the stirring guards to
+silence, listened again intently into the instrument, then pointed that
+hand toward the cloud-filled sky, while he craned his thin neck to look
+above him.
+
+The men's eyes followed the pointing hand to see only the sullen black
+of unlit clouds. The last distant aircraft had vanished from the skies;
+not a ship was in the air--only the enveloping blanket of high-flung
+vapor that blocked out all traces of the heavens. And then!--
+
+The cloud banks high in the skies flashed suddenly to dazzling, rolling
+flame. The ground under their feet was shaken as by a distant
+earthquake, while, above, the terrible fire spread, a swift, flashing
+conflagration that ate up the masses of clouds.
+
+"What in thunder--" McGuire began; then stopped as he caught, in the
+light from above, the reflection of fierce exultation in the eyes of the
+scarlet one. The evil, gloating message of those eyes needed no words to
+explain its meaning. That this cataclysm was self-made by these beings,
+McGuire knew, and he knew that in some way it meant menace to him and
+his.
+
+Yet he groped in thought for some definite meaning. No menace could this
+be to himself personally, for he and Sykes stood there safe in the
+company of the councilor himself. Then the threat of this flaming blast
+must be directed toward the earth!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The fire vanished, and once more, as Professor Sykes had seen on that
+night so long ago, the blanket of clouds was broken. McGuire followed
+the gaze of the scientist whose keen eyes were probing in these brief
+moments into the depths of star-lit space.
+
+"There--there!" Sykes exclaimed in awe-struck tones. His hand was
+pointing outward through the space where flames had cleared the sky. A
+star was shining in the heavens with a glory that surpassed all others.
+It outshone all neighboring stars, and it sent its light down through
+the vast empty reaches of space, a silent message to two humans,
+despondent and heartsick, who stared with aching eyes.
+
+Lieutenant McGuire did not hear his friend's whispered words. No need to
+name that distant world--it was Earth! Earth!... And it was calling to
+its own....
+
+There was a flying-field--so plain before his mental eyes; men in khaki
+and leather who moved and talked and spoke of familiar things ... and
+the thunder of motors ... and roaring planes....
+
+Some far recess within his deeper self responded strangely. What now of
+threats and these brute-things that threatened?--he was one with this
+picture he had visioned. He was himself; he was a man of that distant
+world of men; they would show these vile things how men could meet
+menace--or death.... His shoulders were back and unconsciously he stood
+erect.
+
+The scarlet figure was close beside them in the dusk, his voice vibrant
+with a quality which should have struck fear to his captives' hearts as
+he ordered them on. But the look in his crafty eyes changed to one of
+puzzled wonder at sight of the men.
+
+Hands on each other's shoulders, they stood there in the gathering dark,
+where grotesque trees arched twistingly overhead. Their moment of
+depression had passed; Earth had called, and they had heard it, each
+after his own fashion. But to each the call had been one of clear
+courage. No longer cast off and forlorn, they were one with their own
+world.
+
+"Down," said Professor Sykes with a whimsical smile; "down, but not
+out!" And the lieutenant responded in kind.
+
+"Are we down-hearted?" he demanded loudly. And the two turned as one man
+to grin at the scarlet one as they thundered. "N-o-o!"
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+Two men grinned in derision at the horrible, man-shaped thing that held
+their destinies in his lean, inhuman hands!--but they turned abruptly
+away to look again above them where that bright star still shone through
+an opening in the clouds.
+
+"The earth! Home!" It seemed as if they could never tear their eyes away
+from the sight.
+
+Their captor whistled an order, and the guard of four tugged vainly at
+the two, who resisted that they might gaze upon their own world until
+the closing clouds should blot it from sight. A cry from one of the red
+guards roused them.
+
+The dark was closing in fast, and their surroundings were dim. Vaguely,
+McGuire felt more than saw one of the red figures whirled into the air.
+He sensed a movement in the jungle darkness where were groves of weird
+trees and the tangle of huge vegetable growths. What it was he could not
+say, but he felt the guard who clutched at him quiver in terror.
+
+Their leader snatched at the instrument that hung about his neck and put
+it to his lips; he whistled an order, sharp and shrill. Blazing light
+that seemed to flame in the air was the response; the air was aglow with
+an all-pervading brilliance like that in the car that had whirled them
+from the landing field. The light was everywhere, and the building
+before them was surrounded by a dazzling envelope of luminosity.
+
+Whatever of motion or menace there had been ceased abruptly. Their
+guard, three now in number instead of four, seized them roughly and
+hustled them toward an open door. No time, as they passed, for more than
+fleeting impressions: a hall of warm, glowing light--a passage that
+branched off--and, at the end, a room into which they were thrown, while
+a metal door clanged behind them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+These were no gentle hands that hurled the men staggering through the
+doorway, and Professor Sykes fell headlong upon the glassy floor. He
+sprang to his feet, his face aflame with anger. "The miserable beasts!"
+he shouted.
+
+"Take it easy," admonished the flyer. "We're in the hoose-gow; no use of
+getting all fussed up if they don't behave like perfect gentlemen.
+
+"There's a bunk in the corner," he said, and pointed to a woven hammock
+that was covered with soft cloths; "and here's another that I can sling.
+Twin beds! What more do you want?"
+
+He opened a door and the splash of falling water came to them. A
+fountain cascaded to the ceiling to fall splashing upon a floor of
+inlaid, glassy tile. McGuire whistled.
+
+"Room and bath," he said. "And you complained of the service!"
+
+"I have an idea," he told the scientist, "that our scarlet friend who
+owns this place intends to treat us decently, even though his helpers
+are a bit rough. My hunch is that he wants to get some information out
+of us. That old bird back there in the council chamber told me as plain
+as day that they think they are going to conquer the earth. Maybe that's
+why we are here--as exhibits A and B, for them to study and learn how to
+lick us."
+
+"You are talking what I would have termed nonsense a month ago,"
+replied Sykes, "but now--well, I am afraid you are right. And," he said
+slowly, "I fear that they are equally correct. They have conquered
+space; they have ships propelled by some unknown power; they have gas
+weapons, as you and I have reason to know. And they have all the
+beastly ferocity to carry such a plan through to success. But I wonder
+what that sky-splitting blast meant."
+
+"Bombardment," the flyer told him; "bombardment of the earth as sure as
+you're alive."
+
+"More nonsense," said Sykes; "and probably correct.... Well, what are we
+to do?--sit tight and give them as little information as we can? or--"
+His question ended unfinished; the alternative, it seemed, was not plain
+to him.
+
+"There's only one answer," said McGuire. "We must get away; escape
+somehow."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Professor Sykes' eyes showed his appreciation of a spirit that could
+still dare to hope, but he asked dejectedly: "Escape? Good idea. But
+where to?"
+
+"I have an idea," the flyer said slowly. "An idea about an island." He
+told the professor what he had observed--the fact that there was one
+spot of land on this globe from which the traffic of these monsters of
+Venus steered clear. This, he explained, must have some significance.
+
+"Whatever is there, God only knows," he admitted, "but it is something
+these devils don't like a little bit. It might be interesting to learn
+more. We'll make a break for it; find a boat. No, we probably can't do
+it, but we can make a try. Now what is our first step, I wonder."
+
+"Our first step," said Professor Sykes, measuring his words as if he
+might be working out some astronomical calculation, "is into the
+inverted shower-bath, if you feel as hot as I do. And our next step,
+when all is quiet for the night, is through the window I see beyond. I
+can see the branches of one of those undernourished trees from here."
+
+"Last one in is a lop-eared Venusian!" said McGuire, throwing off his
+jacket. And in that strange room in a strange world, under the shadow of
+death and of tortures unknown, the two men stripped with all the
+care-free abandon of a couple of schoolboys racing to be first in the
+old swimming hole.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was some time later when the door opened and a long red hand pushed a
+tray of food into the room. The tray was of unbreakable crystal--he
+rattled it heedlessly upon the floor--and it held crystal dishes of
+unknown foods.
+
+They were sampling them all when Sykes remarked plaintively, "I would
+like to know what under heaven I am eating."
+
+"I've wished to know that in lots of restaurants," McGuire replied. "I
+remember a place down on--" He stopped abruptly, then chewed in silence
+upon a fruit like a striped pepper that stung his mouth and tongue while
+he scarcely felt it. References to Earth things plainly were to be
+avoided: the visions they brought before one's eyes were unnerving.
+
+They made a pretence of sleeping in case they were being observed, and
+it was some hours later when the two stood quietly beside the open
+window. As Sykes had seen, there were branches of a pale, twisted
+tree-growth close outside. McGuire tried his weight upon them, then
+swung himself out, hand over hand, upon the branch that bent low beneath
+him. Sykes was close behind when he clambered to the ground to stand for
+some minutes, listening silently in the dark.
+
+"Too easy!" the lieutenant whispered. "They are too foxy to leave
+a gateway like that--but here we are. The shore is off in this
+direction."
+
+The dark of a night unrelieved by a single star was about them as they
+moved noiselessly away. They followed open ground at first. The building
+that had been their brief prison was upon their right; beyond and at the
+left was where the ship landed--it was gone now--and beyond that the
+wall of vegetation.
+
+And again, in the dark, McGuire had an uncanny sense of motion. Soft
+bodies were slipping quietly one upon another; something that lived was
+there beyond them in the night. No sound or sign of life came from the
+house; no guard had been posted; and McGuire stopped again, before
+plunging into the tangled growth, to whisper, "Too easy, Sykes! There's
+something about this--"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He had pushed aside the fronds of a giant fern; a cautious step
+beyond his hands touched a slippery, pliant vine. And his whisper
+ended as he felt the thing turn and twist beneath his hand. It was
+alive!--writhing!--cold as the body of a monster snake, and just as
+vicious and savage in the way that it whipped down and about him in
+the gloom of the starless night.
+
+The thing was alive! It threw its coils around his body in an embrace
+that left him breathless; a slender tendril was tightening about his
+neck; his hands and arms were bound.
+
+His ankle was grasped as he was whirled aloft--a human hand that gripped
+him this time--and Sykes, forgetting discretion and the need for
+silence, was shouting in the darkness that gave no clue to their
+opponent. "Hang on!" he yelled. "I've got you, Mac!"
+
+His shouts were cut short by another serpent shape that thrashed him and
+smashed the softer growing things to earth that it might wrap this man,
+too, in its deadly coils.
+
+McGuire felt his companion's hold loosen as he was lifted from the
+ground; there were other arms flailing about him--living, coiling things
+that seemed to fight one with another for this prize. Abruptly,
+blindingly, the scene was vividly etched before him: the strange trees,
+the ferns, the writhing and darting serpent-arms! They were illumined in
+a dazzling, white light!
+
+He was in the air, clutched strangely in constricting arms; an odor of
+rotted flesh was in his nostrils, sickening, suffocating! Beyond and
+almost beneath him a cauldron of green gaped open, and he saw within it
+a pool of thick liquid that eddied and steamed to give off the stench
+of putrescence.
+
+All this in an instant of vision--and in that instant he knew the death
+they courted. It was a giant pod that held that pool--one of the growths
+he had seen ranged out like a line of sentinels. But the terrible
+tendrils that had been coiled and at rest were wrapped about him now,
+drawing him to that reeking pool of death and the waiting thick lips
+that would close above him. Sykes, too! The tendrils that had clutched
+him were whisking his helpless body where another gaping mouth was
+open--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And then, in the blazing light that was more brilliant than any light of
+day in this world, the hold about McGuire relaxed. He saw, as he fell,
+the thick, green lips snap shut; and the arms that had held him pulled
+back into harmless, tight-wound coils.
+
+Their bodies crashed to earth where a great fern bent beneath them to
+cushion their fall. And the men lay silent and gasping for great choking
+breaths, while from the building beyond came the cackle and shrieking of
+man-things in manifest enjoyment of the frustrated plans.
+
+It was the laughter that determined McGuire.
+
+"Damn the plants!" he said between hoarse breaths. "Man-eating
+plants--but they're--better--than--those devils! And there's only--one
+line of them: I saw them here before. Shall we go on?--make a break for
+it?"
+
+Sykes rolled to the shelter of an arching frond and, without a word,
+went crawling away. McGuire was behind him, and the two, as they came to
+open ground, sprang to their feet and ran on through the weird orchard
+where tree trunks made dim, twisting lines. They ran blindly and
+helplessly toward the outer dark that promised temporary shelter.
+
+A hopeless attempt: both men, knew the futility of it, while they
+stumbled onward through the dark. Behind them the night was hideous
+with noise as the great palace gave forth an eruption of shrieking,
+inhuman forms that scattered with whistling and wailing calls in all
+directions.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A mile or more of groping, hopeless flight, till a yellow gleam shone
+among the trees to guide them. A building, beyond a clearing, gave a
+bright illumination to the black night.
+
+"We've run in a circle," choked McGuire, his voice weak and uncertain
+with exhaustion. "Like a couple of fools!--"
+
+He waited until the heavy breathing that shook his body might be
+controlled, then corrected himself. "No--this is another--a new one--see
+the towers! And listen--it's a radio station!"
+
+The slender frameworks that towered high in air glowed like flame--a
+warning to the ships whose lights showed now and then far overhead. And,
+clear and distinct, there came to the listening men the steady,
+crackling hiss of an uninterrupted signal.
+
+Against the lighted building moving figures showed momentarily, and
+McGuire pulled his friend into the safe concealment of a tangle of
+growth, while the group of yelling things sped past.
+
+"Come on," he told Sykes; "we can't get away--not a chance! Let's have a
+look at this place, and perhaps--well, I have an idea!" He slipped
+silently, cautiously on, where a forest of jungle ferns gave promise of
+safe passage.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Some warning had been sounded; the occupants of the building were
+scattered to aid in the man-hunt. Only one was left in the room where
+two Earth-men peeped in at the door.
+
+The figure was seated upon an insulated platform, and his long hands
+manipulated keys and levers on a table before him. McGuire and Sykes
+stared amazedly at this broadcasting station whose air was filled with a
+pandemonium of crashing sound from some distant room, but McGuire was
+concerned mainly with the motion of a lean, blood-red hand that swung
+an object like a pointer in free-running sweeps above a dial on the
+table. And he detected a variation in the din from beyond as the pointer
+moved swiftly.
+
+Here was the control board for those messages he had heard; this was the
+instrument that varied the sending mechanism to produce the wailing
+wireless cries that made words in some far-distant ears. McGuire, as he
+slipped into the room and crept within leaping distance of the grotesque
+thing so like yet unlike a man, was as silent as the nameless, writhing
+horror that had seized them in the dark. He sprang, and the two came
+crashing to the floor.
+
+Lean arms came quickly about him to clutch and tear at his face, but the
+flyer had an arm free, and one blow ended the battle. The man of Venus
+relaxed to a huddle of purple and yellow cloth from which a ghastly face
+protruded. McGuire leaped to his feet and sprang to the place where the
+other had been.
+
+"Hold them off as long as you can!" he shouted to Sykes, and his hand
+closed upon the pointer.
+
+Did this station send where he was hoping? Was this the station that had
+communicated with the ship that had hovered above their flying field in
+that far-off land? He did not know, but it was a powerful station, and
+there was a chance--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He moved the pointer frantically here and there, swung it to one side
+and another; then found at last a point on the outside of the strange
+design beneath his hand where the pointer could rest while the crashing
+crackle of sound was stilled.
+
+And now he swung the pointer--upon the plate--anywhere!--and the noise
+from beyond told instantly of the current's passage. He held it an
+instant, then pushed it back to the silent spot--a dash! A quick return
+that flashed back again to bring silence--a dot! More dashes and dots
+... and McGuire thanked a kindly heaven that had permitted him to learn
+the language of the air, while he cursed his slowness in sending.
+
+Would it reach? Would there be anyone to hear? No certainty; he could
+only flash the wild Morse symbols out into the night. He must try to get
+word to them--warn them! And "Blake," he called, and spelled out the
+name of their field, "warning--Venus--"
+
+"Hold them!" he yelled to Sykes at the sound of rushing feet. "Keep them
+off as long as you can!"
+
+"... Prepare--for invasion. Blake, this is McGuire...." Over and over,
+he worked the swinging pointer into symbols that might in some way, by
+some fortunate chance, help that helpless people to resist the horror
+that lay ahead.
+
+And while heavy bodies crashed against the door that Sykes was holding,
+there came from some deep-hidden well of memory an inspiration. There
+was a man he had once met--a man who had confided wondrous things; and
+now, with the knowledge of these others who had conquered space, he
+could believe wholly what he had laughed and joked about before. That
+man, too, had claimed to have travelled far from the earth; he had
+invented a machine; his name--
+
+The pointer was swinging in frenzied haste to spell over and over the
+name of a man, and the name, too, of a forgotten place in the mountains
+of Nevada. It was repeating the message; then finished in one long
+crashing wail as a cloud of vapor shot about McGuire and his hand upon
+the pointer went suddenly limp.
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+Captain Blake's game of solitaire had become an obsession. He drove
+himself to the utmost in the line of duty, and, through the day, the
+demands of the flying field filled his mind to forgetfulness. And for
+the rest, he forced his mind to concentrate upon the turn of the cards.
+He could not read--and he must not think!--so he sat through long
+evenings trying vainly to forget.
+
+He looked up with an expressionless face as Colonel Boynton entered the
+room. The colonel saw the cards and nodded.
+
+"Does that help?" he asked, and added without waiting for an answer, "I
+don't like cards, but I find my mathematics works well.... My old
+problems--I can concentrate on them, and stop this eternal, damnable
+thinking, thinking--"
+
+There was something of the same look forming about the eyes of
+both--that look that told of men who struggled gamely under the sentence
+of death, refusing to think or to fear, and waiting, waiting,
+impotently. Blake looked at the colonel with a carefully emotionless
+gaze. "It's hell in the big towns, I hear."
+
+The Colonel nodded. "Can't blame them much, if that's what appeals to
+them. A year and a half!--and they've got to forget it. Why not crowd
+all the recklessness and excesses they can into the time that is
+left?--poor devils! But for the most part the world is wagging along,
+and people are going through the familiar motions."
+
+"Well," said Blake, "I used to wonder at times how a man might feel if
+he were facing execution. Now we all know. Just going dumbly along,
+feeling as little as we can, thinking of anything, everything--except
+the one thing. They've turned to using dope, a lot of them, I hear.
+Maybe it helps; nobody cares much. Only a year and a half."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He raised his face from which all expression was consciously erased.
+"Any possible hope?" he asked. "Or do we take it when it comes and fight
+with what we've got as long as we can? There was some talk in the papers
+of an invention--Bureau of Standards cooperating with the big General
+Committee to investigate. Anything come of it?"
+
+"A thousand of them," said the colonel, "all futile. No, we can't expect
+much from those things. Though there's a whisper that came to me from
+Washington. General Clinton--you may remember him; he was here when the
+thing first broke--says that some scientist, a real one, not another of
+these half-baked geniuses, has worked out a transformation of some kind.
+It was too deep for me, but it is based upon changing hydrogen into
+helium, I think. Liberates some perfectly tremendous amount of power.
+The general had it all down pat--"
+
+He stopped speaking at the change in Captain Blake's face. The careful
+repression of all emotions was gone; the face was suddenly alive--
+
+"I know," he said sharply; "I remember something of the theory. There is
+a difference in the atoms or their protons--the liberation of an
+electron from each atom--matter actually transformed into energy;
+theoretical, what I have read. But--but--Oh my God, Boynton, do you mean
+that they've got it?--that it will drive us through space?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The colonel drove one fist into the palm of his other hand. "Fool!
+Idiot!" he exclaimed, and it was evident that the epithets were intended
+for himself.
+
+"I had forgotten that you had been trained along that line. The general
+wants a man to work with them, somewhat as a liason officer to link the
+army requirements closely with their developments; we are hoping to work
+out a space ship, of course. You are just the man; I will radio him this
+minute. Be ready to leave--" The slamming of the door marked a hurried
+exit toward the radio room.
+
+And abruptly, stifflingly, Captain Blake dared to hope. "Scientists will
+come through with something, some new method of propulsion. All the
+world is looking to them!" His thoughts were leaping from one
+possibility to another. "Some miracle of power that will drive a fleet
+through space as they have done, to battle with the enemy on his own
+ground--"
+
+Could he help? Was there one little thing that he could do to apply
+their knowledge to practical ends? The thought thrilled him with
+overpowering emotion an hour later as he felt the lift of the plane
+beneath him.
+
+"Report to General Clinton," the colonel's reply had said. "Captain
+Blake will be assigned to special duty." He opened the throttle to his
+ship's best cruising speed, but his spirit was soaring ahead to urge on
+the swift scout ship whose wings drove steadily into the gathering
+dusk.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And then, after long hours, Washington! Brief words with many men--and
+discouragement! The seat of government of the United States was a city
+of despondent men, weary, hopeless, but fighting. There was a look of
+strain on every face; the eyes told a story of sleepless nights and
+futile thinking and planning. Blake's elation was short lived.
+
+He was sent to New York and on into the state, where the laboratories of
+a great electrical company had turned their equipment from commercial
+purposes to those of war. Here, surely, one might find fuel to feed the
+dying embers of hope; the new development must give greater promise than
+General Clinton had intimated.
+
+"Nothing you can do as yet," he was told, when he had stated his
+mission. "It is still experimental, but we have worked out the
+transformation on a small scale, and harnessed the power."
+
+Captain Blake was in no mood for temporizing; he was tired with being
+put off. He stared belligerently at the chief of this department.
+
+"Power--hell!" he said. "We've got power now. How will you apply it? How
+will we use it for travelling through space?"
+
+The great man of science was unmoved by the outburst. "That is
+poppycock," he replied; "the unscientific twaddle of the sensational
+press. We are practical men here; we are working to give you men who do
+the fighting better ships and better arms. But you will use them right
+here on Earth."
+
+The calm assurance of this man who spoke with a voice of such confidence
+and authority left the flyer speechless. His brain sent a chaos of
+profane and violent expletives to the lips that dared not frame them.
+There was no adequate reply.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Blake jammed his hat upon his head and walked blindly from the room.
+Heedless of the protests of those he jostled on the street he went
+raging on, but some subconscious urge directed his steps. He found
+himself at the railway. There was a station, and a grilled window where
+he was asking for a ticket back to Washington. And on the following
+day--
+
+"There is nothing I can do," he told General Clinton. "It is hopeless. I
+ask to be relieved."
+
+"Why?" The general snapped the question at him. What kind of man was
+this that Boynton had sent him?
+
+"They are fools," said Blake bluntly, "pompous, well-meaning fools! They
+are planning better motors, more power"--he laughed harshly--"and they
+think that with them we can attack ships that are independent of the
+air."
+
+"Still," asked General Clinton coldly, "for what purpose do you wish to
+be relieved? What do you intend to do?"
+
+"Return to the field," said Captain Blake, "to work, and put my planes
+and personnel in the best possible condition; then, when the time comes,
+go up and fight like hell."
+
+An unusual phrasing of a request when one is addressing one's commander;
+but the older man threw back his shoulders, that were bending under
+responsibilities too great for one man to bear, and took a long breath
+that relaxed his face and seemed to bring relief.
+
+"You've got the right idea,"--he spoke slowly and thoughtfully--"the
+right philosophy. It is all we have left--to fight like hell when the
+time comes. Give my regards to Colonel Boynton; he sent me a good man
+after all."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Another long flight, westward this time, and, despite the failure of his
+hopes and of his errand, Blake was flying with a mind at peace. "It is
+all we have left," the general had said. Well, it was good to face
+facts, to admit them--and that was that! There was no use of thinking or
+worrying.... He lifted the ship to a higher level and glanced at his
+compass. There were clouds up ahead, and he drove still higher into the
+night, until he was above them.
+
+And again his peace of mind was not to last.
+
+It was night when he swung the ship over his home port and signalled for
+a landing. A flood of light swept out across the field to guide him
+down. He went directly to the colonel's quarters but found him gone.
+
+"In the radio room, I think," an orderly told him.
+
+Colonel Boynton was listening intently in the silent room; he scowled
+with annoyance at the disturbance of Blake's coming; then, seeing who it
+was, he motioned quickly for the captain to listen in.
+
+"Good Lord, Blake," he told the captain in an excited whisper; "I'm glad
+you're here. Another ship had been sighted; she's been all over the
+earth; just scouting and mapping, probably. And there have been signals
+the same as before--the same until just now. Listen!--it's talking
+Morse!--it's been calling for you!"
+
+He thrust a head set into Blake's hands, then reached for some papers.
+"Poor reception, but there's what we've got," he said.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The paper held the merest fragments of messages that the operator had
+deciphered. Blake examined them curiously while he listened at the
+silent receiver.
+
+"Maricopa"--the message, whatever it was, was meant for them, but there
+were only parts of words and disjointed phrases that the man had written
+down--"Venus attacking Earth ... Captain Blake ... Sykes and...."
+
+At the name of Sykes, Blake dropped the paper.
+
+"What does this mean?" he demanded. "Sykes!--why Sykes was the
+astronomer who was captured with McGuire!"
+
+"Listen! Listen!" The colonel's voice was almost shrill with excitement.
+
+The night was whispering faintly the merest echo of a signal from a
+station far away, but it resolved itself into broken fragments of sound
+that were long and short in duration, and the fragments joined to form
+letters in the Morse code.
+
+"See Winslow," it told them, and repeated the message: "See Winslow at
+Sierra...." Some distant storm crashed and rattled for breathless
+minutes. "Blake see Winslow. This is McGuire, Blake. Winslow can
+help--"
+
+The message ended abruptly. One long, wailing note; then again the night
+was voiceless ... and in the radio room at Maricopa Flying Field two men
+stood speechless, unbreathing, to stare at each other with incredulous
+eyes, as might men who had seen a phantom--a ghost that spoke to them
+and called them by name.
+
+"McGuire--is--alive!" stammered Blake. "They've taken him--there!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Colonel Boynton was considering, weighing all the possibilities, and his
+voice, when he answered, had the ring of conviction.
+
+"That was no hoax," he agreed; "that quavering tone could never be
+faked. That message was sent from the same station we heard before. Yes,
+McGuire is alive--or was up to the end of that sending.... But, who the
+devil is Winslow?"
+
+Blake shook his head despairingly. "I don't know," he said. "And it
+seems as if I should--"
+
+It was hours later, far into the night, when he sprang from out of a
+half-conscious doze to find himself in the middle of the floor with the
+voice of McGuire ringing clearly in his ears. A buried memory had
+returned to the level of his conscious mind. He rushed over to the
+colonel's quarters.
+
+"I've got it," he shouted to that officer whose head was projecting from
+an upper window. "I remember! McGuire told me about this Winslow--some
+hermit that he ran across. He has some invention--some machine--said he
+had been to the moon. I always thought Mac half believed him. We'll go
+over Mac's things and find the address."
+
+"Do you think--do you suppose--?" began Colonel Boynton doubtfully.
+
+"I don't dare to think," Blake responded. "God only knows if we dare
+hope; but Mac--Mac's got a level head; he wouldn't send us unless he
+knew! Good Lord, man!" he exclaimed, "Mac radioed us from Venus; is
+there anything impossible after that?"
+
+"Wait there," said Colonel Boynton; "I'll be right down--"
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+Lieutenant McGuire awoke, as he had on other occasions, to the smell of
+sickly-sweet fumes and the stifling pressure of a mask held over his
+nose and mouth. He struggled to free himself, and the mask was removed.
+Another of the man-creatures whom McGuire had not seen before helped him
+to sit up.
+
+A group of the attenuated figures, with their blood-and-ashes faces,
+regarded him curiously. The one who had helped him arise forced the
+others to stand back, and he gave McGuire a drink of yellow fluid from a
+crystal goblet. The dazed man gulped it down to feel a following surge
+of warmth and life that pulsed through his paralyzed body. The figures
+before him came sharply from the haze that had enveloped them. A window
+high above admitted a golden light that meant another day, but it
+brought no cheer or encouragement to the flyer. McGuire felt crushed and
+hopeless in the knowledge that his life must still go on.
+
+If only that sleep could have continued--carried him out to the deeper
+sleep of death! What hope for them here? Not a chance! And then he
+remembered Sykes; he mustn't desert Sykes. He looked about him to see
+the same prison room from which he and Sykes had escaped. The body of
+the scientist was motionless on the hammock-bed across the room; an
+occasional deep-drawn breath showed that the man still lived.
+
+No, he must not leave Sykes, even if he had the means of death. They
+would fight it through together, and perhaps--perhaps--they might yet be
+of service, might find some way to avert the catastrophe that threatened
+their world. Hopeless? Beyond doubt. But he must hope--and fight!
+
+The leader had watched the light of understanding as it returned to the
+flyer's eyes. He motioned now to the others, and McGuire was picked up
+bodily by four of them and carried from the room.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+McGuire's mind was alert once more; he was eager to learn what he could
+of this place that was to be their prison, but he saw little. A glory of
+blending colors beyond, where the golden light from without shone
+through opal walls--then he found himself upon a narrow table where
+straps of metal were thrown quickly about to bind him fast. He was tied
+hand and foot to the table that moved forward on smooth rollers to a
+waiting lift.
+
+What next? he questioned. Not death, for they had been too careful to
+keep him alive, these repulsive things that stared at him with such cold
+malevolence. Then what? And McGuire found himself with unpleasant
+recollections of others he had seen strapped in similar fashion to an
+operating table.
+
+The lift that he had thought would rise fell smoothly, instead, to stop
+at some point far below ground where the table with its helpless burden
+was rolled into a great room.
+
+He could move his head, and McGuire turned and twisted to look at the
+maze of instruments that filled the room--a super-laboratory for
+experiments of which he dared not think.
+
+"Whoever says I'm not scared to death is a liar," he whispered to
+himself, but he continued to look and wonder as he was wheeled before a
+gleaming machine of many coils and shining, metal parts. A smooth sheet
+of metal stood vertically beyond him; painted a grayish-white, he saw;
+but he could not imagine its use. A throng of people, seated in the
+room, turned blood-red faces toward the bound man and the metal sheet.
+
+"Looks as if we were about to put on a show of some kind," he told
+himself, "and I am cast for a leading role." He watched as best he could
+from his bound position while a tall figure in robes of lustreless black
+appeared to stand beside him.
+
+The newcomer regarded him with a face that was devoid of all emotion.
+McGuire felt the lack of the customary expression of hatred; there was
+not even that; and he knew he was nothing more than a strange animal,
+bound, and helpless, ready for this weird creature's experiments. The
+one in black held a pencil whose tip was a tiny, brilliant light.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Abruptly the room plunged to darkness, where the only visible thing was
+this one point of light. Ceaselessly it waved back and forth before his
+eyes; he followed it in a pattern of strange design; it approached and
+receded. Again and again the motion was repeated, until McGuire felt
+himself sinking--sinking--into a passive state of lethargy. His muscles
+relaxed; his mind was at rest; there seemed nothing in the entire
+universe of being but the single point of light that drew him on and on
+... till something whispered from the far reaches of black space....
+
+It came to him, an insistent call. It was asking about the earth--his
+own world. _What of Earth's armies and their means of defense?_ Vaguely
+he sensed the demand, and without conscious volition he responded. He
+pictured the world he had known; how plainly he saw the wide field at
+Maricopa, and the sweeping flight of a squadron of planes! _Yes--yes!
+How high could they ascend?_ From one of the planes he saw the world
+below; the ships were near their ceiling; this was the limit of their
+climb. _And did they fight with gas? What of their deadliness?_ And
+again he was seated in a plane, and he was firing tiny bullets from a
+tiny gun. No. They did not use gas. _But on the ground below--what
+fortifications? What means of defense?_
+
+McGuire's mind was no longer his own; he could only respond to that
+invisible questioner, that insistent demand from out of the depths where
+he was floating. And yet there was something within him that protested,
+that clamored at his mind and brain.
+
+Fortifications! They must know about fortifications--anti-aircraft
+guns--means for combatting aerial attack. Yes, he knew, and he must
+explain--and the thing within him pounded in the back of his brain to
+draw him back to himself.
+
+He saw a battery of anti-aircraft guns in operation; the guns were
+firing; shells were bursting in little plumes of smoke high in the air.
+And that self within him was shouting now, hammering at him; "You are
+seeing it," it told him; "it is there before you on the screen. Stop!
+Stop!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And for an instant McGuire had the strange experience of witnessing his
+own thoughts. Memories, mental records of past experience, were flashing
+through his mind; mock battles, and the batteries were firing! And,
+before him, on the metal screen, there glowed a vivid picture of the
+same thing. Men were serving the guns with sure swiftness; the bursts
+were high in the air--in a flash of understanding Lieutenant McGuire
+knew that he was giving his country's secrets to the enemy. And in that
+same instant he felt himself swept upward from the depths of that
+darkness where he had drifted. He was himself again, bound and helpless
+before an infernal contrivance of these devil-creatures. They had read
+his thoughts; the machine beside him had projected them upon the screen
+for all to see; a steady clicking might mean their reproduction in
+motion pictures for later study! He, Lieutenant McGuire, was a traitor
+against his will!
+
+The screen was blank, and the lights of the room came on to show the
+thin lips that smiled complacently in a cruel and evil face.
+
+McGuire glared back into that face, and he tried with all the mental
+force that he could concentrate to get across to the exultant one the
+fact that they had not wholly conquered him. This much they had got--but
+no more!
+
+The thin-lipped one had an instrument in his hand, and McGuire felt the
+prick of a needle plunged into his arm. He tried to move his head and
+found himself powerless. And now, in the darkness of the room where all
+lights were again extinguished, the helpless man was fighting the most
+horrible of battles, and the battleground was within his own mind. He
+was two selves, and he fought and struggled with all his consciousness
+to keep those memories from flooding him.
+
+With one part of himself he knew what it meant: a sure knowledge given
+these invaders of what they must prepare to meet; he was betraying his
+country; the whole of humanity! And that raging, raving self was
+powerless to check the flow of memory pictures that went endlessly
+through his mind and out upon the screen beyond....
+
+He had no sense of time; he was limp and exhausted with his fruitless
+struggle when he felt himself released from the bondage of the metal
+straps and placed again in the hammock in his room. And he could only
+look wanly and hopelessly after the figure of Professor Sykes, carried
+by barbarous figures to the same ordeal.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sleep, through the long night, restored both McGuire and his companion
+to normal strength. The flyer was seated with his head bowed low in his
+cupped hands. His words seemed wrung from an agony of spirit. "So that's
+what they brought us here for," he said harshly; "that's why they're
+keeping us alive!"
+
+Professor Sykes walked back and forth in their bare room while he shook
+his impotent fists in the air.
+
+"I told them everything," he exploded; "everything!" Their astronomical
+knowledge must be limited; under this blanket of clouds they can see
+nothing, and from their ships they could make approximations only.
+
+"And I have told them--the earth, and its days and seasons--its orbital
+velocity and motion--its relation to the orbit of this accursed planet.
+They had documents from the observatory and I explained them; I
+corrected their time of firing their big gun on its equatorial position.
+Oh, there is little I left untold--damn them!"
+
+"I wish to heaven," said the flyer savagely, "that we had known; we
+would have jumped out of their beastly ship somehow ten thousand feet
+up, and we would have taken our information with us."
+
+Sykes nodded agreement. "Well," he asked, "how about to-morrow, and the
+next day, and the next? They will want more facts; they will pump the
+last drop of information from us. Are we going to allow it?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+McGuire's tone was dry. "You know the answer to that as well as I do. We
+have just two alternatives; either we get out of here--find some place
+to hide in, then find some way to put a crimp in their plans; or we get
+out of here for good. It's twenty feet, not twenty thousand, from that
+window to the ground, but I think a head-first dive would do it."
+
+Sykes did not reply at once; he seemed to be weighing some problem in
+his mind.
+
+"I would prefer the water," he said at last. "If we _can_ get away and
+reach the shore, and if there is not a possibility of escape--which I
+must admit I consider highly improbable--well, we can always swim out as
+far as we can go, and the result will be certain.
+
+"This other is so messy." The man had stopped his ceaseless pacing, and
+he even managed a cheerful smile at the lieutenant. "And, remember, it
+might only cripple us and leave us helpless in their hands."
+
+"Sounds all right to me," McGuire agreed, and there was a tone of
+finality in his voice as he added: "They've made us do that traitor act
+for the last time, anyway."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Daylight comes slowly through cloud-filled skies; the window of the
+room where the fountain sprayed ceaselessly was showing the first hint
+of gold in the eastern sky. Above was the utter darkness of the
+cloud-wrapped night as the two men swung noiselessly out into the
+grotesque branches of a tree to make their way into the gloom below.
+There, under the cover of great leaves, they crouched in silence, while
+the darkness about them faded and a sound of subdued whistling noises
+came to them from the night.
+
+A wheel creaked, and in the dim light two figures appeared tugging at a
+cart upon which was a cage of woven wire. Beyond them, against the
+darker background of denser growth, tentacles coiled and twisted above
+the row of guardian plants that surrounded the house.
+
+One of the ghostly forms reached within the cage and brought forth a
+struggling object that whimpered in fear. The low whine came distinctly
+to the hidden men. They saw a vague black thing tossed through the air
+and toward the deadly plants; they heard the swishing of pliant
+tentacles and the yelping cry of a frightened animal. And the cry rose
+to a shriek that ended with the gulping splash of thick liquid.
+
+The giant pod next in line was open--they could see it dimly--and its
+tentacles were writhing convulsively, hungrily, across the ground.
+Another animal was taken from the cage and thrown to the waiting,
+serpent forms that closed about and whirled it high in air. Another--and
+another! The yelps of terror grew faint in the distance as the monsters
+passed on in their gruesome work. And the two men, palpitant with
+memories of their own experience, were limp and sick with horror.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the growing light they saw more plainly the fleshy, pliant arms that
+whipped through the air or felt searchingly along the ground. No hope
+there for bird or beast that passed by in the night; nor for men, as
+they knew too well. But now, as the golden light increased, the arms
+drew back to form again the tight-wound coils that flattened themselves
+beside the monstrous pods whose lips were closing. Locked within them
+were the pools of liquid that could dissolve a living body into food for
+these vampires of the vegetable world.
+
+"Damnable!" breathed Sykes in a savage whisper. "Utterly damnable! And
+this world is peopled with such monsters!"
+
+The last deadly arm was tightly coiled when the men stole off through
+the lush growth that reached even above their heads. McGuire remembered
+the outlines he had seen from the air and led the way where, if no
+better concealment could be found, the ocean waited with promise of rest
+and release from their inhuman captors.
+
+They counted on an hour's start--it would be that long before their
+jailer would come with their morning meal and give the alarm--and now
+they went swiftly and silently through the stillness of a strange world.
+The air that flicked misty-wet across their faces was heavy and heady
+with the perfume of night-blooming plants. Crimson blossoms flung wide
+their odorous petals, and the first golden light was filtered through
+tremendous tree-growths of pale lavenders and grays to show as unreal
+colors in the vegetation close about them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+They found no guards; the isolation of this island made the land itself
+their prison, and the men ran at full speed through every open space,
+knowing as they ran that there was no refuge for them--only the ocean
+waiting at the last. But their flight was not unobserved.
+
+A great bird rose screaming from a tangle of vines; its heavy, flapping
+wings flashed red against the pale trees. A pandemonium of shrieking
+cries echoed its alarm as other birds took flight; the forest about them
+was in an uproar of harsh cries. And faintly, from far in the rear, came
+a babel of shrill calls--weird, inhuman!--the voices of the men-things
+of Venus.
+
+"It's all off," said McGuire sharply; "they'll be on our trail now!" He
+plunged through where the trees were more open, and Sykes was beside him
+as they ran with a burst of speed toward a hilltop beyond.
+
+They paused, panting, upon the crest. A wide expanse of foliage in
+delicate shadings swept out before them to wave gently in a sea of color
+under the morning breeze, and beyond was another sea that beckoned with
+white breakers on a rocky shore.
+
+"The ocean!" gasped Sykes, and pointed a trembling hand toward their
+goal. "But--I had no idea--that suicide--was--such hard work!"
+
+The tall figure of Lieutenant McGuire turned to the shorter, breathless
+man, and he gripped hard at one of his hands.
+
+"Sykes," he said, "I'll never get another chance to say it--but you're
+one good scout!... Come on!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+McGuire fought to force his way through jungle growth, while screaming
+birds marked where they went. The sounds of their pursuers were close
+behind them when the two tore their way through the last snarled tangle
+of pale vine to stand on a sheer bluff, where, below, deep waters
+crashed against a rocky wall. They staggered with weariness and gulped
+sobbingly of the morning air. McGuire could have sworn he was exhausted
+beyond any further effort, yet from somewhere he summoned energy to
+spring savagely upon a tall, blood-red figure whose purpling face rose
+suddenly to confront them.
+
+One hand closed upon the metal tube that the other hand raised, and,
+with his final reserve of strength, the flyer wrapped an arm about the
+tall body and rushed it stumblingly toward the cliff. To be balked
+now!--to be brought back to that intolerable prison and the unthinkable
+role of traitor! The khaki-clad figure wrenched furiously at the deadly
+tube as they struggled and swayed on the edge of the cliff.
+
+He freed his arm quickly, and, regardless of the clawing thing that tore
+at his face and eyes, he launched one long swing for the horrible face
+above him. He saw the awkward fall of a lean body, and he swayed
+helplessly out to follow when the grip of Sykes' hand pulled him back
+and up to momentary safety.
+
+McGuire's mind held only the desire to kill, and he would have begun a
+staggering rush toward the shrieking mob that broke from the cover
+behind them, had not Sykes held him fast. At sight of the weapon, their
+own gas projector, still clutched in the flyer's hand, the pursuers
+halted. Their long arms pointed and their shrill calls joined in a
+chorus that quavered and fell uncertainly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One, braver than the rest, dashed forward and discharged his weapon. The
+spurting gas failed to reach its intended victims; it blew gently back
+toward the others who fled quickly to either side. Above the trees a
+giant ship nosed swiftly down, and McGuire pointed to it grimly and in
+silence. The men before them were massed now for a rush.
+
+"This is the end," said the flyer softly. "I wonder how this devilish
+thing works; there's a trigger here. I will give them a shot with the
+wind helping, then we'll jump for it."
+
+The ship was above them as the slim figure of Lieutenant McGuire threw
+itself a score of paces toward the waiting group. From the metal tube
+there shot a stream of pale vapor that swept downward upon the others
+who ran in panic from its touch.
+
+Then back--and a grip of a hand!--and two Earth-men who threw themselves
+out and downward from a sheer rock wall to the cool embrace of deep
+water.
+
+They came to the top, battered from their fall, but able to dive under a
+wave and emerge again near one another.
+
+"Swim!" urged Sykes. "Swim out! They may get us here--recover our
+bodies--resuscitate us. And that wouldn't do!"
+
+Another wave, and the two men were swimming beyond it; swimming feebly
+but steadily out from shore, while above them a great cylinder of
+shining metal swept past in a circling flight. They kept on while their
+eyes, from the wave tops, saw it turn and come slowly back in a long
+smooth descent.
+
+It was a hundred feet above the water a short way out at sea, and the
+two men made feeble motions with arms and legs, while their eyes
+exchanged glances of dismay.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A door had opened in the round under-surface, and a figure, whose
+gas-suit made it a bloated caricature of a man, was lowered from beneath
+in a sling. From the stern of the ship gaseous vapor belched downward to
+spread upon the surface of the water. The wind was bringing the misty
+cloud toward them. "The gas!" said McGuire despairingly. "It will knock
+us out, and then that devil will get us! They'll take us back! Our last
+chance--gone!"
+
+"God help us!" said Sykes weakly. "We can't--even--die--" His feeble
+strokes stopped, and he sank beneath the water. McGuire's last picture
+as he too sank and the waters closed over his head, was the shining ship
+hovering beyond.
+
+He wondered only vaguely at the sudden whirling of water around him. A
+solid something was rising beneath his dragging feet; a firm, solid
+support that raised him again to the surface. He realized dimly the air
+about him, the sodden form of Professor Sykes some few feet distant. His
+numbed brain was trying to comprehend what else the eyes beheld.
+
+A metal surface beneath them rose higher, shining wet, above the water;
+a metal tube raised suddenly from its shield, to swing in quick aim upon
+the enemy ship approaching from above.
+
+His eyes moved to the ship, and to the man-thing below in the sling. Its
+clothes were a mass of flame, and the figure itself was falling headlong
+through the air. Above the blazing body was the metal of the ship
+itself, and it sagged and melted to a liquid fire that poured, splashing
+and hissing, to the waters beneath. In the wild panic the great shape
+threw itself into the air; it swept out and up in curving flight to
+plunge headlong into the depths....
+
+The gas was drifting close, as McGuire saw an opening in the structure
+beside him. The voice of a man, human, kindly, befriending, said
+something of "hurry" and "gas," and "lift them carefully but make
+haste." The white faces of men were blurred and indistinct as McGuire
+felt himself lowered into a cool room and laid, with the unconscious
+form of Sykes, upon a floor.
+
+He tried to remember. He had gone down in the water--Sykes had drowned,
+and he himself--he was tired--tired. "And this,"--the thought seemed a
+certainty in his mind--"this is death. How--very--peculiar--" He was
+trying to twist his lips to a weak laugh as the lighted ports in the
+wall beside him changed from gold to green, then black--and a rushing of
+torn waters was in his ears....
+
+(_To be continued_)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ ASTOUNDING STORIES
+ _Appears on Newsstands_
+ THE FIRST THURSDAY IN EACH MONTH
+
+
+
+
+The Sea Terror
+
+_By Captain S. P. Meek_
+
+ The trail of mystery gold leads Carnes and Dr. Bird to a
+ tremendous monster of the deep.
+
+[Illustration: "_The mass hung over the ship._"]
+
+
+"I beg your pardon, sir. I'm looking for Dr. Bird."
+
+The famous Bureau of Standards scientist appraised the speaker rapidly.
+Keen blue eyes stared questioningly at him from a mahogany brown face,
+criss-crossed with a thousand tiny wrinkles. The tattooed anchor on his
+hand and the ill-fitting blue serge suit smacked of the sea while the
+squareness of his shoulders and the direct gaze of his eye spoke
+eloquently of authority.
+
+"I'm Dr. Bird, Captain. What can I do for you?"
+
+"Thank you, Doctor, but I'm not a captain. My name is Mitchell and I am,
+or was, the first mate of the _Arethusa_."
+
+"The _Arethusa_!" Operative Carnes of the United States Secret Service
+sprang to his feet. "You said the _Arethusa_? There _were_ no
+survivors!"
+
+"I believe that I am the only one."
+
+"Where have you been hiding and why haven't you reported the fact of
+your rescue to the proper authorities? Tell the truth; I'm a federal
+officer!"
+
+Carnes flashed the gold badge of the Secret Service and an expression of
+anger crossed Mitchell's face.
+
+"If I had wished to talk to an officer I could have found plenty in New
+York," he said shortly. "I came to Washington in order to tell my story
+to Dr. Bird."
+
+The seaman and the detective glared at one another for a moment and then
+Dr. Bird intervened.
+
+"Pipe down, Carnes," he said softly. "Mr. Mitchell undoubtedly has
+reasons, excellent reasons, for his actions. Sit down, Mr. Mitchell, and
+have a cigar."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mitchell accepted the cigar which the doctor proferred and took a chair.
+He lighted the weed and after another glance of hostility toward the
+detective he pointedly ignored him and addressed his remarks to Dr.
+Bird.
+
+"I have no objection to telling you why I haven't spoken earlier,
+Doctor," he said. "When the _Arethusa_ sank, I must have hit my head on
+something, for the next thing I knew, I was in the Marine Hospital in
+New York. I had been picked up unconscious by a fishing boat and brought
+in, and I lay there a week before I knew anything. When I knew what I
+was doing I heard about the loss of my ship and was told that there were
+no survivors, and I didn't know what to do. The story I had to tell was
+so weird and improbable that I hesitated to speak to anyone about it. I
+was not sure at first that it was not a trick of a disordered brain, but
+since my head has cleared I am convinced of the truth of it ... and yet
+I know that it _can't_ be so. I have read about you and some of the
+things you have done, and so as soon as I was able to travel I came
+here to tell you about it. You will be better able to judge than I,
+whether what I tell you really happened or was only a vision."
+
+Dr. Bird leaned back in his chair and put the tips of his fingers
+together. Long, tapering fingers they were, sensitive and well shaped,
+though sadly marred by acid stains. It was in his hands alone that Dr.
+Bird showed the genius in his make-up, the artistry which inspired him
+to produce those miracles of experimentation which had made his name a
+household word in the realm of science. Aside from those hands he more
+resembled a pugilist than a scientist. A heavy shock of unruly black
+hair surmounted a face with beetling black brows and a prognathous jaw.
+His enormous head, with a breadth and height of forehead which were
+amazing, rose from a pillar-like neck which sprang from a pair of
+massive shoulders and the arching chest of the trained athlete. Dr. Bird
+stood six feet two inches in his socks, and weighed over two hundred
+stripped. As he leaned back a curious glitter, which Carnes had learned
+to associate with keen interest, showed for an instant in his eyes.
+
+"I will be glad to hear your story, Mr. Mitchell," he said softly. "Tell
+it in your own way and try not to omit any detail, no matter how trivial
+it may be."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The seaman nodded and sat silent for a moment as though marshaling his
+thoughts.
+
+"The story really starts the afternoon of May 12th," he said, "although
+I didn't realize the importance of the first incident at the time. We
+were steaming along at good speed, hoping to make New York before too
+late for quarantine, when a hail came from the forward lookout. I was on
+watch and I went forward to see what was the matter. The lookout was
+Louis Green, an able bodied seaman and a good one, but a confirmed
+drunkard. I asked him what the trouble was and he turned toward me a
+face that was haggard with terror.
+
+"'I've seen a sea serpent, Mr. Mitchell,' he said.
+
+"'Nonsense!' I replied sharply. 'You've been drinking again.'
+
+"He swore that he hadn't and I asked him to describe what he had seen.
+His teeth were chattering so that he could hardly speak, but he gasped
+out a story about seeing a monstrous head, a half mile across, he said,
+with a long snake body stretching out over the sea until the end of it
+was lost on the horizon. I turned my glass in the direction he pointed
+and of course there was nothing to be seen. The man's condition was such
+as to make him worse than useless as a lookout, so I relieved him and
+ordered him below. I took it for a touch of delirium tremens.
+
+"We were bucking a head wind, although not a very stiff one, and we
+didn't make port until after dark, so we anchored at quarantine, just
+off Staten Island, in forty fathoms of water, and Captain Murphy radioed
+for a Coast Guard boat to come out and lay by us for the night. As you
+have probably heard, we were carrying four millions in bar gold
+consigned to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York from the Bank of
+England."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dr. Bird and Carnes nodded. The inexplicable loss of the _Arethusa_ had
+occupied much space in the papers ten days earlier.
+
+"The cutter came out, signalled, and dropped anchor about three hundred
+yards away. So far, everything was exactly as it should be. I walked to
+the stern of the boat and looked out across the Atlantic and then I
+realized that Green wasn't the only one who could see things. The wind
+had fallen and it was getting pretty dark, but not too dark to see
+things a pretty good distance away. As I looked I saw, or thought I saw,
+a huge black leathery mass come to the surface a mile or so away. There
+were two things on it that looked like eyes, and I had a feeling as
+though some malignant thing was staring at me. I rubbed my eyes and
+looked again, but the vision persisted, and I went forward to get a
+glass. When I came back the thing, whatever it was, had disappeared, but
+the water where it had been was boiling as though there were a great
+spring or something of the sort under the surface.
+
+"I trained my glass on the disturbed area, and I will take my oath
+that I saw a huge body like a snake emerge from the water. It lay in
+long undulations on the waves, and moved with them as though it were
+floating. It was quite a bit nearer than the first thing had been and
+I could see it plainly with the glass. I would judge it to be fifteen
+or twenty feet thick, and it actually seemed to disappear in the
+distance as Green had described it. The sight of the thing sent shivers
+up and down my spine, and I gave a hoarse shout. The lookout hurried
+to my side and asked me what the trouble was. I pointed and handed
+him the glass. He looked through it and handed it back to me with a
+curious expression.
+
+"'I can't see nothing, sir,' he said.
+
+"I took the glass from him and tried to level it but my hands were
+trembling so that I was forced to rest it on the rail. The lookout was
+right. There was absolutely nothing to be seen and the peculiar
+appearance of the sea had subsided to normal. The lookout was staring at
+me rather curiously and I knew that he was thinking the same thing about
+me as I had thought about Green in the afternoon. I made some kind of an
+excuse and went below to pull myself together. I caught a glimpse of
+myself in the glass. I was as white as a sheet, and the sweat was
+running off my face in drops.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I shook myself together after a fashion and managed to persuade myself
+that the whole thing was just a trick of my mind, inspired by Green's
+vivid description of his delirious vision of the afternoon. Eight bells
+struck, and when Mr. Fulton, the junior officer, relieved me, I laid
+down and tried to quiet myself. I didn't have much luck. Just before I
+took the deck again at midnight I slipped down to the forecastle to see
+how Green was coming along. He was lying in his bunk, wide awake, with
+staring eyes.
+
+"'How are you feeling now, Green?' I asked.
+
+"He looked up at me with an expression of a man who has looked death in
+the face.
+
+"'Ain't there no chance of dockin' to-night, Mr. Mitchell?' he asked.
+
+"'Of course not,' I said rather sharply. 'What's the matter with you?
+Are you afraid your sea serpent will get us?'
+
+"'He'll get us if we stay out here to-night, sir,' he replied with an
+air of conviction. 'I saw the horrible mouth on him, large enough to
+bite this ship in half; and it had a beak like a bird, like a bloody
+parrot, sir. I saw its horrible body, too, with great black ulcers on
+the under side of it where the sharks had been after it. For all the
+shark takes a man now and then, he's the seaman's friend, sir, because
+he kills off the sea serpents who would take ship and all.'
+
+"'Nonsense, Green!' I said sharply. 'Don't talk any more such
+foolishness or I'll have you ironed. You've been drinking so much that
+you are seeing things, and I won't have the crew disturbed by your crazy
+talk.'
+
+"'You won't think it's talk when those big eyes stare into yours
+to-night, Mr. Mitchell, and that body twists around you and squeezes the
+life out of you. I don't care whether you iron me or not; I know that
+I'm doomed and so is everyone else; but I won't talk about it, sir. The
+crew might as well rest easy while they can, for there's no escape if we
+have to stay out here to-night.'
+
+"'Well, be sure you keep a tight mouth then,' I said, and left rather
+hurriedly. I was in a cold sweat, for his air of conviction, together
+with what I had seen, had shaken me pretty badly. I heard the watch
+changing up above, and knew there would be men in the forecastle in a
+minute. I didn't want to face them right then.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Mr. Fulton reported everything quiet when I went on deck to relieve
+him, and although I surveyed the water through a night glass for as far
+as I could see, there was nothing out of the way. The Coast Guard's
+lights were shining less than a quarter of a mile away, and things
+looked peaceful enough. The wind had gone down with the sun; the sea was
+almost glassy, and there was a bright moon.
+
+"After going around the ship, I relieved all of the watch except two men
+for lookouts, and sent them below to get a good night's sleep. If I
+hadn't done that, some of them might be alive now.
+
+"I paced the deck for an hour trying to quiet my nerves, but really
+getting more nervous every minute. Three bells struck and I walked
+forward and leaned on the rail to watch the water. I saw a peculiar
+swirl as though some large body were coming to the surface from below,
+and then I saw--it.
+
+"Dr. Bird, I take a drink once in a while when I am on shore, but never
+at sea and never in excess, and I know it wasn't a vision of drink
+delirium. I felt perfectly normal aside from my nervousness, and I don't
+think it was fever. Either I saw it or I am insane, for it is as vivid
+to me as though I were standing on the _Arethusa's_ deck and that
+monstrous horror was rising once more before my eyes."
+
+The seaman's face had become drawn and white as he talked, and drops of
+sweat were trickling from his chin. Carnes sat forward absorbed in his
+narrative while Dr. Bird sat back with a glitter in his black eyes and
+an expression of great attention on his face.
+
+"Go on, Mr. Mitchell," the doctor said soothingly. "Tell me just what
+you saw."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mitchell shuddered and glanced quickly around the laboratory as though
+to assure himself that he was safe within four walls.
+
+"From the surface of the sea," he went on, "rose a massive body, black,
+and of the appearance of wet leather. It must have been a couple of
+hundred yards across, although the size of objects is often magnified by
+moonlight and my terror may have added to its size. In the midst of it
+were two great discs, thirty feet across, which glowed red with the
+reflected moonlight. It stared for a moment and then rose higher until
+it towered above the ship; and then I saw, or thought I saw, a huge
+gaping beak like a parrot's. It was as Green had described it, large
+enough to bite the _Arethusa_ in half, and she was a ship of three
+thousand tons.
+
+"I was frozen with horror and couldn't move or cry out. As I watched, I
+saw the long snake-like body emerge from the water, and the estimate I
+had made of the size in the afternoon seemed pitifully inadequate.
+Presently a second and a third snake arose from the water, and then
+more, until the whole sea and the air above it seemed a writhing mass of
+huge snakes. I remember wondering why the watch of the Coast Guard
+cutter didn't sound an alarm, and then I realized that the thing had
+arisen on our port side and the cutter was on the starboard.
+
+"The mass of snakes writhed backward and forward, and then two of them
+rose in the air and hung over the ship. I could see the under side and I
+saw what Green had called the scars where the sharks had attacked. They
+were great cup-shaped depressions with vile white edges, and they did
+resemble huge sores or ulcers. They wavered over the ship for an
+instant, and then both of them dropped down on the deck.
+
+"I found my voice and I think that I gave a yell, but even as I opened
+my mouth, I realized the futility of it. The _Arethusa_ was sucked down
+into the sea as though it had been a tiny chip. I saw the water rising
+to the rail, and I think I cried out again. The ship tilted and I felt
+myself falling. The next thing I knew was when I was in the hospital and
+was told that I had been raving for a week. I was afraid to tell my
+story for fear I would be put in an asylum, so I kept a tight tongue in
+my head until I was discharged."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dr. Bird mused for a moment as the seaman's voice stopped.
+
+"You cried out all right, Mr. Mitchell," he said. "You gave two distinct
+shouts, both of which were heard by the watch on the _Wren_, the Coast
+Guard cutter. They reported that at 1:30, the _Arethusa_ sank without
+warning. As soon as he heard your shouts, the watch gave the alarm and
+the crew piled on deck. The _Arethusa_ was gone completely and the
+_Wren_ was tossing about like 'a chip in a whirlpool' as they
+graphically described it. The _Wren_ had steam up and they fought the
+waves and steamed over your anchoring ground looking for survivors, but
+they found none. The sea gradually subsided and they did the only thing
+they could do--dropped a buoy, to guide the salvage people, and radioed
+for assistance. The _Robin_ came out and joined them, and both cutters
+stood by until daylight, but nothing unusual was seen. The insurance
+people are trying to salvage the wreck now, but so far they have made
+little headway."
+
+"That brings me to the rest of the story, the part that made me decide
+to come to you, Doctor," said the seaman. "Did you see what happened to
+the divers yesterday?"
+
+Dr. Bird nodded.
+
+"I saw a brief account of it," he said. "It seems that two of them were
+lost through their lines getting fouled and their air connections
+severed in some way. I don't believe the bodies have been recovered
+yet."
+
+"They never will be recovered, Doctor. I was discharged from the
+hospital yesterday and the papers were just out with an account of it. I
+went down to the dock where the _John MacLean_, the salvage ship, ties
+up, and I talked to Captain Starley who commands it. I have known him
+casually for some years, although not intimately, and he gave me a few
+more details than the press got. He didn't connect me up at first with
+the Mitchell who was reported lost on the _Arethusa_.
+
+"The first man to go down from the _MacLean_ was Charley Melrose, an
+expert diver. He went down in a pressure outfit to the bottom and
+started to work. Everything was going along fine until the telephone
+suddenly rang and the man who answered it heard him say, 'Raise me, for
+God's sake! Hurry!' The signal for raising was given, but they hadn't
+got him more than thirty feet from the bottom before there came a tug on
+the line and he was gone! The air line, the lifting cable and the
+telephone cord floated free and were reeled in. Melrose had been plucked
+off the end of that line as you or I would pluck off a grape."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dr. Bird leaned forward with the curious glitter again in his eye.
+
+"Go on," he said tersely.
+
+"Blake, the other diver, donned a suit and insisted on being lowered at
+once. Starley tried to dissuade him but he insisted on going down. They
+lowered him over the side with a twelve-foot steel-shod pike in his
+hand. He never got to the bottom. He had not been lowered more than a
+hundred feet when a scream came over the telephone, and again there was
+a jerk on the lines which threatened to wreck the reel--and the line
+came aboard with no diver on the end of it. At the same time, Starley
+told me, the sea boiled and churned as though the whole bottom were
+coming up, and his ship was tossed about as though it were in a violent
+storm, although it was calm enough for forty fathom salvage work and
+that is pretty quiet, you know. Half the time his screws were out of
+water and he had a hard time to keep from being capsized. He fought his
+way out of the disturbed area, and as soon as he did, it started to
+quiet down, and in ten minutes it was calm again.
+
+"Starley was pretty badly shaken and besides he had lost both of his
+divers, so he came in and I saw him at the dock. When I heard his yarn,
+I took him into my confidence and told him what I had seen and that I
+proposed coming to you and asking your advice. I was afraid until I
+heard his story that it was merely a vision that I had had, but it
+certainly was no vision that plucked those two divers off their lines."
+
+"Has Captain Starley told that story to anyone else yet?"
+
+"No, Doctor, he hasn't. He promised not to talk until after I had seen
+you. I'll vouch for him; he'll keep his word through anything; and he is
+keeping his whole crew on board until he hears from me."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dr. Bird sprang to his feet.
+
+"Mr. Mitchell," he said energetically, "you have shown excellent
+judgment. Wire Captain Starley that you have seen me and that he is to
+hold his crew on board and to talk to no one until I get there. Carnes,
+telephone the Chief of Naval Operations and ask him to receive me in
+conference at once. Have him get the Secretary of the Navy in, too, if
+he is available. When you have finished that, telephone Bolton that you
+will be away from Washington indefinitely."
+
+"I'll telephone Admiral Buck for you, Doctor, but I don't dare telephone
+any such message to Bolton; he'd take my head off. He has been running
+the whole service ragged lately, and this is my first afternoon off duty
+in a fortnight."
+
+"What's the trouble, a flood of new counterfeits?"
+
+"No, the counterfeit division is getting along all right. In point of
+fact, they have lent us a dozen men. The trouble is a sudden big
+increase in Communist activity throughout the country, with the Young
+Labor party behind it. Bolton has been pretty jumpy since that Stokowski
+affair last August and he is afraid of another attempt of some sort on
+the President."
+
+"The Young Labor party? I thought that gang was bankrupt and out of
+business, since the Coast Guard broke up their alien smuggling scheme."
+
+"They were down and out for a while, but they are in funds again--and
+how! They must have three or four millions at least."
+
+"Where did they get it?"
+
+"That's what we have been trying to find out. The leaders have presented
+bars of gold to a dozen banks throughout the country and demanded
+specie. The banks shipped the gold to the mint and it was good gold,
+nine hundred and twenty-five fine. What we are trying to find out is how
+that gold got into the United States."
+
+"A shipment of that size should be easy to trace."
+
+"It would seem so, but it hasn't been. We have accounted for every pound
+of every shipment that has come in through a port of entry, and we have
+checked almost that close on the output of every mine in the United
+States. If the gold came from Russia, it would have had to cross Europe,
+and we can't get any trace of it from abroad. It looks as though they
+were _making_ it."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dr. Bird rubbed his head thoughtfully.
+
+"Possible, but hardly probable," he said. "How much did you say they
+had?"
+
+"Over three millions in thirty-pound bars. Each bar shows signs of
+having a mint mark chiselled off, but that don't help much for they have
+done too good a job. It has us pretty well bluffed."
+
+Again Dr. Bird rubbed his head.
+
+"Telephone Admiral Buck, and then phone Bolton and tell him exactly what
+I told you to: that you will be away indefinitely. When he gets through
+exploding, tell him that you are going with me and that possibly, just
+barely possibly, we might be on the trail of that gold shipment."
+
+"On the trail of the gold!" gasped Carnes. "Surely, Doctor, you don't
+think--"
+
+"Once in a while, old dear," replied the Doctor with a chuckle, "which
+is more than anyone in the Secret Service does. You might tell Bolton
+that I said that, but hang up quickly if you do. I don't want the wires
+of my telephone melted off. No, Carnesy, I have no miraculous
+inspiration as to where that gold is coming from; I just have a plain
+old-fashioned hunch, and that hunch is that we are going to have lots of
+fun and more than our share of danger before we see Washington again.
+After you get through bearding Bolton in his den, you might call the
+Chief of the Air Corps and ask him to have a bomber held at Langley
+Field subject to my orders. If he squawks any, I'll talk to him."
+
+He turned to a telephone which stood on his desk and lifted the
+receiver.
+
+"Get Mr. Lambertson on the wire," he said. "He is the chief technician
+of the Pyrex Glass Works at Corning, New Jersey."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The _U.S.S. Minneconsin_ steamed out of New York harbor and headed down
+toward the lower bay. On her forward deck rested a huge globe. The
+bottom quarter of the sphere was made of some dark opaque substance but
+the upper portion was transparent as crystal. Through the walls could be
+seen a quantity of apparatus resting on the opaque bottom portion. Two
+mechanics from the Bureau of Standards were making final adjustments of
+one of the pieces of apparatus, which resembled a tank fitted with a
+piston geared to an electric motor. From the tank, tubes ran to four
+hollow pipes, an inch and a half in diameter, which ran through the skin
+and extended thirty inches from the outer skin of the twenty-foot
+sphere. Dr. Bird stood near talking with the executive officer of the
+ship and from time to time giving a brief word of direction to the
+mechanics.
+
+"It's safer than you might think, Commander," he said. "In the first
+place, that globe is not made of ordinary glass; it is made of
+vitrilene, a new semi-malleable glass which was developed at the Bureau
+and which is being made on an experimental scale for us by the Pyrex
+people. It is much stronger than ordinary glass, and is not sensitive to
+shock. It is also perfectly transparent to ultra-violet light, being
+superior even to rock crystal or fused quartz in that respect. The
+walls, as you have noticed, are four inches thick, and I have calculated
+that the ball will stand a uniform external pressure of thirty-five
+hundred atmospheres, the pressure which would be encountered at a depth
+of about twenty miles. I believe that it will stand a squeeze of six
+thousand tons without buckling, and it is impossible to fracture it by
+shock. It could be dropped from the top of the Woolworth Building, and
+it would just bounce."
+
+"It seems incredible that it could stand such a pressure as you have
+named."
+
+"My figures are conservative ones. Lambertson calculated them even
+higher, but we allowed for the fact that this is the first large mass of
+the material to be cast, and lowered them."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"But suppose your lifting cable should break?" objected the naval
+officer. "The outfit weighs a good many tons."
+
+"You notice that the lower quarter is made of lead. The specific gravity
+of the entire globe when sealed up tight with two men in it is only a
+little more than unity. In the water its weight is so little that a
+three-inch manilla hawser would raise it, let alone a steel cable. I
+have another safety device. Granted that the cable should snap, I can
+detach the lead from it and it would shoot to the surface like a
+rocket."
+
+"How long can you remain under water in it?"
+
+"A week, if necessary. I have an oxygen tank and a carbon dioxide
+removing apparatus which will keep the air in good condition. The globe
+is electrically lighted, and can be heated if necessary. Should my
+telephone line become fouled and broken, I have a radio set which will
+enable me to communicate with you. I can't see that it is especially
+dangerous; not nearly as much so as a submarine."
+
+"What is your object in going down, if I may ask?"
+
+"To take pictures and to explore the wreck if we can. The globe is
+equipped with huge floodlights and excellent cameras. The salvage people
+are having a little trouble and we are trying to help them out."
+
+"You mentioned exploring. Can you leave the globe while it is under
+water?"
+
+"Yes. There is a locking device for doing so. A man in a diving suit can
+enter the lock and fill it with water. Once the external pressure is
+released he can open the outer door and step out. Coming back, he seals
+the outer door and the man inside blows out the lock and compressed air
+and then the inner door can be opened. It is the same principle as a
+torpedo tube."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A jangle of bells interrupted them and the _Minneconsin_ slowed down.
+Commander Lawrence stepped to the rail and gave a sharp order to the
+navigating officer on the bridge. The bells jangled again and the ship's
+engines stopped.
+
+"We are almost over the buoy, Doctor," he said.
+
+Dr. Bird nodded and spoke to the two mechanics. With a few final
+touches to the apparatus they emerged from the globe and Dr. Bird
+entered.
+
+"Come on, Carnes," he called. "No backing out at the last minute."
+
+Carnes stepped forward with a sickly smile and joined the Doctor in the
+huge sphere.
+
+"All right, boys; close her up."
+
+The mechanics swung the outer door into place with a crane. Both the
+edge of the door and the surface against which it fitted had been ground
+flat and were in addition faced with soft rubber. Bolts were fastened in
+the door which passed through holes in the main sphere, and Dr. Bird
+spun nuts onto them and tightened them with a heavy wrench. He and
+Carnes lifted the smaller inner door into place and bolted it tight. Dr.
+Bird stepped to the telephone.
+
+"Lower away," he directed.
+
+From a boom attached to the _Minneconsin's_ forward fighting top, a huge
+steel cable swung down, and the latch at the end of the cable was closed
+over a vitrilene ring which was fastened to the top of the sphere. The
+cable tightened and the globe with the two men in it was lifted over the
+side of the battleship and lowered gently into the water. Carnes
+involuntarily ducked and threw up his hand as the waters closed over
+them. Dr. Bird laughed.
+
+"Look up, Carnes," he said.
+
+Carnes gasped as he looked up and saw the surface of the water above
+him. Dr. Bird laughed again and turned to the telephone.
+
+"Lower away," he said. "Everything is tight."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The globe descended into the depths of the sea. Darker and darker it
+grew until only a faint twilight glow filled the sphere. A dark bulk
+loomed before them. Dr. Bird snapped on one of his huge floodlights and
+pointed.
+
+"The _Arethusa_," he said.
+
+The ill-fated vessel lay on her side with a huge jagged hole torn in her
+fabric amidships.
+
+"That's where her boilers burst," explained the Doctor. "Luckily we have
+a hard bottom to deal with. Let's see if we can locate any of Mitchell's
+sea serpents."
+
+He turned on other flood lights and swept the bottom of the sea with
+them. The huge beams bored out into the water for a quarter of a mile,
+but nothing unusual was to be seen. Dr. Bird turned his attention again
+to the wreck.
+
+"Things look normal from this side," he said after a prolonged scrutiny.
+"I'll have the _Minneconsin_ steam around it while we look it over."
+
+In response to his telephone orders the ship above them swung around the
+wreck in a circle, and Carnes and the Doctor viewed each side in turn.
+But nothing of a suspicious nature made its appearance. The sphere
+stopped opposite the hole in the side and Dr. Bird turned to Carnes.
+
+"I'm going to put on a diving suit and explore that wreck," he said. "If
+there ever was any danger, it isn't apparent now; and I can't find out
+anything until I get inside."
+
+"Don't do it, Doctor!" cried Carnes. "Remember what happened to the
+other divers!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"We don't know what happened to them, Carnes. No matter what it was,
+there is no danger apparent right now, and I've got to get into that
+ship before I can get any real information. We could have lowered an
+under-sea camera and learned as much as we have so far."
+
+"Let me go instead of you, Doctor."
+
+"I'm sorry to refuse you, old dear, but frankly, I wouldn't trust your
+judgment as to what you had seen if you went alone; and we can't both
+go."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"If we both went, who would work the air to let us back in? No, this is
+a one-man job and I'm the one to do it. While I am gone, keep a sharp
+lookout, and if you see anything unusual call me at once."
+
+"How can I call you?"
+
+"On this small radio phone. A pair of receivers tuned to the right
+wave-length are in my diving helmet, and I will be able to hear you
+although I can't reply. I won't be gone long: I have only a small air
+tank, large enough to keep me going for thirty minutes. Now help me into
+my suit and keep a sharp watch. A timely warning may save my life if
+anything happens."
+
+With Carnes' assistance, Dr. Bird donned a deep-sea diving outfit and
+screwed down the helmet. He crawled through the inner door into the lock
+and lifted the inner door into place. Carnes fastened the door with nuts
+and the Doctor opened a pair of valves in the outer door and filled the
+lock with water. He removed the outer door; and, taking in one hand a
+steel-shod twelve-foot pike with a hook on the end, and in the other a
+waterproof flashlight, he sallied forth. As he left the shell he paused
+for a moment, and then returned and picked up the heavy wrench with
+which he had removed the nuts holding the outer door into place. He
+fastened the tool to the belt of his suit. Then, with a wave of his hand
+toward the detective, he approached the hulk.
+
+The hole in the side was too high for him to reach, but he hooked the
+end of his pike in one of the joints of the _Arethusa's_ plates and
+climbed slowly and painfully up the side of the vessel. As he
+disappeared into the hull, Carnes realized with a sudden start that he
+had been watching his friend and neglecting the duty imposed on him of
+keeping a sharp watch. He turned quickly to the floodlights and searched
+the sea bottom.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Nothing appeared, and the minutes moved as slowly as hours should.
+Carnes felt that he had been submerged alone for weeks, and his nerves
+grew so tense that he felt that he would scream in another instant. A
+sudden thought sobered him like a dash of cold water. If he screamed,
+Dr. Bird would take it for an alarm signal and possibly be afraid to
+emerge from the vessel. His watch showed him that the Doctor had been
+gone for twenty-five minutes and he moved slowly to the radio
+transmitter.
+
+"Dr. Bird," he said slowly and distinctly, "you have been gone nearly
+thirty minutes. Nothing alarming has appeared but I will feel better
+when I see you coming back."
+
+He glued his eyes on the opening in the ship's side and waited. Five
+minutes passed, and then ten, with no signs of the Doctor. Carnes moved
+again to the receiver.
+
+"It has been over half an hour. Doctor," he cried in a pleading voice.
+"If you are all right, for God's sake show yourself. I am frantic with
+worry."
+
+Another five minutes passed, and the sweat dripped in a steady stream
+from the detective's chin. Suddenly he gave a sob of relief and sank
+back against the side of the globe. A bulky figure showed at the edge of
+the hole, and Dr. Bird climbed slowly and heavily out of the hold and
+dropped to the sea bottom. He lay prone for a moment before he rose and
+made his way with evident effort toward the sphere. He entered the
+compartment and with a heroic effort lifted the outer door into place,
+and feebly and with fumbling fingers placed nuts on the bolts. His hands
+wandered uncertainly toward the valves and closed the upper one. He
+waved his hand toward Carnes and sank in a heap on the floor of the
+lock.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+With trembling hands Carnes connected the air and opened the valve. Air
+flowed into the lock and the water was gradually forced out. When the
+lock was empty, he waited for Dr. Bird to close the outer valve but the
+Doctor did not move. Carnes tore at the bolts which held the inner door
+and threw his weight against it. It held against his assault, and he
+thought frantically. An inspiration came to him, and he disconnected
+the air valve. With a whistling rush, the air from the lock rushed into
+the sphere and he forced open the inner door. A stream of sea water
+drove against his feet through the open valve, and he reached for the
+valve to close it. The force of the water held it open for a moment, but
+he threw every ounce of his strength into the effort. The valve slowly
+closed.
+
+It was beyond his strength to haul the heavy Doctor with his pressure
+diving suit through the restricted confines of the inner door, so Carnes
+wormed his way into the lock and with trembling fingers unscrewed the
+helmet of the Doctor's diving suit. The helmet clanged to the floor and
+Carnes scooped up his hands full of water and dashed it into the
+Doctor's face. There was no response and he was at his wit's end. He
+sprang for the radio to order the sphere hauled up when his glance fell
+on the oxygen tank. It took him only a moment to connect a rubber hose
+to the tank, and in a few seconds a blast of the life-giving gas was
+blowing into the scientist's face. Dr. Bird gave a convulsive gasp or
+two and opened his eyes.
+
+"Shut off the juice, Carnes," he said faintly. "Too much of that's
+bad."
+
+Carnes shut off the oxygen and Dr. Bird struggled to a sitting position
+and inhaled deep breaths.
+
+"That was a narrow squeak, old dear," he said faintly. "Give me a hand
+and I'll climb in."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+With the detective's aid he climbed into the sphere and Carnes fastened
+the inner door. Slowly the Doctor rid himself of the diving suit and lay
+prone on the floor, his breath still coming in gasps.
+
+"Thanks for your warning about the time, Carnes," he said. "I knew that
+my air supply was running short but I was caught down there and couldn't
+readily free myself. I thought for a while that my time had come, but it
+wasn't so written. By the looks of things, I freed myself just in
+time."
+
+"Did you find out anything?" asked the detective eagerly.
+
+"I did," replied Dr. Bird grimly. "For one thing, the gold is no longer
+in the hold of the _Arethusa_."
+
+"It's gone?"
+
+"Clean as a whistle, every bar of it. A hole has been cut in the vault
+around the combination, and the bars slid back and the door opened. The
+gold has been stolen."
+
+"Might it not have been stolen before the vessel sank?"
+
+"The idea occurred to me of course, and I examined things pretty
+carefully. I know that the theft occurred after the vessel sank."
+
+"How could you tell?"
+
+"For one thing, the hole was cut with an under-water cutting torch. For
+the second, look here."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Doctor rolled up his trousers and showed the detective his leg.
+Carnes cried out as he saw huge purple welts on it.
+
+"What caused that?" he cried.
+
+"As I entered the vault, I stepped full into a steel bear trap which was
+set there for the purpose of catching and holding anyone who entered.
+Someone has visited the _Arethusa_, since she sank, and looted her, and
+also arranged so that any diver who got as far as the vault would never
+return to the surface to tell of it. Luckily for myself, I carried a
+heavy wrench and was able to free myself. Most divers don't carry such a
+thing."
+
+"But who could have done it?"
+
+"That's what we have got to find out, and we aren't going to do it down
+here. Give the word to have us hauled up; and, Carnes, don't mention
+anything about the looting of the vessel. Allow it to be understood that
+I couldn't get into the hold. We'll head back for New York at once. I
+want to have a few small changes made in this sphere before we use it
+again. While I am doing that, I want you to get hold of the Coast Guard
+or the Immigration Service or whoever it is that has the complete
+records in that case of alien smuggling, by the Young Labor party. When
+you get the information, report to me and we'll go over it. You might
+also drop a hint to Captain Starley that will stop all further attempts
+at salvage operations for a few days. Tell him that I'll arrange to have
+a Coast Guard cutter guard the locality of the wreck."
+
+"Won't that be rather risky for the cutter?"
+
+"I think not. The gold is gone and there is no reason to apprehend any
+further danger in that locality, at least for the present."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At nine o'clock next morning Carnes and Dr. Bird sat in the office of
+Lieutenant Commander Minden of the United States Coast Guard, listening
+intently to the history of the alien smuggling case. Commander Minden
+was saying:
+
+"Their boats would load up and clear ostensibly for Rio de Janeiro or
+some other South American port, but once they were in the Atlantic, they
+would alter their course and head from the Massachusetts coast. Of
+course, we had no right to interfere with them on the high seas, and
+they never came closer than fifty miles of our coast line. When they got
+that close, they would cruise slowly back and forth for a few days and
+then steam away south to the port they had cleared for. When they got
+there, of course there were no passengers on board.
+
+"We patrolled the coast carefully while they were around but we never
+got any indication of any landing of aliens and yet we knew they were
+being landed in some way. We drew lines so close that a cork couldn't
+get by without being seen and we even had the air patrolled, but with no
+results. Eventually the air patrol was the thing that gave them away.
+
+"They had been operating so successfully that they evidently got
+careless and started a load off late in the night so they didn't reach
+the coast by dawn. A Navy plane was flying along the coast-line about
+twelve miles off when they spotted a submarine running parallel with the
+coast, headed north. It didn't look like an American craft and they went
+on and radioed Washington and found that we had no under-sea craft in
+that neighborhood. They returned to their patrol and followed the sub
+for a matter of thirty or forty miles up the coast, and then it turned
+in right toward the shore. The shore line there is rocky, and, at the
+point where the sub was heading, it falls sheer about two hundred
+fathoms. The sub ran right at the cliff and disappeared from view."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lieutenant Commander Minden paused impressively. Carnes and Dr. Bird set
+forward in their chairs, for it was evident that the crux of the story
+was at hand.
+
+"When the plane reported what they had seen, we knew how those aliens
+were being landed. The point where the sub went in gave us a good idea
+of the location of their base and we threw a cordon of men around and
+searched. A Navy sub was sent to the scene and they reported that there
+was a tunnel opening into the rock, about a hundred fathoms under water,
+running for they had no idea how far under the land. They stayed to
+guard the hole while we combed the land. It took us a week to locate the
+place, but we traced some truck loads of food and finally found it. This
+tunnel ran under the land for a mile and then ended in a large cave
+underground. The Young Labor party had established a regular receiving
+depot there, and took the aliens from the sub and kept them for a day or
+two until they had a chance to load them into trucks and run them into
+Boston or some other town in the night.
+
+"Once we had the place spotted, we sent a gang in and captured the whole
+works without any trouble. The underground cavern had no natural opening
+to the surface, but one had been made by blasting. We captured the
+whole lot and then sealed the end of the hole with rock and concrete.
+That was the end of the affair."
+
+"Thank you, Commander; you have given us a very graphic description of
+it. I suppose you could find the entrance which was sealed up?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Easily. I led the raiding party. I forgot to mention one blunder we
+made. Evidently some word of our plans leaked out, for the sub which was
+guarding the outer end of the tunnel was called away by a radio message
+supposed to be from the Navy Department. It had gone only a short
+distance, however, when the commander smelled a rat and made his way
+back. He was too late. He was just in time to see the sub emerge from
+the hole and head into the open sea. He gave chase, but the other sub
+was faster than the Navy boat and it got clear away. The leader of the
+gang must have been on it, for we didn't get him."
+
+"Who was the leader?"
+
+"From some records we captured, his name was Ivan Saranoff. I never saw
+him."
+
+"Saranoff?" said Dr. Bird thoughtfully. "The name seems familiar. Where
+have I--Thunder! I know now. He was at one time a member of the faculty
+of St. Petersburg. He was one of the leading biologists of his time.
+Carnes, we've found our man."
+
+"If you are thinking of Saranoff, I am afraid you are mistaken, Doctor,"
+said Commander Minden. "Neither he nor his submarine have ever been
+heard of since and it has been generally conceded that they were lost at
+sea. We had some pretty rough weather just after that affair."
+
+"Rough weather doesn't mean much to a sub, Commander. I expect that he's
+our man. At any rate, the place we want to go is the end of that
+tunnel."
+
+"I'm at your service, Doctor."
+
+"Carnes, get the location of that tunnel entrance from Commander Minden
+and order the _Minneconsin_ to proceed north along the coast to that
+vicinity and stand by for radio orders. I am going to telephone Mitchell
+Field and get a plane. We have no time to lose."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The plane from Mitchell Field roared down to a landing, and Carnes, Dr.
+Bird and Commander Minden dismounted from the rear cockpit and looked
+around. They had landed in a smooth field at the base of a rise almost
+rugged enough to be called a mountain. A group of three men were
+standing near them as they got out of the plane. One of the men
+approached.
+
+"Dr. Bird?" asked the newcomer. "I am Tom Harron, United States Marshal.
+These two men are deputies. I understand that I am to report to you for
+orders."
+
+"I'm glad to know you, Mr. Harron. This is Operative Carnes of the
+Secret Service and Commander Minden of the Coast Guard. We are going to
+explore an underground cavern that is located in this vicinity."
+
+"Do you mean the one where they used to smuggle aliens? That is closed
+up. I was in charge of that work and we closed it tight as a drum two
+years ago."
+
+"Can you find the entrance?"
+
+"Sure. It isn't over a mile from here."
+
+"Lead the way, then. We want to take a look at it."
+
+The marshal led the way toward the eminence and took a path which led up
+a gully in its side. He paused for a moment to take his bearings and
+then turned sharply to his left and climbed part way up the side of the
+ravine.
+
+"Here it is," he announced. An expression of astonishment crossed his
+face and he examined the ground closely. "By Golly, Doc," he went on as
+he straightened up, "this place has been opened since I left it!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dr. Bird hurried forward and joined him. The heavy stone and concrete
+with which the entrance to the cavern had been sealed were undisturbed,
+but in the side of the hill was set a steel door beside the concrete.
+There was no sign of a keyhole or other means of entering it.
+
+"Was this steel door part of your work?" asked Carnes.
+
+"No, sir, it wasn't. We sealed it solid. That door has been put there
+since."
+
+Dr. Bird closely examined the structure. He tapped it and went around
+the edges and then straightened up and took a small pocket compass from
+his pocket and opened the case. The needle swung crazily for a moment
+and then pointed straight toward the door.
+
+"A magnetic lock," he exclaimed. "If we could find the power line it
+would be easy to force, but finding that line might take us a week. At
+any rate, we have found out what we were after. This is their base from
+which they are operating. Mr. Harron, I want you to station a guard
+armed with rifles at this door day and night until I personally relieve
+you. Remember, until I relieve you, in person. Verbal or written orders
+don't go. Capture or kill anyone who tries to enter or leave the cavern
+through this entrance. Just now we'll find that cavern more vulnerable
+from the sea end, and that is where I mean to attack. We'll force that
+door and explore from this end later. Commander Minden, you may stay
+here with Mr. Harron, if you like, or you may come with Carnes and me.
+We are going on board the _Minneconsin_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Mitchell Field plane roared to a take-off and bore south along the
+coast. Half an hour of flying brought them in view of the battleship
+steaming at full speed up the coast. Dr. Bird radioed instructions to
+the ship, and an hour later a launch picked them up from the beach and
+took them out. As soon as they were on board they resumed their
+progress, and in two hours the peak that Dr. Bird had marked as a
+landmark was opposite.
+
+"Steam in as close to the shore as you can safely," he said, "and then
+lower us. Once we are down, you will be guided by our telephoned
+instructions. Come on, Carnes, let's go."
+
+The detective followed him into the sphere as the _Minneconsin_ edged up
+toward the shore. The huge ball was lifted from the deck and lowered
+gently into two hundred fathoms of water. It was pitch dark at that
+depth, and Dr. Bird switched on one floodlight and studied the cliff
+which rose a hundred yards from them.
+
+"We have missed the place, Carnes," he said. "We'll have them pull us up
+a few hundred feet and then steam along the coast."
+
+He turned to the telephone and the sphere rose while the battleship
+steamed slowly ahead, the vitrilene ball following in her wake. For a
+quarter of a mile they continued on their way, and then Dr. Bird halted
+the ship.
+
+"What depth are we?" he asked. "Eighty fathoms? All right, lower us,
+please."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The ball sank until it rested on the sea bottom, and Dr. Bird turned on
+two additional floodlights and studied the surroundings. The bed of the
+ocean was literally covered with lobster and crab shell, with the bones
+of fish scattered here and there among them. A few bones of land animals
+were mixed with the debris and Carnes gave a gasp as Dr. Bird pointed
+out to him a diving helmet.
+
+"We are on the right track," said the scientist grimly. He stepped to
+the telephone and ordered the sphere raised to one hundred fathoms. The
+ship moved forward along the coast until Dr. Bird again stepped to the
+telephone and halted it. Before them yawned the entrance to the
+underground tunnel. It was about two hundred feet high and three hundred
+across, and their most powerful beams would not penetrate to the end of
+it. A pile of debris could be seen on the floor of the tunnel and
+Carnes fancied that he could see another diving helmet among the litter.
+Dr. Bird pointed toward the side of the cavern.
+
+"See those floodlights fastened to the cliff so that their beams will
+sweep across the mouth of the tunnel when they are lighted?" he said.
+"Apparently the cave is used as a prison and the light beams are the
+bars. The creature is not at home just now or the bars would be up. My
+God! Look at that, Carnes!"
+
+Carnes stared and echoed the Doctor's cry of surprise. Clinging to a
+shelf of rock which extended out from the wall of the cavern and half
+hidden among the seaweed was a huge marine creature. It looked like a
+huge black slug with rudimentary eyes and mouth. The thing was fifty
+feet in length and fully fifteen feet in diameter. It hung there, moving
+sluggishly as though breathing, and rudimentary tentacles projecting
+from one end moved in the water.
+
+"What is it, Doctor?" asked Carnes in a voice of awe.
+
+"It is a typical trochosphere of the giant octopus, the devil fish of
+Indian Ocean legend, multiplied a thousand times," he replied. "When the
+octopus lays its eggs, they hatch out into the larval form. The free
+swimming larva is known as a trochosphere, and I am positive that that
+is what we see; but look at the size of the thing! Man alive, if that
+ever developed, I can't conceive of its dimensions!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I have seen pictures of a huge octopus pulling down a ship," said
+Carnes, "but I always fancied they were imaginary."
+
+"They are. This monstrosity before us is no product of nature. A dozen
+of them would depopulate the seas in a year. It is a hideous parody of
+nature conceived in the brain of a madman and produced by some glandular
+disturbance. Saranoff spent years in glandular experimentation, and no
+doubt he has managed to stimulate the thyroid of a normal octopus and
+produce a giant. I fancy that the immediate parent of the thing before
+us was of normal size, and so, probably, are its brothers and sisters.
+The phenomenon of giantism of this nature occurs in alternate
+generations and then only in rare instances. Its grandparent may not be
+far away, however. I wish it was safe to use a submarine to explore that
+cavern."
+
+"Why isn't it?"
+
+"Any creature powerful enough to pull the _Arethusa_ under water would
+crush a frail submarine without effort. Anyway, a Navy sub isn't built
+for under-water exploration like this ball is. The window space is quite
+limited and they aren't equipped with powerful floodlights. I would like
+to be able to reach that thing and destroy it, but it can wait until
+later. The best thing we can do is to put out our lights and wait."
+
+His hand sought the light switch, and the globe became dark. Only a tiny
+glimmer of light came down to them from the surface, a hundred fathoms
+above. In the darkness they stared into the depths of the sea.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For an hour they waited and then Dr. Bird grasped Carnes by the
+shoulder and pointed. Far in the distance could be seen a tiny point
+of light. It wavered and winked and at times disappeared, but it was
+gradually approaching them. Dr. Bird stepped to the telephone and the
+_Minneconsin_ moved a hundred yards further from the shore. The light
+disappeared again as though hidden by some opaque body. Their eyes
+had become accustomed to the dim light and they could dimly see a long
+snake-like body approach the globe and then suddenly withdraw.
+
+The light appeared again only a few hundred yards away. The water
+swirled and the sphere swayed drunkenly as some gigantic body moved past
+it with express train speed and entered the mouth of the cavern. The
+light turned toward them and they could see the dim outlines of a small
+submarine on which it was mounted. Another rush of water came as the
+object which had entered the cave started to leave it, and the light
+swung around. It bore on a huge black body, and was reflected with a red
+glow from huge eyes, and the creature backed again into the cave. Back
+and forth across the mouth of the cavern the light played, and the
+watchers caught a glimpse of a huge parrot beak which could have
+engulfed a freight car. From the cavern projected twisting tentacles of
+gargantuan dimensions, and red eyes, thirty feet in diameter, glared
+balefully at them. For several minutes the light of the submarine played
+across the mouth of the cave, and then the floodlights on the cliff
+sprang into full glow and bathed the ball and the mouth of the tunnel in
+a flood of light.
+
+Before their horrified gaze was an octopus of a size to make them
+disbelieve their eyes. The submarine had moved up to within a few feet
+of them, and the light from it played full on the ball. The submarine
+maneuvered in the vicinity, keeping the ball full in the beam of its
+light, and then drew back. As it did so, the floodlights on the cliff
+died out and the beam of the submarine's light was directed away from
+them. Dr. Bird jumped to the telephone.
+
+"Head straight out to sea and full speed ahead!" he shouted. "Don't try
+to pull us in; tow us!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The ball swayed as the _Minneconsin's_ mighty engines responded to his
+orders and the cliff wall disappeared.
+
+"As long as they know we're here, we might as well announce our presence
+in good style," said the doctor grimly as he closed a switch and threw
+all of the sphere's huge lights into action. He had turned on the lights
+just in time, for even as he did so a mighty tentacle shot out of the
+darkness and wrapped itself around the ball. For a moment it clung there
+and then was withdrawn.
+
+"The thing can't stand light," remarked the doctor as he threw off the
+switch. "That sub was herding it like a cow by the use of a light beam.
+As long as we are lighted up we are safe from attack."
+
+"Then for God's sake turn on the lights!" cried Carnes.
+
+"I want it to attack us," replied the doctor calmly. "We have no
+offensive weapons and only by meeting an attack can we harm the thing."
+
+As he spoke there came a soft whisper of sound from the vitrilene walls
+and they were thrown from their feet by a sudden jerk. Dr. Bird stumbled
+to the switch and closed it, and the ball was flooded with light. Two
+arms were now on them but they were slowly withdrawn as the lights
+glared forth. The huge outlines of the beast could be seen as it
+followed them toward the surface. Its great eyes glared at them
+hungrily. The submarine was visible only as a speck of light in the
+distance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The _Minneconsin's_ speed was picking up under the urge of her huge
+steam turbines, and the ball was nearing the surface. The sea was light
+enough now that they could see for quite a distance. The telephone bell
+jangled and Dr. Bird picked the receiver from its hook.
+
+"Hello," he said. "What's that? You can? By all means, fire. Yes,
+indeed, we're well out of danger; we must be thirty or forty feet down.
+Watch the fun now," he went on to Carnes as he replaced the receiver.
+"The beast is showing above the surface and they're going to shell it."
+
+They watched the surface and suddenly there came a flash of light
+followed by a dull boom of sound. The huge octopus suddenly sank below
+them, thrashing its arms about wildly.
+
+"A hit!" shouted Dr. Bird into the telephone. "Get it again if it shows
+up. I want it to get good and mad."
+
+He turned off the lights in the ball and the octopus attacked again. The
+shell had taught it caution and it kept well down, but three huge arms
+came up from the depths of the sea and wrapped themselves about the
+ball. The forward motion stopped for a moment, and then came a jerk that
+threw them down. The ball started to sink.
+
+"Our cable has parted!" cried the doctor. "Turn on the lights!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Carnes closed the switch. The ball was so covered with the huge
+tentacles that they could see nothing, but the light had its usual
+effect and they were released. The ball sank toward the bottom and they
+could see the huge cephalopod lying below watching them. Blood was
+flowing from a wound near one of its eyes where the _Minneconsin's_
+shell had found its mark.
+
+Toward the huge monster they sank until they lay on the bottom of the
+ocean and a few yards from it. In an instant the sea became opaque and
+they could see nothing.
+
+"He has shot his ink!" cried the doctor. "Here comes the real attack.
+Strap yourself to the wall where you can reach one of the motor
+switches."
+
+Through the darkness huge arms came out and wrapped themselves around
+the ball. The heavy vitrilene groaned under the enormous pressure which
+was applied, but it held. The ink was clearing slightly and they could
+see that the sphere was covered by the arms. The mass moved and the huge
+maw opened before them. The pipes projecting from the sides of the ball
+were buried in the creature's flesh.
+
+"Good Lord, he's going to swallow us!" gasped the doctor. "Quick,
+Carnes, the motor switch."
+
+He closed one of them as he spoke, and the powerful little electric
+motors began to hum, forcing forward the piston attached to the tank
+connected to the hollow rods. Steadily the little motors hummed, and the
+tank emptied through the rods into the body of the giant cephalopod.
+
+"I hope the stuff works fast," groaned the doctor as they approached
+closer to the giant maw. "I never tried giving an octopus a hypodermic
+injection of prussic acid before, but it ought to do the business.
+There's enough acid there to kill half New York City."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Carnes blanched as the ball approached the mouth. One by one the arms
+unwound until only one was holding them and the jaws opened wider. They
+were almost in them when the motion stopped. They could feel a shudder
+run through the arm which held them. For a moment the arm alternately
+expanded and contracted, almost releasing them only to clutch them
+again. Another arm came from the depths and whipped about the ball, and
+again the vitrilene groaned at the pressure which was applied. The arms
+were suddenly withdrawn and the ball started to sink.
+
+"Drop the lead, Carnes!" cried the doctor. With the aid of the detective
+he operated the electric catches which held the huge mass of lead to the
+bottom, and the sphere shot up through the water like a rocket. It
+leaped clear of the water and fell back with a splash. A half mile away
+the _Minneconsin_ was swinging in a wide circle to head back toward
+them. They turned their gaze toward the shore.
+
+As they looked a giant arm shot a hundred yards up into the air,
+twisting and writhing frantically. It disappeared, and another, and then
+half a dozen flashed into the air. The arms dipped below the surface. A
+huge black body reared its bulk free from the water for a moment, and
+the sea boiled as though in a violent storm. The body sank and again the
+arms were thrown up, twisting and turning like a half dozen huge snakes.
+The whole creature sank below the waves and the ball tossed back and
+forth, often buried under tons of water and once tossed thirty feet into
+the air by the huge waves.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A momentary lull came in the waves. Carnes gave a cry of astonishment
+and pointed toward the shore. With an effort, Dr. Bird twisted himself
+in his lashing and looked in that direction. The huge body had again
+come to the surface, and three of the arms were towering into the air.
+Grasped in them was a long, black, cigar-shaped object. As they watched
+the object was torn into two parts and the fragments crushed by the
+enormous power of the octopus. Again the arms writhed in torment, and
+then they stiffened out. For a moment they towered in the air and then
+slowly sank below the surface of the sea.
+
+"The cyanide has worked," cried the doctor, "and in its last agonies the
+creature has turned on its creator and destroyed him. It is a shame, for
+Saranoff was a brilliant although perverted genius, and besides, I would
+have liked to have learned his method. However, I may find something
+when we open the land end and raid the cave; and really, he was too
+brilliant a man to hang for murder. Once we open the cave and I get any
+data that is there, my connection with the case will end. Trailing down
+the gold and recovering it is a routine matter for Bolton, and one in
+which he won't need my help."
+
+"What about that creature we saw in the cave, Doctor? Won't it hatch
+into another terror of the sea like the thing that destroyed the ship?"
+
+"The trochosphere? No, I'm not worried there. It won't try to leave the
+cave for some days yet, and by that time we'll have the land end opened
+and the floodlights turned on. They will keep it there and it will
+starve to death. We could send down a sub to feed it a torpedo, but
+there's no need. Nature will dispose of it. Meanwhile, I hope the
+_Minneconsin_ rigs up a jury tackle pretty soon and takes us on board.
+I'm getting seasick."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_IN THE NEXT ISSUE_
+
+ THE FIFTH-DIMENSION CATAPULT
+
+ _A Novelette of an Extraordinary Interdimensional Rescue_
+ _By_ Murray Leinster
+
+
+ THE GATE TO XORAN
+
+ _A Thrilling Story of a Metal Man's Visit to Earth_
+ _By_ Hal K. Wells
+
+
+ THE EYE OF ALLAH
+
+ _A Story of the Tracking Down of a Mysterious Scientific Killer_
+ _By_ C. D. Willard
+
+
+ THE PIRATE PLANET
+
+ _Part Three of the Outstanding Current Novel_
+ _By_ Charles W. Diffin
+
+
+ ----_AND OTHERS_!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Gray Denim
+
+_By Harl Vincent_
+
+ The blood of the Van Dorn's ran in Karl's veins. He rode the skies
+ like an avenging god.
+
+[Illustration: _There came a stabbing pencil of light from over Karl's
+shoulder._]
+
+
+Beneath the huge central arch in Cooper Square a meeting was in
+progress--a gathering of the gray-clad workers of the lower levels of
+New York. Less than two hundred of their number were in evidence, and
+these huddled in dejected groups around the pedestal from which a
+fiery-tongued orator was addressing them. Lounging negligently at the
+edge of the small crowd were a dozen of the red police.
+
+"I tell you, comrades," the speaker was shouting, "the time has come
+when we must revolt. We must battle to the death with the wearers of the
+purple. Why work out our lives down here so they can live in the lap of
+luxury over our heads? Why labor day after day at the oxygen generators
+to give them the fresh air they breathe?"
+
+The speaker paused uncertainly as a chorus of raucous laughter came to
+his ears. He glared belligerently at a group of newcomers who stood
+aloof from his own gathering. Seven or eight of them there were, and
+they wore the gray with obvious discomfort. Slummers! Well, they'd hear
+something they could carry back with them when they returned to their
+homes!
+
+"Why," he continued in rising tones, "do we sit at the controls of the
+pneumatic tubes which carry thousands of our fellows to tasks equally
+irksome, while they of the purple ride their air yachts to the pleasure
+cities of the sky lanes? Never in the history of mankind have the poor
+been poorer and the rich richer!"
+
+"Yah!" shouted a disrespectful voice from among the newcomers. "You're
+full o' bunk! Nothing but bunk!"
+
+An ominous murmur swelled from the crowd and the red police roused from
+their lethargy. The mounting scream of a siren echoed in the vaulted
+recesses above and re-echoed from the surrounding columns--the call for
+reserves.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+All was confusion in the Square. The little group of newcomers
+immediately became the center of a mêlée of dangerous proportions. Some
+of the more timid of the wearers of the gray struggled to get out of the
+crowd and away. Others, not in sympathy with the speaker, rushed to the
+support of the besieged visitors. The police were, for the moment,
+overwhelmed.
+
+The orator, mad with resentment and injured pride, hurled himself into
+the group. A knife flashed in his hand; rose and fell. A scream of agony
+shrilled piercingly above the din of the fighting.
+
+Then came the reserves, and the wielder of the knife turned to escape.
+He broke away from the milling combatants and made speedily for the
+shadows that lay beyond the great pillars of the Square. But he never
+reached them, for one of the red guards raised his riot pistol and
+fired. There was a dull _plop_, and a rubbery something struck the
+fleeing man and wrapped powerful tentacles around his body, binding him
+hand and foot in their swift embrace. He fell crashing to the pavement.
+
+A lieutenant of the red police was shouting his orders and the din in
+the Square was deafening. With their numbers greatly augmented, the
+guards were now in control of the situation and their maces struck left
+and right. Groans and curses came from the gray-clad workers, who now
+fought desperately to escape.
+
+Then, with startling suddenness, the artificial sunlight of the
+cavernous Square was gone, leaving the battle to continue in utter
+darkness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Cooper Square, in the year 2108, was the one gathering place in New York
+City where the wearers of the gray denim were permitted to assemble and
+discuss their grievances publicly. Deep in the maze of lower-level ways
+seldom visited by wearers of the purple, the grottolike enclosure bore
+the name of a philanthropist of the late nineteenth century and still
+carried a musty air of certain of the traditions of that period.
+
+In Astor Way, on the lowest level of all, there was a tiny book shop.
+Nestled between two of the great columns that provided foundation
+support for the eighty levels above, it was safely hidden from the gaze
+of curious passersby in the Square. Slumming parties from afar, their
+purple temporarily discarded for the gray, occasionally passed within a
+stone's throw of the little shop, never suspecting the existence of such
+a retreat amidst the dark shadows of the pillars. But to the initiated
+few amongst the wearers of the gray, and to certain of the red police,
+it was well known.
+
+Rudolph Krassin, proprietor of the establishment, was a bent and
+withered ancient. His jacket of gray denim hung loosely from his
+spare frame and his hollow cough bespoke a deep-seated ailment.
+Looking out from behind thick lenses set in his square-rimmed
+spectacles, the watery eyes seemed vacant; uncomprehending. But old
+Rudolph was a scholar--keen-witted--and a gentleman besides. To his
+many friends of the gray-clad multitude he was an anomaly; they
+could not understand his devotion to his well-thumbed volumes. But they
+listened to his words of wisdom and, more frequently than they could
+afford, parted with precious labor tickets in exchange for reading
+matter that was usually of the lighter variety.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When the fighting started in the Square, Rudolph was watching and
+listening from a point of vantage in the shadows near his shop. This
+fellow Leontardo, who was the speaker, was an agitator of the worst
+sort. His arguments always were calculated to arouse the passions of his
+hearers; to inflame them against the wearers of the purple. He had
+nothing constructive to offer. Always he spoke of destruction; war;
+bloodshed. Rudolph marveled at the patience of the red police. To-day,
+these newcomers, obviously a slumming party of youngsters bent on
+whatever mischief they could find, were interfering with the speaker.
+The old man chuckled at the first interruption. But at signs of real
+trouble he scurried into the shadows and vanished in the blackness of
+first-level passages known only to himself. He knew where to find the
+automatic sub-station of the Power Syndicate.
+
+Returning to the darkness he had created in the Square, he was relieved
+to find that the sounds of the fighting had subsided. Apparently most of
+the wearers of the gray had escaped. He skirted the avenue of pillars
+along Astor Way, feeling his way from one to another as he progressed
+toward his little shop. Peering into the blackness of the square he saw
+the feeble beams of several flash-lamps in the hands of the police. They
+were searching for survivors of the fracas, maces and riot pistols held
+ready for use. A sobbing gasp from close by set his pulses throbbing. He
+crept stealthily in the direction from which the sound had come.
+
+"Steady now," came a whispered voice. "My uncle's shop is close by.
+He'll take you in. Here--let me lift you."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There was a shuffling on the opposite side of the pillar at which
+Rudolph had halted; another grunt of pain.
+
+"Karl!" hissed the old man. It was his nephew.
+
+"Uncle Rudolph?" came the guarded response.
+
+"Yes. Can I help you?"
+
+"Quick--yes--he's fainted."
+
+The old man was around the huge base of the column in an instant. He
+groped in the darkness and his hands encountered human bodies.
+
+"Who is it?" he breathed.
+
+"One of the hecklers, Uncle. A young lad; and of the purple I think.
+He's been knifed."
+
+Together they dragged the inert form into the shelter of the long line
+of pillars. There was a trampling of many men in the square. That would
+be a second detachment of reserves. A ray of light filtered through and
+dancing shadows of the giant columns made grotesque outlines against the
+walls of the Way. A portable searchlight had been brought to the scene.
+They must hurry.
+
+Impeded by the dead weight of their burden, they made sorry progress and
+several times found it necessary to halt in the shadow of a pillar while
+the red police passed by in their search of the Square. It was with a
+sigh of relief that Rudolph opened the door of his shop and with still
+greater satisfaction closed and bolted it securely. His nephew
+shouldered the limp form of the unconscious youth and carried it to his
+own bed in one of the rear rooms.
+
+"Ugh!" exclaimed old Rudolph as he ripped open the young man's shirt,
+"it's a nasty cut. Warm water, Karl."
+
+The gaping wound was washed and bound tightly. Rudolph's experienced
+fingers told him the knife had not reached a vital spot. The youth would
+recover.
+
+"But Karl," he objected, "he wears the purple. Under the gray. See!
+It'll get us in trouble if we keep him."
+
+He was stripping the young man of his clothing to prepare him for bed.
+Suddenly there was revealed on the white skin a triangular mark. Bright
+scarlet it was and just over the right hip. He made a hasty attempt to
+hide it from the watching eyes of Karl.
+
+"Uncle!" snapped his nephew, "--the mark you call cursed! He has it,
+too!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The tall young man in gray was on his knees, tearing the hands of the
+old man away. He saw the mark clearly now. There was no further use of
+attempting to conceal it. Rudolph rose and faced his angered nephew, his
+watery eyes inscrutable.
+
+"You told me, Rudolph, that it was a brand that cursed me. I have seen
+it on him, too. You have lied to me."
+
+The old man's eyes wavered. He trembled violently.
+
+"Why did you lie?" demanded Karl. "Am I not your nephew? Am I not really
+cursed as you've maintained? Tell me--tell me!"
+
+He had the old man by the shoulders, shaking him cruelly.
+
+"Karl--Karl," begged the helpless ancient, "it was for your good. I
+swear it. You were born to the purple. That's what that mark means--not
+that you're degraded to the gray, as I said. But there's a reason. Let
+me explain."
+
+"Bah! A reason! You've kept me in this misery and squalor for a reason!
+Who's my father?"
+
+He flung Rudolph to the floor, where the old man crouched in apprehensive
+misery.
+
+"Please Karl--don't! I can explain. Just give me time. It's a long
+story."
+
+"Time! Time! For twenty-odd years you've lied to me; cheated me. My
+birthright--where is it?"
+
+He menaced his supposed uncle; was about to strike him. Then suddenly he
+was ashamed. He turned on his heel.
+
+"I'm leaving," he said shortly.
+
+"Karl--my boy," begged Rudolph Krassin, struggling to his feet. "You
+can't! That lad in there--he--"
+
+But Karl was too angry to reason.
+
+"To hell with him!" he raged, "and to hell with you! I'm through!"
+
+He stamped from the room and out into the eery shadows of the Way. Karl
+was done with his old life. He'd go to the upper levels and claim his
+rights. Some day, too, he'd punish the man who'd stolen them away. God!
+Born to the purple! To think he'd missed it all! Probably was kidnaped
+by the old rascal he'd been calling uncle. But he'd find out. Rudolph
+didn't have to explain. Fingerprint records would clear his name;
+establish his rightful station in life. He dived into a passage that
+would lead him to one of the express lifts. He'd soon be overhead.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A sergeant of the red police looked up startled from his desk as a tall
+youth in the gray denim of forty levels below appeared before him.
+
+"Well?" he growled. The stalwart young worker had stared belligerently
+and insolently, he thought.
+
+"I want to check my fingerprint record, Sergeant."
+
+"Hm. Pretty cocky, aren't you? The records for such as you are down
+below, where you belong."
+
+"Not mine, I think."
+
+"So? And who the devil are you?"
+
+"That's what I'm here to find out. I've got a triangle branded on my
+right hip."
+
+"A what?"
+
+"Triangle. Here--look!"
+
+The amazing youngster had raised his jacket and was pulling at his
+shirt. The sergeant stared at what was revealed, his eyes bulging as he
+looked.
+
+"Lord!" he gasped, "a Van Dorn--in the gray!"
+
+Quickly he turned to the radiovision and made rapid connection with
+several persons in turn--important ones, by the appearance of the
+features of each in the brilliant disc of the instrument.
+
+Karl was confused by the sudden turn of things. The sergeant talked so
+rapidly he could not catch the sense of his words. And that name, Van
+Dorn, eluded him. He knew he had heard it before, in the little shop
+down there in Astor Way. But he could not place it. He wished fervently
+that he had paid more attention to the desires of old Rudolph; had
+studied more and read the books the old man had begged him to read. His
+new surroundings confused him, too, and he knew that he was the center
+of some great new excitement.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Then they were in the room; two individuals, one in the red uniform of a
+captain of police, the other a pompous, whiskered man in purple. Others
+followed and it seemed to Karl that the room was filled with them,
+strangers all, and they stared at him and chattered incessantly. He
+experienced an overwhelming impulse to run, but mastered it and faced
+them boldly.
+
+A square of plate glass was placed under his outstretched fingers. It
+was smeared with something sticky and he watched the whiskered man as he
+held it up to the light and studied the impressions. Then there was more
+confusion. Everyone talked at once and the pompous one in purple made
+use of the radiovision, holding the square of glass near its disc for
+observation by the person he had called. The identification number was
+repeated aloud, a string of figures and letters that were a meaningless
+jumble to Karl. The room became quiet while the police captain thumbed
+the pages of a huge book he had taken from among many similar ones that
+filled a rack behind the desk.
+
+Karl's blood froze in his veins at the rumbling swish of a car speeding
+through the pneumatic tube beneath their feet. His nerves were on edge.
+Then the captain of police looked up from the book and there was a
+peculiar glint in his eyes as he spoke.
+
+"Peter Van Dorn. Missing since 2085. Wanted by Continental Government.
+Ha!"
+
+The words came to Karl's ears through a growing sensation of unreality.
+It seemed that the speaker was miles away and that his voice and
+features were those of a radiovision likeness. Wanted by the great power
+across the Atlantic! It was unthinkable. Why, he had been but an infant
+in 2085! What possible crime could he have committed? But the red police
+captain was speaking again, this time in a chill voice. And the room of
+the police, thick with the smoke of a dozen cigars, became suddenly
+stifling.
+
+"Where have you been these twenty-three years, Peter Van Dorn?" asked
+the captain. "Who have you lived with, I mean?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Something warned him to protect old Rudolph. And somehow he wished
+he had not treated the old fellow as he did when he left. His
+self-possession returned. A wave of hot resentment swept over him.
+
+"That's my affair," he said defiantly.
+
+The captain shrugged his shoulders. "Oh, well," he said, "you needn't
+answer--now. We'll find out when it's necessary. In the meanwhile we'll
+have to turn you over to the Continental Ambassador."
+
+Two of the red police advanced toward him and the rest drew back.
+
+"You mean I'm under arrest?" asked Karl incredulously.
+
+"Certainly. Of course you're not to be harmed."
+
+One of the guards had him by the arm and he saw the glint of handcuffs.
+They couldn't do this! If it had been for rioting in the Square it
+would be different. But this! It meant he was a prisoner of a foreign
+government, for what reason he could not guess. He lost his head
+completely.
+
+The captain cried out in amazement as one of his huskiest guards went
+sprawling under a well-planted punch. This youngster must be as crazy as
+was his father before him. But he was a whirlwind. Before he could be
+stopped he had tackled the other guard and with a mighty heave flung him
+halfway across the room where he fell with a thud that left him dazed
+and gasping. The pompous little man in the purple crawled under the desk
+as the sergeant leveled a slender tube at the young giant in gray.
+
+Karl ducked instinctively at sight of the weapon, but the spiteful
+crackle of its mechanism was too quick for him. A faintly luminous ray
+struck him full in the breast and stopped him in his tracks. A thrill of
+intense cold chased up his spine and a thunderbolt crashed in his brain.
+The captain caught his stiffened body as he fell.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Karl--refusing to think of himself as Peter Van Dorn--came to his senses
+as from a troubled sleep. His head ached miserably and he turned it
+slowly to view his surroundings. Then, in a flash, he remembered. The
+paralyzing ray of the red police! They never used it in the lower
+levels; but overhead--why, the swine! He sat suddenly erect and glared
+into a pair of green eyes that regarded him curiously.
+
+A quick glance showed him that he was in a small padded compartment like
+that of the pneumatic tube cars. At one end there was an amazing array
+of machinery with glittering levers and handwheels--a control board on
+which numberless tiny lights blinked and flickered in rapid succession.
+At these controls squatted the twisted figure of a dwarf. A second of
+the creatures sat at his side and stared with those horrible green
+eyes.
+
+"Lord!" he muttered. "Am I still asleep?"
+
+"No," smiled the dwarf, "you're awake, Peter Van Dorn." The misshapen
+creature did not seem unfriendly.
+
+"Then where am I, and who are you?"
+
+"You're in one of the Zar's rocket cars, speeding toward Dorn. We are
+but two of the Zar's servants--Moon men."
+
+"Rocket car? Moon men?" Karl was aghast. He wanted to pinch himself. But
+a hollow roar to the rear told him he was in a rapidly moving vessel of
+some sort. Certainly, too, these dwarfs were not figments of his
+imagination.
+
+"You've been kept completely ignorant?" asked the dwarf.
+
+"It--it seems so." Karl was bewildered. "You mean we are out in the
+open--traveling in space--to the Moon perhaps?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The dwarf laughed. "No, I wish we were," he replied. "But we are about
+halfway to the capital of the Continental Empire, greatest of world
+powers. We'll be there in an hour."
+
+"But I don't understand."
+
+"Stupid. Didn't you ever hear of the rocket ships that cross the ocean
+like a projectile, mounting a thousand miles from the surface and making
+the trip in two hours?"
+
+"No!" Karl was aghast. "Are we really in such a contraption?" he
+faltered.
+
+"Say! Are you kidding me?" The dwarf was incredulous. "Do you mean to
+tell me you know so little of your world as that? Have you never read
+anything? The news broadcasts, the thought exchangers--don't you follow
+them at all?"
+
+Karl shook his head in growing wonder. Truly Rudolph had kept him in
+ignorance. Or was it his own fault? He had refused to dig into the
+volumes old Krassin had begged him to read. The broadcasts and the
+thought machines--well, only those of the purple had access to those.
+
+"Hey, Laro!" called the dwarf to his companion, "this mole is as dumb as
+can be. Doesn't know he's alive hardly. And a Van Dorn!"
+
+The two laughed uproariously and Karl raged inwardly. Mole! So that's
+what they called wearers of the gray! He clenched his fists and rose
+unsteadily to his feet.
+
+"Sorry," apologized his tormentor. "Mustn't get sore now. It seems so
+funny to us though. And listen, kid, you'll never have another chance to
+hear it all. So, if you'll sit down and calm yourself a bit I'll give
+you an earful."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mollified, Karl listened. A marvelous tale it was, of a disgruntled
+scientist of the Eastern Hemisphere who had conquered that portion of
+the world with the aid of the inhabitants he had found on the outer side
+of the Moon; of the scientist who still ruled the East--Zar of the
+Continental Empire. A horrible war--in 2085, the year of his own
+birth--depopulated the countries of Asia, Europe and Africa and reduced
+them to subjection. There was no combatting the destructive rays and
+chemical warfare of the Moon men. The United Americas, still weakened
+from a civil war of their own, remained aloof and, for some strange
+reason, the Zar left them in peace, contenting himself with his conquest
+of practically all of the rest of the world. Now, it seemed, the two
+major powers were as separate as if on different planets, there being no
+traffic between them save by governmental sanction; and that was rarely
+given.
+
+It grew uncomfortably warm in the compartment as the rocket car entered
+the lower atmosphere but Karl listened spellbound to the astounding
+revelations of the Moon man. There came a pause in the discourse of the
+dwarf as a number of relays clicked furiously on the control board and
+the vessel slackened its speed perceptibly.
+
+"But," said Karl, thinking aloud rather than meaning to interrupt,
+"what has all this to do with me? Why does the government of this Zar
+want me?"
+
+The dwarf bent close and eyed him cautiously. "Poor kid!" he whispered,
+"it doesn't seem right that you should suffer for something that
+happened when you were born; something you know nothing about. But the
+Zar knows best. You--"
+
+There came a stabbing pencil of light from over Karl's shoulder and the
+green eyes of the dwarf went wide with horrified surprise. He clutched
+at his breast where the flame had contacted, then slowly collapsed in a
+pitiful, distorted heap. Karl recoiled from the odor of putrefaction
+that immediately filled the compartment. He whirled to face the new
+danger but saw nothing but the padded walls.
+
+Then they were in darkness save for the blinking lights of the control
+board. He was thrown forward violently and the piercing screech of
+compressed air rushing past the vessel told him they had entered the
+receiving tube at their destination and were being retarded in speed for
+the landing. This much he had gathered from the explanations of the now
+silenced dwarf.
+
+Laro, the other Moon man, remained mute at the controls. His companion
+evidently had talked too much.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The vessel had stopped and a section of the padded rear wall of the
+compartment moved back to reveal a second chamber. There were three
+other occupants of the ship and Karl knew now at whose hands the
+talkative Moon man had met his death. One of the three--all wearers of
+the purple--still held the generator of the dazzling ray in his hands.
+He decided wisely that resistance was useless and followed meekly when
+he was led from the ship.
+
+Endlessly they rode upward in a high-speed lift, dismounting finally at
+a pneumatic tube entrance. A special car whisked them roaring into the
+blackness. Then they were shot forth into the open and Karl saw the
+light of the sun for the first time in many years. They were on the
+upper surface of a great city, Dorn, the capital of the Continental
+Empire.
+
+The air was filled with darting ships of all sorts and sizes, most of
+them being pleasure craft of the wearers of the purple. To Karl it was
+the sudden realization of his dreams. He was one of them. He, too,
+should be wearing the purple. Then his heart sank as one of his guards
+prodded him into action. His dream already was shattered for they stood
+at the entrance to a great crystal pyramid that rose from the flat
+expanse of the roofs of Dorn. It was the palace of the Zar.
+
+It seemed then that fairyland had opened its gates to the young man in
+gray denim. He immediately fell under its influence when they traversed
+a long lane between rows of brightly colored growing things which filled
+the air with sweet odors. Feathered creatures fluttered about and
+twittered and caroled in the sheer joy of being alive. It was sweeter
+music than he had ever believed possible or even imagined as existing.
+Again he forgot the menace of the imperial edict which had brought him
+from the other side of the world.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Then rudely, he was brought back to earth. He was in the presence of the
+mighty Zar and his three escorts were bowing themselves from the huge
+room in which the wizened monarch sat enthroned. They had finished their
+duties.
+
+A shriveled face; beady eyes; trembling hands with abnormally large
+knuckles; a cruel and determined mouth--these were the features that
+most impressed Karl as he stared wordlessly at this Zar of the Eastern
+Hemisphere. The magnificence of the royal robe was lost on the young
+wearer of the gray.
+
+"Well, well, so this is Peter Van Dorn, my beloved nephew." The Zar was
+speaking and the chilly sarcasm in which the words were uttered belied
+the friendliness they otherwise might have implied.
+
+"That's what I'm told," replied Karl, "though I didn't know I'm supposed
+to be the nephew of so great a figure as yourself."
+
+Not bad that, for an humble wearer of the gray.
+
+"Oh, yes, yes, indeed. Why else should I have sent for you?"
+
+"I have wondered why--and still wonder."
+
+"Oh, you wonder, eh?" The Zar inspected him carefully and then broke
+into a cackle of horrible laughter. "A Van Dorn in gray denim!" he
+chortled. "A mole of the Americas! And to think that even the Zar has
+been unable to find him in all these years!"
+
+"Stop!" bellowed Karl. "I'll not have your ridicule. Come to the point
+now and have it over with. Kill me if you will, but tell me the story!"
+He had seen the slender tube in the Zar's hand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+An expression of surprise, almost of admiration, flickered in the beady
+eyes of the Zar and was gone. He spoke coldly.
+
+"Very well, I shall explain. You, Peter, are actually my nephew. Your
+father, Derek Van Dorn, was my brother; he a king of Belravia and I a
+poor but experienced scientist. He scorned me and he paid, for I learned
+of the ancient race of the other side of the Moon, the side we can not
+see from the earth. I went to them and enlisted their aid in warring
+upon my brother. When we returned to carry on this war I learned that I
+had a son. So, too, did Derek. But my son was born in obscurity and
+Derek's son--you, Peter--in the lap of luxury. The war was short and, to
+me, sweet. Belravia was first to fall, and I had your father removed
+from this life by the vibrating death."
+
+"You monster!" cried Karl. But the slender rod menaced him.
+
+"A moment, my hot-headed nephew. I vowed I'd have your life, Peter, but
+your father had a few friends and one of these spirited you away. So
+temporarily you escaped. But now I have you where I can keep that vow.
+You, too, shall die. By the vibration. But first--ha! ha!--I'll give you
+a taste of the purple. Just so the going will be harder."
+
+Karl kept his temper as best he could. He thought, conscience-stricken,
+of old Rudolph, that good friend of his father. Then he thought of that
+youth he had taken from the Square.
+
+"Your son?" he asked gently. "Has he the triangular brand?"
+
+The Zar was taken aback. "He has, yes. Why?" he asked.
+
+"I have seen him in the Americas. He now lies wounded and in peril of
+his life. What do you think of that?"
+
+Karl was triumphant as the Zar paled.
+
+"You lie, Peter Van Dorn!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But the beady eyes saw that the young man was truthful. Sudden fury
+assailed the monarch of the East. A bell pealed its mellow summons and
+three Moon men entered the Presence.
+
+"Quick, Taru--the radiovision! Our ambassador in the Americas!" The Zar
+was on his feet, his hard features terrible in fear and anger. "By God!"
+he vowed, "I'll lay waste the Americas if harm has come to my son. And
+you"--turning to Karl--"I'll reserve for you an even more terrible fate
+than the vibrating death!"
+
+The radiovision was wheeled in and in operation. A frightened face
+appeared in its disc: the Zar's ambassador across the sea.
+
+"Moreau--my son!" snapped the Zar. "Where is he?"
+
+"Majesty! Have mercy!" gasped Moreau. "Paul has eluded us. He was
+skylarking--in the lower levels of New York. But our secret agents are
+combing the passages. We'll have him in twenty-four hours. I promise!"
+
+The rage of the Zar was terrible to see. Karl expected momentarily that
+the white flame would lay him low, for the anger of the mad ruler was
+directed first at Moreau, then at himself. But a quick, evil calm
+succeeded the storm.
+
+"You, Peter," he stated, in tones suddenly silky, "shall have that
+twenty-four hours--no more. If Moreau has not produced my son in that
+time you shall be dismembered slowly. A finger; an ear; your tongue; a
+hand--until you reveal the whereabouts of the heir to my throne!"
+
+"Never! You scum!" Karl was on the dais in a single bound. He had the
+Zar by the throat, his fingers twisting in the flabby flesh. Might as
+well have it over at once. "Fratricide--murderer of my father, I'll take
+you with me!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But it was not to be. The throne room was filled with retainers of the
+mad emperor. Strong hands tore him away and he was borne, struggling and
+fighting, to the floor. A sharp pain in his forearm. A deadening of the
+muscles. He was powerless, save for the painful ability to crawl to his
+knees, swaying drunkenly. A delicious languor overcame him. Nothing
+mattered now. He saw that a tall man in the purple had withdrawn the
+needle of the hypodermic and was replacing the instrument in its case.
+Ever so slowly, it seemed.
+
+The Zar was laughing. That horrible cackle. But Karl didn't care. They'd
+have their sport with him. Let 'em! Then it'd be over. Lord! If only he
+had been a little quicker. He'd have torn the old Zar's windpipe from
+its place!
+
+"My word," laughed the Zar. "The sacred word of a Van Dorn. I gave it.
+He'll wear the purple for a day. Take him from my sight!"
+
+Karl was walking, quite willingly now. The effects of the drug were
+altering. His muscular strength returned but his mental state underwent
+a complete change. Always he'd wanted a taste of the purple. For years
+he'd listened to the orators of the Square, to the conflicting
+statements of old Krassin. But now he'd see. He'd know the joys of the
+upper levels; the pleasure cities, perhaps. For one day. But what did it
+matter? He found himself laughing and joking with his companion, a
+heavy-set wearer of the purple. They were in a luxurious apartment.
+Servants! Moon men all of them, but so efficient. They stripped him of
+his gray denim; discarded it contemptuously. Karl kicked the heap into a
+corner and laughed delightedly. His bath was waiting.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Much can happen in a day. Clothed in the purple, Karl--Peter Van Dorn,
+he was, now--expanded. Turgid emotions surged through his new being. He
+was a new man. In his rightful place. He was delighted with the
+companionship of his new friend of the purple, Leon Lemaire. An
+euphonious name! A fine fellow! Fool that the Zar must be, to leave him
+in the care of so amiable a man. Why, Leon couldn't hold him! None of
+them could. He'd escape them all--if he wished. Twenty-four hours,
+indeed!
+
+They were in the midst of a gay company. Wine flowed freely, and Leon
+had attached to their party a pair of beautiful damsels, young, and easy
+to know. There was music and dancing. Lights of marvelous color played
+over the assemblage in the huge hall, swaying their senses at the will
+of some expert manipulator. Peter was a different person now. He was
+exhilarated to the point of intoxication, but not by the wine. Somehow
+he couldn't bear the taste of the amber fluid the others were imbibing
+with such gusto. The effects of the drug had left a coppery taste in his
+mouth. But no matter! Rhoda, his lovely companion at the table leaned
+close. Her breath was hot at his throat. He swept her into his arms.
+Leon and the other girl laughed approvingly.
+
+There were many such places in the upper levels of Dorn and they
+traveled from one to another. Now their party was larger, it having
+been augmented by the appearance of other of Leon's friends. Fine
+companions, these men of the purple, and the women were incomparable.
+Especially Rhoda. They understood one another perfectly now. It was all
+as he had pictured it.
+
+Someone proposed that they visit the intermediate levels. It would be
+such a lark to watch the mechanicals. They made the drop in a lift. A
+laughing, riotous party. And Peter was one of them! He felt that he had
+known them for years. Rhoda clung to his arm, and the languorous glances
+from under her long lashes set the blood racing madly in his veins.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the levels of the mechanicals they romped boisterously. To them the
+strange robots--creatures of steel and glass and copper--were objects of
+ridicule. Poor, senseless mechanisms that performed the tasks that made
+the wearers of the purple independent of labor. Here they saw the
+preparation of their synthetic food, untouched by human hands. In one
+chamber a group of mechanicals, soulless and brainless, engaged in the
+delicate chemical compounding of raw materials that went into the making
+of their clothing. Here was a nursery, where tiny tots born to the
+purple were reared to adolescence by unfeeling but efficient mechanical
+nurses. The mothers of the purple could not be bothered with their
+offspring until they had reached the age of reason. The whirring
+machinery of a huge power plant provided much amusement for the feminine
+members of the party. It was all so massive; throbbing with energy. But
+dirty! Ugh! Lucky the attendants could be mechanicals.
+
+"We have visited the lower levels," whispered Rhoda in his ear, "but not
+often. It isn't pleasant. Ignorant fools in the gray denim--too many of
+them. I don't know why we permit their existence. Fools who will not
+learn. Education made us as we are, and they won't take it. Sullen
+looks and evil leers are all that they have for us. Hope nobody suggests
+going down there now."
+
+"Me, too," said Peter. He had forgotten that once he was Karl Krassin, a
+wearer of the despised gray.
+
+Someone in the party was becoming restless. They must move on.
+
+"Where to?" asked Peter.
+
+"Sans Dolor, sweet boy. A pleasure city within a hundred kilometers of
+Dorn. You'll love it, Peter."
+
+A pleasure city! Fondest dream of the wearers of the gray! In the dim
+past, when he was Karl, he had dreamed it often. Now he was to visit
+one!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+They were atop the city now and the crystal palace of the Zar shimmered
+in the sunlight off there across the flat upper surface of Dorn. But it
+seemed so far away that Peter did not give it a second thought. He was
+living in the present.
+
+A swift aero took them into the skies and they roared out above the
+wilderness that was everywhere between the great cities of earth. Funny
+nobody thought of leaving the cities and exploring the jungles of the
+outside. But, of course, it wasn't necessary. They had everything they
+needed within the cities. All of their wants were supplied by the
+mechanicals and by the few toilers in the gray who still persisted in
+ignorance and in some perverse ideas that they must work in order to
+live. Besides, the jungle was dangerous.
+
+Sans Dolor loomed into view, a great island floating in the air a
+thousand meters above the tossing waters of the ocean. Peter gave not a
+thought to the forces that kept it suspended. Dimly he recalled certain
+words of old Rudolph, words regarding the artificial emanations that had
+been discovered as capable of counteracting the force of gravity. But
+his mind was intent on the pleasures to come.
+
+They were over the city. Carefully tended foliage lined its streets and
+a smooth lagoon glistened in its center. Its towers and spires were
+decorated with gay colors. The streets were filled with wearers of the
+purple and the nude bodies of bathers in the lagoon gleamed white in the
+strong sunlight.
+
+He sensed anew the nearness of Rhoda. Her soft warm hand nestled in his
+and she responded instantly to his sudden embrace.
+
+There came a shock and the party was stilled in dismay. The aero
+careened violently and the pilot struggled with controls that were dead.
+Sans Dolor dropped rapidly away beneath them. They were shooting
+skyward, drawn by some inexplicable and invisible energy from above.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Rhoda screamed and held him close, trembling violently. All of the women
+screamed and the men cursed. Leon arose to his feet and stared at Peter.
+The friendliness was gone from his features and he spat forth an
+accusation. A glistening mechanism appeared in his hand as if by magic.
+A ray generator! He had been appointed by the Zar to guard this upstart
+and, whatever happened, he'd not let him escape with his life. The girl
+shuddered at sight of the weapon and extricated herself from his arms.
+Her affection too had been a pose.
+
+Peter's mind was clearing from the effects of the drug. He had not the
+slightest idea of what might have caused the quick change in the
+situation but he resolved he would die fighting, if die he must. Leon
+fumbled with the catch of the generator. It refused to operate. The
+force that was drawing them upward had paralyzed all mechanisms aboard
+the little aero. Flinging it from him in disgust he sprang for Peter.
+
+Their minds befuddled, the rest of the men watched dully. The women
+huddled together in a corner, whimpering. They were a sorry lot after
+all, thought Karl. He was no longer Peter Van Dorn, and he thrilled to
+the joy of battle.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Leon Lemaire was no mean antagonist. His flailing arms were everywhere
+and a huge fist caught Karl on the side of his head and sent him
+reeling. But this only served to clear his mind further and to fill him
+with a cold rage. He bored in unmercifully and Lemaire soon was on the
+defensive. A blow to his midsection had him puffing and Karl hammered in
+rights and lefts to the now sinister face that rocked his opponent to
+his heels. But the minion of the Zar was crafty. He slid to the floor as
+if groggy, then with catlike agility, dove for Karl's knees, bringing
+him down with a crash.
+
+The air whistled by them as the ship was drawn upward with ever-increasing
+speed. The other passengers cowered in fright as the two men rolled over
+and over on the floor, banging at each other indiscriminately. Both
+were hurt. Karl's lip was split, and bleeding profusely. One eye was
+closing. But now he was on top and he pummeled his opponent to a pulp.
+Long after he ceased resisting them, the blows continued until the
+features of Leon Lemaire were unrecognizable. The infuriated Karl did not
+see that one of the members of the party was creeping up on him from
+behind. Neither was he aware that the upward motion of the aero had
+ceased and that they now hung motionless in space. A terrific blow at
+the base of his skull sent him sprawling. Must have been struck by a
+rocket, one of those funny ships that crossed the ocean so quickly. A
+million lights danced before his aching eyeballs.
+
+Lying prone across the inert body of his foe, dimly conscious and
+fingers clutching weakly, he knew that the cabin was filled with people.
+Alien voices bellowed commands. There was the screaming of women; the
+sound of blows; curses ... then all was silence and darkness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was a far cry to the little book shop off Cooper Square, but Karl was
+calling for Rudolph when he next awoke to the realization that he was
+still in the land of the living. His head was bandaged and his tongue
+furry. A terrible hangover. Then he heard voices and they were
+discussing Peter Van Dorn. He opened one eye as an experiment. The other
+refused to open. But it might have been worse. At least he was alive; he
+could see well enough with the one good optic.
+
+"Sh-h!" whispered one of the voices. "He's recovering!"
+
+He looked solemnly into the eyes of an old man; a pair of wise and
+gentle eyes that reminded him somehow of Rudolph's.
+
+"Quiet now, Peter," said the old man. "You'll be all right in a few
+minutes. Banged up a bit, you are, but nothing serious."
+
+"Don't call me Peter," objected Karl. He loathed the sound of the name;
+loathed himself for his recent thoughts and actions. "I am Karl
+Krassin," he continued, "and as such will remain until I die."
+
+There were others in the room and he saw glances of satisfaction pass
+between them. This was a strange situation. These men were not of the
+purple. Neither were they of the gray. Their garments shone with the
+whiteness of pure silver. And that's what they were; of finely woven
+metallic cloth. Was he in another world?
+
+"Very well, Karl." The kind old man was speaking once more. "I merely
+want you to know that you are among friends--your father's friends."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Surprised into complete wakefulness, Karl struggled to a seated position
+and surveyed the group that faced him. They were a fine looking lot,
+mostly older men, but there was a refreshing wholesomeness about them.
+
+"My father?" he faltered. "He's not alive."
+
+"No, my poor boy. Derek Van Dorn left this life at the hands of your
+uncle, Zar Boris. But we, his friends, are here to avenge him and to
+restore to you his throne."
+
+"But--but--I still do not understand."
+
+"Of course not, because we've kept ourselves hidden from the world for
+more than twenty-two years, waiting for this very moment. There are
+forty-one of us, including Rudolph, my brother. We have lived in the
+jungle since Boris conquered the Eastern Hemisphere. But amongst our
+numbers were several scientists, two greater than was Boris, even in his
+heyday. They have done wonderful things and we are now prepared to take
+back what was taken from Derek--and more. His life we can not
+restore--Heaven rest him--but his kingdom we can. And to his son it
+shall be returned.
+
+"You were given into Rudolph's care when little more than a babe in arms
+and he has cared for you well. We've watched, you know, in the
+detectoscopes--long range radiovision mechanisms that can penetrate
+solid walls, the earth itself, to bring to us the images and voices of
+persons who may be on the other side of the world. We've followed your
+every move, my boy, and the first time we feared for you was yesterday
+when the drug of the Zar's physician stole away your sense of right and
+wrong. But we were in time to save you, and now we are ready to kneel at
+your feet and proclaim you our king. First there is the Zar to be dealt
+with and then we shall set up the new regime. Are you with us?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Karl gazed at the speaker in wonder. He a king? Always to live amongst
+the wearers of the purple? To be responsible for the welfare of half the
+world? It was unthinkable! But Zar Boris, the murderer of his own
+father--he must be punished, and at the hands of the son!
+
+"I'll do it," he said simply. "That is, I'll do whatever you have
+planned in the way of exterminating the Zar. Then we'll talk of the new
+empire. But how is the Zar to be overcome? I thought he was invincible,
+with his Moon men and terrible weapons."
+
+"Ah! That, my boy, is where our scientists have triumphed. True, his
+rays were terrible. They could not be combatted when he first returned.
+The strange chemicals and gases of the Moon men defied analysis or
+duplication. His citadel atop the city of Dorn is proof against them
+all; proof against explosives and rays of all kinds known to him. The
+disintegration and decomposition rays have no effect on the crystal of
+its walls. It is hermetically sealed from the outer air so can not be
+gassed. The vibration impulses have no effect upon its reinforced
+structure. But there is a ray, a powerful destructive agent, against
+which it is not proof. And our scientists have developed this agency.
+You shall have the privilege of pressing the release of the energy that
+destroys the arch-fiend in his lair. His dominance over, the empire will
+fall. We shall take it--for you."
+
+A strange exaltation shone from the faces of those in the room, and Karl
+found that it was contagious. His bosom swelled and he itched to handle
+the controls of this wonderful ray.
+
+"This ray," continued the brother of old Rudolph, "carries the longest
+vibrations ever measured, the vibrations of infra-red, the heat-ray. We
+have succeeded in concentrating a terrific amount of power in its
+production, and with it are able to produce temperatures in excess of
+that of the interior of the earth, where all substances are molten or
+gaseous. The Zar's crystal palace cannot withstand it for a second. He
+cannot escape!"
+
+"How'll you know he's there at the time?" Karl was greatly excited, but
+he was curious too.
+
+"Come with me, my boy. I'll show you." The old man led him from the room
+and the others followed respectfully.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+They stopped at a circular port and Karl saw that they were high above
+the earth in a vessel that hovered motionless, quivering with what
+seemed like human eagerness to be off.
+
+"This vessel?" he asked.
+
+"It's a huge sphere; the base of our operations. To it we drew the aero
+on which you were fighting. A magnetic force discovered by our
+scientists and differing only slightly from that used in counteracting
+gravity. We let the rest of them go; foolishly I think. But it's done
+now and we have no fear. From this larger vessel we shall send forth
+smaller ones, armed with the heat-ray. The flagship of the fleet is to
+be yours and you'll lead the attack on Dorn. Here--I'll show you the
+Zar."
+
+They had reached the room of the detectoscopes--a mass of mechanisms
+that reminded Karl of nothing so much as the vitals of the intermediate
+levels which he had visited with Leon--and Rhoda. He knew that he
+flushed when he thought of her. What a fool he had been!
+
+A disc glowed as one of the silver-robed strangers manipulated the
+controls. The upper surface of Dorn swung into view. Rapidly the image
+drew nearer and they were looking at the crystal pyramid that was the
+Zar's palace. Down, down to its very tip they passed. Karl recoiled from
+the image as it seemed they were falling to its glistening sides. The
+sensation passed. They were through, penetrating solid crystal, masonry,
+steel and duralumin girders. Room after room was opened to their view.
+It was magic--the magic of the upper levels.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now they were in the throne room. A group of purple-clad men and women
+stood before the dais. Leon, Rhoda--all of his wild companions were
+there, facing the dais. The Zar was raging and the words of his speech
+came raucously to their ears through the sound-producing mechanism.
+
+"You've failed miserably, all of you," he screamed. "He's gotten away
+and you know the penalty. Taru--the vibrating ray!"
+
+The Moon man already was fussing with a gleaming machine, a machine with
+bristling appendages having metallic spheres on their ends, a machine in
+which dozens of vacuum tubes glowed suddenly.
+
+Rhoda screamed. It was a familiar sound to Karl. He noted with
+satisfaction that Leon could hardly stand on his feet and that his face
+was covered with plasters. Then, startled, he saw that Leon was
+shivering as with the ague. His outline on the screen grew dim and
+indistinct as the rate of vibration increased. Then the body bloated and
+became misty. He could see through it. The vibrating death! His father
+had gone the same way!
+
+Karl groaned at the thought. The whine of the distant machine rose in
+pitch until it passed the limit of audibility. Tiny pin-points of
+incandescence glowed here and there from the Zar's victims as periods of
+vibration were reached that coincided with the natural periods of
+certain of the molecules of their structure. They were no longer
+recognizable as human beings. Shimmering auras surrounded them. Suddenly
+they were torches of cold fire, weaving, oscillating with inconceivable
+rapidity. Then they were gone; vanished utterly.
+
+The Zar laughed--that horrible cackle again.
+
+"Great God!" exclaimed Karl, "let's go! The fiend must not live a moment
+longer than necessary. Are you ready?"
+
+Rudolph's brother smiled. "We're ready Karl," he said.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The great vessel hummed with activity. The five torpedo-shaped aeros of
+the battle fleet were ready to take off from the cavities in the hull.
+In the flagship Karl was stationed at the control of the heat-ray. His
+instructions in its operation had been simple. A telescopic sight with
+crosshairs for the centering of the object to be attacked; a small
+lever. That was all. He burned with impatience.
+
+Then they were dropping; falling clear of the mother ship. The pilot
+pressed a button and the electronic motors started. A burst of roaring
+energy streamed from the tapered stern of their vessel and the earth
+lurched violently to meet them. Down, down they dived until the rocking
+surface of Dorn was just beneath them. Then they flattened out and
+circled the vast upper surface. From the corner of his eye Karl saw that
+the other four vessels of his fleet were just behind. There was a flurry
+among the wasplike clouds of pleasure craft over the city. They scurried
+for cover. Something was amiss!
+
+"Hurry!" shouted Karl. "The warning is out! There is no time to lose!"
+
+He pressed his face to the eye-piece of his sight, his finger on the
+release lever of the ray. The crystal pyramid crossed his view and was
+gone. Again it crossed, more slowly this time. And now his sight was
+dead on it, the gleaming wall rushing toward him. Pressure on the tiny
+button. They'd crash into the palace in another second! But no, a
+brilliant flash obscured his vision, a blinding light that made the sun
+seem dark by comparison. They roared on and upward. He took his eye from
+the telescope and stared ahead, down. The city was dropping away, and,
+where the crystal palace had stood, there was a spreading blob of molten
+material from which searing vapors were drifting. The roofs of the city
+were sagging all around and great streams of the sparkling, sputtering
+liquid dripped into the openings that suddenly appeared. Derek Van Dorn
+was avenged.
+
+"Destroy! Destroy!" yelled Karl madly. A microphone hung before him and
+his words rang through every vessel of his convoy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The lust of battle was upon him. A fleet of the Zar's aeros had risen
+from below; twenty of them at least. These would be manned by Moon
+creatures, he knew, and would carry all of the dreadful weapons which
+had originated on that strange body. But he did not know that his own
+ships were insulated against most of the rays used by the Zar's forces.
+He knew only that he must fight; fight and kill; exterminate every last
+one of the Zar's adherents or be exterminated in the attempt.
+
+Kill! Kill! The madness was contagious. His pilot was a marvel and drove
+his ship straight for the massed ships of the foe. The air was vivid
+with light-streamers. A ray from an enemy vessel struck the thick glass
+of the port through which he looked and the outer surface was shattered
+and pock-marked. But a cloud of vapor and a dripping stream of fiery
+liquid told him his own ray had taken effect on a vessel of the enemy.
+One! They wheeled about and spiraled, coming up under another of the
+Zar's aeros. It vanished in a puff of steam and they narrowly missed
+being covered by the falling remnants of incandescent liquid. Two!
+Karl's aim was good and he gloated in the fact. Three! They climbed and
+turned over, dropping again into the fray. Four!
+
+The air grew stifling, for the expended energy of the enemies' rays must
+needs be absorbed. It could not disintegrate them nor decompose their
+bodies, but the contacts were many and the liberation of heat enormous.
+They were suffocating! But Karl would not desist. They drove on, now
+beneath, now above an enemy ship. He lost count.
+
+One of his own vessels was in trouble. The report came to him from the
+little speaker at his ear. He looked around in alarm. A glowing object
+reeled uncertainly over there between two of the aeros of the Zar. The
+concentration of beams of vibrations was too much for the sturdy craft.
+It was red hot and its occupants burned alive where they sat. Suddenly
+it slipped into a spin and went slithering down into the city, leaving a
+gaping opening where it fell. This sobered him somewhat, but he went
+into the battle with renewed fury.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+How many had they brought down? Fifteen? Sixteen? He tore his purple
+jacket from his body. The perspiration rolled from his pores. His own
+ship would be next. But what did it matter? Kill! Kill! He shouted once
+more into the microphone, then dived into battle. Another and another!
+In Heaven's name, how many were there? It was maddening. If only he
+could breathe. His lungs were seared; his eyes smarting from the heat.
+And then it was over.
+
+Three of the Zar's aeros remained, and these turned tail to run for it.
+No! They were falling, nose down, under full power; diving into the city
+from which they had come. Suicide? Yes. They couldn't face the
+recriminations that must come to them. And anything was better than
+facing that burning death from the strange little fighters which had
+come from out the skies. Dorn was a mass of wreckage.
+
+Karl tore at the fastenings of the ports, searing his fingers on the
+heated metal. His pilot had collapsed, the little aero heading madly
+skyward with no guiding hand. Air! They must have air! He loosened the
+pilot's jacket; slapped frantically at his wrists in the effort to bring
+him to consciousness. Then he was at the controls of the vessel, tugging
+on first one, then the other. The aero circled and spun, executing the
+most dangerous of sideslips and dives. A little voice was speaking to
+him--the voice of the radio--instructing him. In a daze he followed
+instructions as best he could. The whirlings of the earth stabilized
+after a time and he found he was flying the vessel; climbing rapidly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A sense of power came to him as the little voice of the radio continued
+to instruct. Here were the controls of the electronic motor; there the
+gravity-energy. He was proceeding in the wrong direction. But what did
+it matter? He learned the meaning of the tiny figures of the altimeter;
+the difference between the points of the compass. Still he drove on.
+
+"East! Turn East!" begged the little voice from the radio. "You're
+heading west. Your speed--a thousand kilometers an hour--it's too fast.
+Turn back, Zar Peter!"
+
+He tore the loud speaker of the radio from its fastenings. West! He
+wanted to go west! On and on he sped, becoming more and more familiar
+with the workings of the little vessel as he progressed. A cooling
+breeze whistled from the opened ports, a breeze that smelled of the sea.
+His heart sang with the wonder of it all. He could fly. And fly he did.
+Zar Peter? Never! He knew now where he belonged; knew what he wanted.
+He'd find the coast of North America. Follow it until he located New
+York. A landing would be easy, for had not the voice instructed him in
+the use of the gravity-energy? He'd make his way to the lower levels, to
+the little book shop of Rudolph Krassin. A suit of gray denim awaited
+him there and he'd never discard it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Onward he sped into the night, which was falling fast. He held to his
+westward course like a veteran of the air lanes. The pilot had ceased to
+breathe and Karl was sorry. Game little devil, that pilot. Have to shove
+his body overboard. Too bad.
+
+Rudolph's brother would understand. He'd be watching in the detectoscope.
+And the others--those who had wished to seat him on a throne--they'd
+understand, too. They'd have to!
+
+Rudolph would forgive him, he knew. Paul Van Dorn--his own cousin--the
+secret agents of the Zar would never locate him! Too many friends of
+Rudolph's were of the red police.
+
+He gave himself over to happy thoughts as the little aero sped on in the
+darkness. Home! He was going home! Back to the gray denim, where he
+belonged and where now he would remain content.
+
+
+
+
+The Ape-Men of Xlotli
+
+_By David R. Sparks_
+
+ A beautiful face in the depths of a geyser--and Kirby plunges into
+ a desperate mid-Earth conflict with the dreadful Feathered
+ Serpent.
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+Kirby did not know what mountains they were. He did know that the
+Mannlicher bullets of eleven bad Mexicans were whining over his head and
+whizzing past the hoofs of his galloping, stolen horse. The shots were
+mingled with yelps which pretty well curdled his spine. In the
+circumstances, the unknown range of snow mountains towering blue and
+white beyond the arid, windy plateau, offering he could not tell what
+dangers, seemed a paradise. Looking at them, Kirby laughed harshly to
+himself.
+
+As he dug the heels of his aviator's boots into the stallion's flanks,
+the animal galloped even faster than before, and Kirby took hope. Then
+more bullets and more yelps made him think that his advantage might
+prove only temporary. Nevertheless, he laughed again, and as he became
+accustomed to the feel of a stallion under him, he even essayed a few
+pistol shots back at the pack of frantic, swarthy devils he had fooled.
+
+[Illustration: _His head wavered back and forth and his hiss filled the
+night._]
+
+Three hours ago he had been eating a peaceful breakfast with his friend
+and commandant, Colonel Miguel de Castanar, in the sunlit patio of the
+commandant's hacienda. Castanar, chief of the air patrol for the
+district, had waxed enthusiastic over the suppression of last spring's
+revolutionists and the cowed state of up-country bandits. Captain
+Freddie Kirby, American instructor of flying to Mexican pilots in the
+making, had agreed with him and asked for one of the Wasps and three
+days' leave with which to go visiting in Laredo. The simple matter of a
+broken fuel line, a forced landing two hundred kilometres from nowhere,
+and the unlucky proximity of the not-so-cowed horsemen, were the things
+which had changed the day from what it had been to what it was.
+
+The one piece of good fortune which had befallen him since the bandits
+had surrounded the wrecked Wasp, looted it, and taken its lone pilot
+prisoner, was the break he was getting now. During the squadron's first
+halt to feed, he had knocked down his guards and made a bolt for the
+grazing stallion. So far, the attempt was proving worth while.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On and on the stallion lunged toward the white mountains. Kirby's eyes
+became red rimmed now from fatigue and the glare of the sun and the dust
+of the pitilessly bare plateau. A negligible scalp wound under his mop
+of straw-colored hair, slight as it was, did not add to his comfort. But
+still he would not give up, for the horse, as if it sensed what its
+rider needed most, was making directly for a narrow ravine which
+debouched on the plateau from the nearest mountain flank.
+
+It was the promise of cover afforded by the jagged rocks and jungle
+growth of that ravine which kept hope alive in Kirby's throbbing brain.
+
+The stallion was blown and staggering. Foam from the heavily bitted
+mouth flashed back in great yellow flakes against Kirby's dust-caked
+aviator's tunic. But just the same, the five mile gallop had carried
+both horse and rider beyond range of any but the most expert rifle shot.
+And Kirby knew that if his own splendid mount was almost ready to crash,
+the horses of his pursuers must be in worse shape still. So for the
+third time since the fight had begun, he laughed. This time there was no
+harshness, but only relief, in the sound which came from his dry lips.
+
+Ten minutes later, he flung himself out of his saddle. Like the caress
+of a vast, soothing hand, the shadowed coolness of the ravine lay upon
+him. As his feet struck ground, they splashed in the water overflowing
+from a spring at the base of an immense rock. At once Kirby dropped the
+reins on the stallion's neck, giving him his freedom, and as the horse
+lowered his head to drink, Kirby stooped also.
+
+There was cover everywhere. Kirby's first move after pulling both
+himself and the horse away from the spring, was to glance up the long,
+deeply shaded canyon which he had entered--a gash hacked into the breast
+of the steep mountain as by a titanic ax. Then, reassured as to the
+possibilities for a defensive retreat, he glanced back toward the
+dazzling, bare plateau.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was what he saw taking place amongst the sombreroed bandits out there
+which made the grin of satisfaction fade from his broad mouth. His last
+glance backward, before bolting into the canyon mouth, had showed him a
+ragged squadron of men left far behind, yet galloping after him still.
+But now--
+
+Presently a puzzled frown made wrinkles in Freddie Kirby's wide
+sunburned forehead. He relaxed his grip upon the heavy Luger, which, in
+his big hands, looked like a cap pistol, and rubbed his eyes.
+
+But he was not mistaken. The horsemen had halted! Out there on the
+glaring, alkali-arid plateau, they were standing as still as so many
+statues. Looking toward the canyon mouth which had swallowed their
+quarry, they certainly were, but they were halted as completely as men
+struck dead.
+
+"Huh," Kirby grunted, and scratched behind his ear.
+
+The next second he swung around to look at his horse, uncertain what he
+was going to do next, but aware of the fact that right now, with a lot
+of unknown country between himself and Castanar's sunlit patio, the
+stallion was going to be a friend in need.
+
+As he turned, however, prepared to take up the loose reins, something
+else happened. The stallion let out a neigh as shrill as a trumpet
+blast. As Kirby jumped, grabbed for the bridle, his fingers found empty
+air. Like a crazy animal the stallion leaped past him, barely missing
+him. Out toward the plain the horse jumped, out and away from the shaded
+canyon mouth, out toward the spot where other horses waited. And despite
+the animal's blown condition, the speed he put into his retreat left
+Kirby dazed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After a helpless, profanity-filled second, Kirby scratched behind his
+ear again. As certain as the fact that almost his sole hope of getting
+back to civilization depended upon the stallion, was the fact that the
+brute did not intend to stop running until he dropped.
+
+"Now what in the hell ever got into his crazy head?" Kirby muttered
+grimly.
+
+Then he turned around to glance up the shadow-filled slash of a canyon,
+and sniffed.
+
+"Huh!"
+
+Faintly in the air had risen an odor the like of which he had never
+encountered in his life. A combination, it was, of the unforgetable
+stench which hangs over a battlefield when the dead are long unburied,
+and of a fragrance more rare, more heady, more poignantly sweet than any
+essence ever concocted by Parisian perfumer.
+
+With the drifting scent came a sound. Faint, carrying from a distance,
+the rumble which Kirby heard was almost certainly that of a geyser.
+
+There was no telling what had brought the troop of horsemen to a halt,
+but after a time Kirby knew that the cause of his horse's sudden
+departure must have been a whiff of the strange perfume.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For a long time he stood still, watching the crazy stallion dwindle in
+size, watching the line of unexpectedly timid bandits. Then, when it
+became apparent that the horsemen were going to stay put either until he
+came out, or showed that he never was coming out, he shrugged, and swung
+on his heel so that he faced up the canyon.
+
+The odor was dying away now, and the geyser rumble was gone. In Kirby's
+heart came a mingled feeling of tense uneasiness and fascinated
+curiosity. Momentarily he was almost glad that his horse _had_ bolted,
+and that his pursuers _were_ blocking any lane of retreat except that
+offered by the canyon. If things had been different, the queer behavior
+of the Mexicans, the unaccountable actions of his horse and the equally
+strange growth of his own uneasiness might have made him uncertain
+whether he would go up the canyon or not. Now it was the only thing to
+do, and Kirby was glad because, fear or no fear, he wanted to go on.
+
+"I wonder," he said out loud as he started, "just what the denizens of
+First Street in Kansas would say to a layout like this!"
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+At the end of an hour he was still wondering.
+
+At midday the canyon was chill and dank, lit only by a half light which
+at times dwindled to a deep dusk as the rock walls beetled together
+hundreds of feet above his head. Always when he stumbled through one of
+the darkest passages, he heard and half saw immense gray bats flapping
+above him. In the half-lit reaches, he hardly took a step without seeing
+great rats with gray coats, yellow teeth, and evil pink eyes. But rats
+and bats combined were not as bad as the snakes. They were almost white,
+and nowhere had he seen rattlers of such size. If his caution relaxed
+for a second, they struck at him with fangs as long and sharp as
+needles.
+
+The tortured, twisted cedars, the paloverdi, occatilla, cholla, opunti,
+through which he edged his laborious way, all offered an almost animate,
+armed hostility.
+
+Altogether this journey was the least sweet he had taken anywhere. Yet
+he went on.
+
+Why had eleven Mexican bandits refused to advance even to within decent
+rifle range of the canyon's mouth? What was there about the putrid yet
+gorgeous perfume that had made the stallion go off his nut, so to
+speak?
+
+After a time, Kirby veered away from a fourteen-foot rattler which
+flashed in a loathsome coil on his left hand. Hungry, weakened by all he
+had been through since breakfast time, he plodded doggedly on.
+
+But a moment later he stumbled past a twisted cedar, and then stopped,
+forgetting even the snakes.
+
+At his feet lay the bleached skeleton of a man.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Beside the right hand, in a position which indicated that only the final
+relaxation of death had loosened his grip upon a precious object, lay a
+cylinder, carefully carved, of rich, yellow gold.
+
+Of the science of anthropology Kirby knew enough to make him sure that
+the dolicocephalic skull and characteristically shaped pelvic and thigh
+bones of the skeleton had belonged to a white man.
+
+As for the cylinder--But he was not so sure what that was.
+
+Regardless of the dry swish of a rattler's body on the rocks behind
+him, he lifted the object from the spot in which it had lain for no man
+knew how long. Of much the size and shape of an old-time cylindrical wax
+phonograph record, the softly gleaming thing weighed, he judged, almost
+two pounds.
+
+Two pounds of soft, virgin gold of a quality as fine as any he had seen
+amongst all the treasures brought out of Mexico, Yucatan, and Peru
+combined!
+
+But the gold was not the only thing. If Kirby was human enough to think
+in terms of treasure, he was also enough of an amateur anthropologist to
+hold his breath over the carvings on the yellow surface.
+
+First he recognized the ancient symbols of Sun and Moon. And then a
+representation, semi-realistic, semi-conventionalized, of Quetzalcoatl,
+the Feathered Serpent, known in all the annals of primitive Mexican
+religions.
+
+Good enough.
+
+But the mere symbols by no means told the whole story of the cylinder.
+The workmanship was archaic, older than any Aztec art Kirby knew, older
+than Toltec, older far, he ventured to guess, than even earliest archaic
+Mayan carvings.
+
+God, what a find!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For a moment it seemed almost impossible that he, Freddie Kirby, native
+of Kansas, unromantic aviator, should have been the one to discover this
+relic of an unknown, lost race. Yet the cylinder of gold was there, in
+his hand.
+
+After a long minute Kirby looked around him, then listened.
+
+From up the canyon came the provocative rumble of the geyser. It was
+closer now, and Kirby, glancing at his watch which had been spared to
+him in the Wasp's crash, noted that just forty-four minutes had passed
+since the last eruption. There was nothing to be done about the bleached
+skeleton. So, tucking the precious cylinder into his tunic, Kirby
+headed on up the gash of a canyon.
+
+Far away indeed seemed the neat, maple-shaded asphalt street, the rows
+of parked cars and farm wagons, the telephone office and drug store and
+bank, of the Kansas town where he had grown up.
+
+Time passed until again he heard the geyser, and again was dizzied by
+the perfume. As the fragrance--close and powerful now--died away, he
+flailed with one arm at a two-foot bat which flapped close to his head.
+
+And then he trudged his dogged way around a deeply shadowed bend, and
+found the chasm not only almost wholly dark, but narrower than it had
+been at any previous point.
+
+"Holy mackerel," Kirby groaned. "Phew! If this keeps up, I--"
+
+He stopped. His jaw dropped.
+
+"Oh, hell!"
+
+The beetling walls narrowed in until the gash was scarcely fifteen feet
+wide. Further progress was barred by a smooth wall which rose sheer in
+front of him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kirby did not know how many seconds passed before he made out through
+the gloom that the wall was man-made and carved with the same symbols of
+Sun, Moon, and Feathered Serpent, which ornamented the cylinder of gold.
+But when he did realize at last, the shout with which he expressed his
+feeling was anything but a groan.
+
+It simply meant that the skeleton which once had been a man, had almost
+surely found the golden cylinder beyond the wall and not in the canyon.
+And if the dead man had passed that smooth, carved barrier, another man
+could do it!
+
+Kirby jumped forward, began to search in the darkness for some hidden
+entrance.
+
+Minute after minute passed. He gave another cry. He saw a long, upright
+crack in the stone surface, and a quick push of his hands made the
+stones in front of him give almost an inch.
+
+All at once his shoulder was planted, and behind that square shoulder
+was straining all the muscle of his two hundred pound body. The result
+was all that he desired. When he ceased pushing, a slab of rock gaped
+wide before him, giving entrance to a pitch dark tunnel.
+
+For a moment he held the portal back, then, releasing his pressure, he
+stepped into the dark passage. By the time a ponderous grating of rocks
+assured him that the door had swung shut of its own weight, he had
+produced matches and struck a light.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The puny flame showed him a curving passage hewn smoothly through the
+heart of bedrock. Before the flare died he walked twenty feet, and as
+another match burned to his fingers, he found the right hand curve of
+the passage giving way to a left hand twist. After that he dared use no
+more of his precious matches. But just when the darkness was beginning
+to wear badly on his nerves, he uttered a low cry.
+
+As he increased his rapid walk to a run, the faint light he had suddenly
+seen ahead of him grew until it became a circular flare of daylight
+which marked the tunnel's end.
+
+Out of the passage Kirby strode with shoulders square and head up, his
+cool, level, practical blue eyes wide with wonder. Out of the tunnel he
+strode into the valley of the perfumed geyser.
+
+"God above!"
+
+The words were vibrant with hoarse reverence. He saw the sunlight of a
+cliff-surrounded diminutive Garden of Eden. He saw a vale of flowering
+grass, of palms and live oaks, saw patches of lilies so huge as to
+transcend belief, and dizzying clumps of tree cactus almost as tall as
+the palms themselves.
+
+What was more, he saw in the center of this upland, cliff-guarded
+valley, a gaping black orifice which every faculty of judgment told him
+was the mouth of the geyser of perfume. And beside it, outstretched on a
+smooth sheet of rock which glistened as though coated with a layer of
+clear, sparkling glass, he saw--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kirby blinked his eyes rapidly, hardly believing what he saw.
+
+On the glistening rock lay the perfectly preserved figure of a Spanish
+Conquistadore in full armor. Morion and breast-plate were in place, and
+glistened as though they had been burnished this morning. And the
+Spaniard's dark, handsome, bearded face! Kirby saw instantly that no
+decay had touched it, that even the hairs of the beard were perfect. The
+whole armor-clad corpse gleamed softly with a covering of the same
+glassy substance which covered the rock.
+
+Kirby glanced at his watch, saw that twelve minutes must elapse before
+the geyser spouted again. Then his eyes narrowed. He remained standing
+where he was, hard by the mouth of the tunnel, knowing that a wise man
+would conduct cautiously his exploration of this valley of wonders.
+
+Arsenic! Silicon!
+
+The two words stood out sharply in his thought. In Africa existed plenty
+of springs whose waters contained enough arsenic to bring death to those
+who drank. Might not the Spaniard's presence here be explained, then, by
+assuming that the geyser water was charged with a strong arsenic
+content, and, in addition, with some sort of silicon solution which,
+left to dry in the air, hardened to glass?
+
+Lord, what a discovery to take back with him to Kansas! Almost it made
+the discovery of the golden cylinder pale by comparison. Why, the
+commercial uses to which this silicon water might be put were almost
+without limit, and the owner of the concession might confidently expect
+to make millions!
+
+It was while Kirby stood there, breathless and jubilant, waiting for
+the geyser to spout, that he began to feel that _he was being watched_.
+
+Suddenly, with a start, he shot a sweeping glance over the whole grove.
+But that did no good. He saw nothing save sunlight and waving green
+leaves.
+
+Eleven days were to pass before he discovered all that was to be
+involved in that sensation of being gazed at by unseen eyes.
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+At the beginning of the eleventh morning in the valley, Kirby had again
+posted himself close to the mouth of the black tunnel, and again felt
+that hidden eyes were observing him.
+
+But this morning differed from the first morning, because now, for the
+first time, he was ready to do something about the watcher or watchers.
+Exploration of the whole valley had not helped. Therefore, there lay at
+his feet a considerable coil of rope, the manufacture of which from
+plaited strands of the tough grass in his Eden had taken him whole days.
+With what patience he could find, he was waiting for the gigantic spout
+of milky-colored, perfumed water which would mean that the geyser had
+gone off and would erupt no more for exactly forty-four minutes.
+
+Eleven days in the valley!
+
+While he waited, Kirby considered them. Who had made the beautiful
+footprints beside him, when he had slept at last after his arrival here?
+Why had so many of the queer, fuzzy topped shrubs with immense
+yam-shaped roots, which grew here been taken away during that first
+sleep, and during all his other periods of sleep? Who had taken them?
+Early in his stay, he had learned that the tuberlike roots were good to
+eat and would sustain life, and he supposed that the unseen people of
+the valley took them for food. But who were these people of the valley?
+
+Who had laid beside him during his first sleep the immense lily with
+perfume like that which came with the milky geyser spray--that spray of
+death and delight mingled? Why had someone scratched a line in the earth
+from him directly to the distant orifice of the geyser? Was this, as he
+believed, a signal to come not only to the edge of the orifice, _but to
+lower himself down into its depths_? And if the line were intended as a
+signal, did the persons who came to the valley while he slept, always
+eluding him, wish him well or mean to do him harm?
+
+Last question of all: had the beautiful girl's face he believed he had
+seen just once, been real or an hallucination? It had been while he was
+kneeling at the very edge of the geyser cone, staring down its many
+colored throat, that the vision had appeared. Misty white amidst the
+green gloom, the face had been turned up to him, smiling, its lips
+forming a kiss, and its great eyes beckoning. Had the face been real or
+a dream?
+
+Eleven days in the valley! Now, with his braided rope ready at last, he
+was going to do something which might help to answer his questions.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kirby reached out and began to run his grass rope, yard by yard, through
+his hands, searching carefully for any flaw. A canyon wren made the air
+sweet above him, while the morning sun began to wink and blink against
+the shadows which still lay against the face of the guardian cliffs.
+Kirby glanced at his watch and got up.
+
+Crossing beyond the mouth of the geyser, he grinned good morning at his
+friend the Conquistadore, and marched on into the shade of the live oak
+which grew nearest the geyser. Here he made one end of his rope fast to
+the gnarled trunk, inspected his pistol, patted his tunic to make sure
+that the cylinder of gold was safe, then stood by to await the geyser.
+
+With the passing of three minutes there came from the still empty
+orifice a sonorous rumbling. Kirby grinned.
+
+From deep in the earth issued a sound of fizzing and bubbling, and
+then, to the accompaniment of subterranean thunder, burst loose the
+milky, upward column which had never ceased to awe the man who watched
+so eagerly this morning. As the titanic jet leaped skyward now, the
+slanting rays of the sun caught it, and turned the water, fanning out,
+into a fire opal, into a sheet of living color.
+
+Kirby, hard headed to the last, drew from the supply in one pocket of
+his tunic, a strip of one of the tuberlike roots, and munched it.
+
+The thunder ceased. The waters receded.
+
+After that Kirby hesitated not a second. Promptly he moved forward,
+flung his coil of line down into the geyser tunnel, and swung on to the
+line. By the time he had swallowed the last bite of his breakfast, the
+world he knew had been left behind, and he was climbing down to a new.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It became at once apparent that the gorgeously colored, glassy-smooth
+throat glowed with tints which were unfamiliar to him. He could perceive
+these new shades of color, yet had no name for them.
+
+As he stopped after fifty feet to breathe, the color phenomenon made him
+wonder if the tuber roots he had been eating had affected his vision;
+then decided they had not. In addition to food value, the roots had some
+power to stimulate courage and a slight mental exhilaration. But the
+drug had proved non-habit forming, and Kirby knew that his powers of
+perception were not now, and never had been, affected.
+
+He swung down further.
+
+Just a moment after he began that progress was when things began to
+happen to him. First he heard what seemed to be the low titter of a
+human voice laughing sweetly. Next came a far off, unutterably lovely
+strumming of music. And then he realized that, at a depth of about a
+hundred feet, he was hanging level with a hole which marked the mouth
+of another tunnel.
+
+This new tunnel sloped down into the earth on his right hand. The floor
+and walls were glassy smooth, and the angle of descent was steep, but by
+no means as steep as the drop of the vertical geyser shaft in which he
+now hung.
+
+Laughter, music, the new tunnel suddenly aroused an excitement which
+made him quiver.
+
+"When I saw _her_," he gasped, "she was standing here, in the mouth of
+this tunnel, looking up at me!"
+
+Violently, Freddie Kirby forgot the maple-shaded street of his Kansas
+town, forgot everything but desire to reach the mouth of the new tunnel,
+where the girl of the exquisite face and beckoning lips had stood.
+Tightening his grip on the rope, he began to swing himself back and
+forth like a pendulum.
+
+It seemed probable that when the geyser water shot up past the
+horizontal tunnel, its force was so great that no water at all entered.
+He redoubled his efforts to widen his swing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Then his feet scraped on the floor, and in a second he had alighted
+there. He still hung stoutly to his line, however, for the tunnel sloped
+down sharply enough, and was slippery enough, to prohibit the
+maintenance of footing unaided.
+
+The music which issued from the depths of that stunningly mysterious
+passage swelled to a crescendo--and stopped. Kirby clung there to his
+precarious perch, his feet slipping on the glass under them with every
+move he made, and feelings stirred in his heart which had never been
+there before.
+
+Then, as silence reigned where the music had been, something prompted
+him to look up. The next instant he stifled a cry.
+
+With widening eyes he saw the flash of a white arm and the gleam of a
+knife hovering over the spot where his taut rope passed out of the
+geyser opening into the sunshine of the outer world. Again he stifled a
+cry. For crying out would do no good. While the suppressed sound was
+still on his lips, the knife flickered.
+
+Then Kirby was shooting downward, the severed line whipping out after
+him. The first plunge flung him off his feet. A long swoop which he took
+on his back dizzied him. But as the fall continued, he was able to slow
+it a little by bracing arms and legs against the tunnel walls.
+
+"Holy Jeehosophat!" he gurgled.
+
+But there seemed to be no particular danger. The slide was as smooth as
+most of the chutes he had ever encountered at summer swimming pools. If
+ever the confounded spiral passage came to an end, he might find that he
+was still all right. As seconds passed and he fell and fell, it seemed
+that he was bound for the center of the earth. It seemed that--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He swished around a multiple bend, and eyes which had been accustomed to
+darkness were blinded by light.
+
+It was light which radiated in all colors--blue, yellow, browns,
+purples, reds, pinks, and then all the new colors for which he had no
+name. Somehow Kirby knew that he had shot out of the tunnel, which
+emerged high up in the face of a cliff, and that he was dropping through
+perfumed, brilliant air resonant with the sound of birds and insects and
+human cries. The funny thing was that the pull of gravity was not right,
+somehow, and he was dropping fairly slowly. From far below, a body of
+what looked like water was sweeping up to meet him. Kirby closed his
+eyes.
+
+When he opened them again, his whole body was stinging with the slap of
+his impact, and he found that it was water which he had struck. The
+proof of it lay in the fact that he was swimming, and was approaching a
+shore.
+
+But such water! It was milky white and perfumed as the geyser flow had
+been, and it seemed luminous as with a radium fire. Had he not realized
+presently that the fluid probably contained enough arsenic to finish a
+thousand like him, he would have thought of himself as bathing in the
+waters of Paradise.
+
+But then he began to forget about the poison which might already be at
+work upon him.
+
+Ahead of him, stretched out in the gorgeous, colored light, ran a beach
+which was backed by heavy jungle. And on the beach stood the lovely
+creatures, all clad in shimmering, glistening garments, whose flutelike
+cries had come to him as he fell.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kirby looked, and became almost powerless to continue his swim. The
+beauty of those frail women was like the reputed beauty of bright
+angels. That paralyzing effect of wonder, however, did not last long.
+
+The girls moved forward to the water's edge, and, laughing amongst
+themselves, beckoned to him with lovely slender hands whose every motion
+was a caress.
+
+"Be not afraid," called one in a curious patois dialect, about
+five-sixths of which seemed made up of Spanish words, distorted but
+recognizable.
+
+"The water would kill you," called another, "as it killed the Spaniard
+in armor. But we are here to save you. I will give you a draught to
+drink which will defeat the poison. Come on to us!"
+
+Kirby's heart was almost literally in his mouth now, because the girl
+who promised him salvation was she whose lips had formed a kiss at him
+from the green-gloomy throat of the geyser.
+
+His feet struck a shale bottom. Panting, he stood up and was conscious
+of the fact that despite his forlornly dripping and dishevelled
+condition, he was tall and straight and big, and that for some reason
+all of the girls on the gleaming sand, and one girl in particular, were
+anxious to receive him here.
+
+The one girl had drawn a small, gleaming flask of gold from the misty
+bodice of her gown, and was holding it out while she laughed with red
+lips and great, dazzling dark eyes.
+
+"_Pronto!_" she called in pure Spanish, and other girls echoed the word.
+"Oh," went on the bright owner of the flask, "we thought you would
+_never_ have done with your work on the rope. It took you so long!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kirby left the smooth lake behind him and stood dripping on the sand.
+The moment the air touched his clothes, he felt that they were
+stiffening slightly. Yet the sensation brought no terror. He could not
+feel terror as he faced the girls.
+
+"Give him the flask, Naida!" someone exclaimed.
+
+"Ah, but the Gods _have_ been kind to us!" echoed another.
+
+The girl with the flask made a gesture for silence.
+
+"Is it Naida you are called?" Kirby put in quickly, and as he spoke the
+Spanish words, the roll of them on his tongue did much to make him know
+that he was sane and awake, and not dreaming, that this was still the
+Twentieth Century, and that he was Freddie Kirby.
+
+Answering his question, Naida nodded, and gave him the flask.
+
+"A single draught will act as antidote to the poison," she said.
+
+"I drink," said Kirby as he raised the flask, "to the many of you who
+have been so gracious as to save me!"
+
+A flashing smile, a blush was his answer. And then he had wetted his
+lips with, and was swallowing, a limpid liquid which tasted of some
+drug.
+
+"Enough!" Naida ordered in a second.
+
+As she reached for the flask, her companions closed in as though a
+ceremony of some sort had been completed.
+
+"Is it time to tell him yet, Naida?" piped one of the girls, younger
+than the rest, whom someone had called Elana.
+
+"Oh, _do_ begin, Naida," chorused two more. "We can't wait _much_ longer
+to find out if he is going to help us!"
+
+Kirby turned to Naida, while a soothing sensation crept through him from
+the draught he had taken.
+
+"Pray tell me what it is that I am to be permitted to do for you. I
+can promise you that the whole of my life and strength, and such
+intelligence as I possess, is yours to command."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Excited small cries and a clapping of hands answered him. As for Naida,
+her face lighted with glowing joy.
+
+"Oh, one who could say that, _must_ be the friend and protector of whom
+we have stood in such bitter need!"
+
+"What," asked Kirby, "is this need which made one of you cut my rope, so
+that I should come here?"
+
+A momentary silence was broken only by the hum of insects in the
+perfumed air, and by the golden thrilling of a bird back in the jungle.
+Then Kirby beheld Naida bowing to him.
+
+"So be it," she said in a voice low and flutelike. "I will speak now
+since you request it. Already you have seen that you are here in our
+world because we conspired amongst ourselves to bring you here. Our
+reason--"
+
+She paused, looked deep into his eyes.
+
+"Amigo," she continued slowly, "we whom you see here are the People of
+the Temple. For more centuries than even our sages can tell, our
+progenitors have dwelt here, where you find us, knowing always of your
+outer world, but remaining always unknown by it. But now the time has
+come when those of us who are left amongst our race need the help of one
+from the outer races we have shunned. Dangers of various orders confront
+us who have waited here for your coming. When we first discovered you in
+the Valley of the Geyser, the idea came to me that we must make you
+understand our troubles, and ask of you--"
+
+But then she stopped.
+
+As Kirby stared at her, the gentleness of her expression was replaced by
+a swift strength which made her majestic.
+
+The next moment bedlam reigned upon the beach.
+
+"_They are after us!_" gasped one of the girls in terror. "Quick, Naida!
+Quick! Quick!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Whatever it was that threatened, Naida did not need to be told that the
+need for action was pressing. She shouted at her companions some order
+which Kirby did not understand. From a pouch at her side, she snatched
+out a greyish, spherical vegetable substance which looked almost like a
+tennis ball. Then she braced herself as if to withstand an assault.
+
+"Stand back!" she cried to Kirby.
+
+He had long ago ceased to wonder at anything that might happen here.
+Disappointed that Naida's story had been interrupted, wondering what was
+wrong, he obeyed Naida's order to keep clear.
+
+As he fell back and stood motionless, there came from behind a dense
+screen of shrubs which would have resembled aloe and prickly pear
+bushes, save that they were as big as oak trees, a ghastly howling. The
+next second, hopped and hurtled across the beach toward the girls, a
+group of hair-covered, shaggy creatures which were neither apes nor men.
+The faces, contorted with lust, were hideously leathery and brown, the
+foreheads small and beetling, and the mouths enormous, with immense
+yellow teeth.
+
+Helpless, Kirby realized that Naida and all the others had clapped over
+their faces curious masks which seemed to be made of some crystalline
+substance, and that now others had armed themselves with the tennis
+balls. And that was the last observation he made before the battle
+opened furiously.
+
+With a cry muffled behind her mask, Naida leaped out in front of her
+squadron and cut loose her queer vegetable ball with whizzing aim and
+force.
+
+Full into the snarling face of one of the ape-men the thing smashed,
+filling the air all about the creature with a yellow, mistlike powder.
+Kirby was half deafened by the yells of rage and terror which went up
+from the entire attacking band. The creature who had been hit fell to
+his knees the while he made agonized tearing movements at his face and
+uttered shrill, jabbering yelps.
+
+Other balls flashed instantly from Naida's ranks, and each brought about
+the same ghastly result as the first. But then Kirby saw that the whole
+jungle seethed with the hairy, awful men.
+
+"Keep back!" Naida shrieked at him through her mask. "We have no mask
+for you. If the powder from our fungi touches you, it will be the end!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+With gaps in the advancing line filled as soon as each screeching ape
+went down, the attackers leaped on until Kirby knew they would be upon
+the girls in a matter of seconds. A sweat broke out on his neck.
+
+But then an idea gripped him, and suddenly, without even a last glance
+at Naida, he leaped away even as she had commanded.
+
+A great boulder lay on the shore fifty yards away. Toward it Kirby
+streaked as though he had become coward. But he had not turned coward.
+
+By the time he reached the shelter which would protect him from the
+fungus mist, a turning point had come in the battle. The ape-men had
+closed in on the girls, were swarming about them, and the mist balls had
+almost ceased to fly. But the thing which gave Kirby hope was that the
+apes were not attempting to harm the girls. They seemed victors, but
+they were not committing atrocities.
+
+It was the sharp intuition that something like this might happen which
+had sent Kirby fleeing from the fight. He believed he might yet prove
+useful.
+
+The thickest group of attackers were jostling about Naida. As the
+screams and sobs of the girls quivered out, mingled with the guttural
+roaring of the men, Naida was shut off by a solid wall of aggressors.
+
+Then Kirby saw her again. But now two of the most powerful of the
+ape-men had caught her up and was carrying her. Her kicking and writhing
+and biting accomplished nothing. The apes were headed directly back to
+the jungle.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now, however, most of the yellow mist had disappeared, and that was all
+Kirby had been waiting for. With a growling shout, he tore out from
+behind his boulder, his Luger ready. Naida's captors were in full
+retreat, and other pairs of men were snatching up other girls and
+hopping after them. Toward Naida Kirby ran madly but not blindly.
+
+"Naida! Naida!" he bellowed.
+
+He got in two strides for every one the apes made.
+
+"Naida!" he shouted, and at last saw her look at him.
+
+Her face was pallid with loathing and terror. As her glimmering dark
+eyes met his, they flashed a plea which made his heart thrash against
+his lungs.
+
+With a final roar of encouragement Kirby closed in on the hair-covered
+men, and fired instantly a shot which caught one full in the heart. The
+creature wavered on its legs, looked at the unexpected enemy with
+dismayed, swinish little red eyes, and relaxing his hold upon Naida,
+dropped without making a sound.
+
+After that--
+
+But suddenly Kirby found himself unable to comprehend fully the other
+terrific results of his intervention. Before the echoes of his shot
+died, there came to him the rumble of what seemed to be tons of falling
+rock. In the bright air a slight mist was precipitated. To all of which
+was added the effect upon the ape-men of fear of a weapon and a type of
+fighter utterly new to them.
+
+Kirby had fired believing that he would have to fight other ape-men
+when the first fell. But not so. Instead of that--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He blinked rapidly as he took in the scene.
+
+Naida had been released. Lying on the sand beside the dead ape-man, she
+was looking up at him in stupefied wonder. And her other captor, instead
+of remaining to fight, had clapped shaggy hands over his ears, and was
+leaping headlong for the protection of the jungle!
+
+Moreover, the soprano cries of the girls and the deep howls of the men
+were rising everywhere, and everywhere the ape-men were dropping their
+captives and plunging away after their leader.
+
+"Huh," Kirby muttered aloud, and wondered what the citizens of Kansas
+would have to say about _this_.
+
+Naida looked at the dead and bleeding ape-man and shuddered, and then at
+the score or so of others brought down by the puff balls. Then she
+looked up at Kirby, raised her arms for his support, and smiled up into
+his brown face.
+
+Kirby forgot Kansas, lifted her, warm and alive, radiantly beautiful, in
+his arms.
+
+"Our friends the enemies," she whispered as she remained for a second in
+his embrace and then drew away, "will attack no more this day--thanks to
+you."
+
+There was no possible need for another shot, Kirby saw. In terrified
+silence, the first of the apes had already floundered behind the prickly
+pear and aloe bushes, and the last stragglers were using all the power
+in their legs to catch up. On the beach, Naida's followers were picking
+themselves up, and already a few of them had burst into ringing
+laughter.
+
+"Come on, all of you," Naida said to them, and, including Kirby in her
+glance, added, "We may as well go to the caciques now, and have it over
+with."
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+It was with Naida at his side and the other girls grouped about them,
+that they started their journey to the "caciques," whoever they might
+be, "to have it over with," whatever that might mean. As they strode
+along in silence, Kirby did what he could to straighten out in his mind
+the many curious things which had happened since he sat testing his rope
+in the upper world this morning.
+
+In final analysis, it seemed to him that, extraordinary as his
+experience had been, there was nothing so much out of the way about it,
+after all. The only unusual thing was the existence of this inhabited
+pocket in the earth. For the rest, the strange colors to which he could
+not put a name, were simply some manifestation of infra-reds and
+ultra-violets. And then the startling effect of his single shot at the
+ape-men--that was simply the old story of savage creatures running from
+a new weapon and a new enemy; naturally the shot had sounded loud in
+this enclosed cavern. Lastly, the pull of gravity down here seemed upset
+somehow. But why should it not seem so, at this distance within the
+earth? The American was no scientist; the conclusions he reached seemed
+very reasonable to him.
+
+All told, the last thing Kirby found he needed to do was pinch himself
+to see if he was awake.
+
+A place of indefinite extent, the cavern seemed to be exactly what he
+had already judged it--a giant pocket within the earth. The ceiling, or
+the sky, was of some kind of natural glass--no doubt the same kind which
+was crackling on his clothes now--and from it emanated the brilliant,
+many colored glow which lighted the cavern. Radium? Perhaps it was that.
+Perhaps the rays were cast off from some other element even less
+understood than mysterious radium. As for the plant and animal life with
+which the cavern teemed, it was amazing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But Kirby did not give himself up to silent observation any longer.
+
+"Will you finish telling me," he asked of Naida, "about the task I am to
+perform for you here?"
+
+Naida, walking with lithe strides along a path jungle-hemmed on both
+sides, smiled at him.
+
+"You are to be our leader."
+
+"Yes?"
+
+Now both Naida and the other girls became sober.
+
+"You will lead us in a revolt."
+
+"Ah!" Kirby whistled softly.
+
+"In a revolt against the caciques--the wise men--whose kind have
+governed the People of the Temple since the beginning."
+
+Her statement was received with acclaim by the whole troop, who crowded
+close around, the while they smiled at Kirby.
+
+"You mean I am to lead a revolt," he asked, "against these same caciques
+whom we are going now to face?"
+
+Naida nodded emphatically.
+
+"Yes, if revolt proves necessary. And it probably will."
+
+"Hum." Kirby scratched behind his ear. "You'd better tell me what you
+can about it."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Then, as they hurried on, Naida spoke rapidly.
+
+The situation before the People of the Temple was that for a long time
+now, the only children to be born had been girls. Worse still, not even
+a girl had been born during a period equal to sixteen upper-world years.
+The only remaining members of a race which had flourished in this
+underground land for countless thousands of years, consisted of the
+caciques, a handful of aged people, and the thirty-four girls, including
+Naida, who accompanied Kirby now.
+
+On one hand was promised extinction through lack of reproduction. On the
+other, even swifter and more terrible extinction at the hands of the
+ape-men, whom Naida called the Worshippers of Xlotli, the Rabbit God,
+the God of all bestiality and drunkenness.
+
+It was the menace of the ape-men, rather than the less appalling one of
+lack of reproduction, which was making the most trouble now. Ages ago,
+when the People of the Temple had flourished as a race, they had been
+untroubled by the Worshippers of Xlotli. But now the ape-men were by far
+the stronger; and they desired the girls who had been born as the last
+generation of an ancient race. The battle of this morning had been only
+one of many.
+
+Dissension between the caciques, who ruled the People of the Temple, and
+their girl subjects, had arisen on the subject of the best way of
+dealing with the ape-man menace.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Some time ago, Naida, heading a council of all the girls, had proposed
+to the caciques that support be sought amongst the people of the upper
+world. This would be done judiciously, by bringing to the lower realm a
+few men who were wise and strong, men who would make good husbands, and
+who could fight the ape-men.
+
+This proposal the priests had promptly quashed. They would never
+receive, they said, any members of the teeming outer races from whom the
+People of the Temple had so long been hidden. Those few who had
+blundered into the Valley of the Geyser during the centuries, and who
+had never escaped, were enough. Better, said the caciques, that a
+compromise be arranged with the subjects of the Rabbit God.
+
+Flatly then, the priests had proposed that some of the girls, the number
+to be specified later, should be given to the ape-men, and peace won.
+During the time of reprieve which would thus be afforded, prayers and
+sacrifices could be offered the Lords of the Sun and Moon, and to
+Quetzalcoatl, the Feathered Serpent. In answer to these prayers, the
+Gods would surely send the aged people who alone were left as
+prospective parents, a generation of sons.
+
+Once the priests' program of giving up some of the girls to the ape-men
+had been made definite, it had not taken Naida and the others long to
+decide that they would never submit. And then, while matters were at an
+acute stage, a tall, blond white man had come to the Valley of the
+Geyser--Kirby.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As Naida had finished her story, Kirby mustered a smile despite the
+soberness which had come upon him.
+
+"So the white man came," he repeated after her, "and all of you decided
+forthwith to stage your revolt."
+
+"Why not?" Naida answered. "We observed you until we were sure you
+possessed the qualities of leadership we wanted. After that, we did what
+we could to coax you to come here."
+
+Kirby grinned at that.
+
+"Now," Naida ended simply, "we will go to the caciques. If they accept
+you, and grant our requests to them, there will be peace. If they rage,
+it will be war."
+
+Suddenly she drew closer to Kirby as they swung along, and slipped her
+hand into his, looking up at him in silent entreaty.
+
+"How much farther," he asked in a voice which became sharp, "until we
+reach the headquarters of these caciques?"
+
+"They live in a castle which our ancestors built ages ago on a protected
+plateau," Naida answered tensely. "It is a good distance still, but we
+will cover it soon enough."
+
+They crossed now one edge of a shadow-filled forest composed principally
+of immense, pallid palmlike trees. Farther on, the path wound through a
+belt of swampy land covered by gigantic reeds which rustled above their
+heads with a glassy sound, and by things which looked like the cat-tails
+of the upper world, but were a hundred times larger. Everywhere hovered
+odd little creatures like birds, but with teeth in their long snouts and
+small frondlike growths on each side of their tails. About some swamp
+plants with very large blooms resembling passion flowers, flitted dragon
+flies of jeweled hues and enormous size, and under the flowers hopped
+strange toadlike creatures equipped with two pair of gauzy wings.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Finally, through a tunnel composed of ferns a hundred feet high, they
+emerged to a still densely overgrown but higher country which Naida said
+was a part of the Rorroh forest.
+
+In the forest, Kirby gained a hazy impression of bronzy, immense cycads
+and what appeared to be tree chrysophilums with gorgeous blossoms. Then
+he received a much clearer impression of other trees with blossoms of
+bright orange yellow and very thick petals, each tipped with a glassy
+sharp point. The disconcerting thing about the tree was that, as they
+approached, the scaly limbs began to tremble and wave, and suddenly
+lashed out as though making a human effort to snatch at the bright
+travelers.
+
+Naida and all the others hurried along without offering comment, and
+Kirby asked no questions.
+
+Once he thought he saw a group of gorilla creatures parallelling their
+course back amongst the forest growth, but if Naida observed the
+animals, she paid no attention. The one thing which had any effect upon
+the company was the appearance, presently, of two vast, birdlike
+creatures. As these things approached, Naida signaled to all to crouch
+beneath the shelter of a tall rock beside the path.
+
+Enormous, the birds had bat wings, and carried with them, as they
+approached, the stink of putrid flesh. The long beaks were overfull of
+sharp teeth. The heads, set upon bodies of glistening white-grey, were
+black. Reddish grey eyes searched the jungle as the creatures flapped
+along. But, the Pterodactyls--if they were that--passed above Naida's
+band without offering attack, and presently Naida gave the command to
+advance again.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In time, they came to a chasmlike gorge across which was suspended
+a slender long thread of a bridge. Not far above the bridge, a
+considerable river emptied itself into the gorge in a mirrorlike
+ribbon. Kirby could not hear the torrent fall--or rather could not
+hear it strike any solid bottom. But from somewhere in the unlighted,
+unfathomed depths of the abyss rose strange bubbling and whistling
+sounds.
+
+At the bridge, Naida paused and pointed to the land across the river.
+And as Kirby looked in the direction indicated, he beheld a rocky
+eminence rising for several hundred feet straight up from the expanse of
+a level, tree and grass covered plain. Atop of the plateau, glimmered
+the complex towers and turrets, the crenellated walls of a castle which,
+in its grey antiquity, seemed as old as the race of men.
+
+"It is behind those walls that the caciques dwell," Naida said quickly.
+"It is behind the castle, in a series of separate houses, that the older
+members of the race dwell. We shall go and look upon them presently. But
+first we will force an interview with the caciques."
+
+In silence Kirby took her hand, and, with the others following, they
+moved out upon the swaying, perilous causeway which hung above the
+chasm. After that, the trip across the plain to the foot of the plateau
+cliffs was quickly accomplished.
+
+Here, however, Kirby thought they must face trouble, for he found that
+the great walls, of a sparkling, almost glassy smoothness, shot up to a
+height of at least three hundred feet, and that no path of any sort was
+visible.
+
+"We're here," he said, "but how can we get up?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But understanding began to dawn as Naida laughed, and produced from the
+pouch at the side of her gauzy dress four pliable discs of a substance
+which resembled rubber.
+
+"You are very strong, are you not?" she asked.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then you will have no trouble in following us up the cliff. Our Serpent
+God, Quetzalcoatl, taught us how to climb long ago."
+
+With that she handed Kirby the set of vacuum discs, and producing
+another for herself, moistened them in a pool of water close at hand.
+Then, as all of the girls followed her action, she strapped them to her
+hands and feet, and in a moment they had begun the ascent.
+
+"Why," Kirby said presently, "with these things you could hang by your
+feet and walk on a smooth ceiling!"
+
+Naida laughed, and they worked their way upward.
+
+When the climb was accomplished and the discs were put away, Kirby found
+himself standing on the outer edge of a mediaeval paradise, of a
+magnificent plateau partly fortified by nature, partly by the hand of
+man.
+
+"Ah!" he cried in deep admiration, then followed Naida.
+
+The building--the castle--in the near distance, resembled a castle of
+Spain, save that there was greater beauty and subtlety of architecture.
+Turreted on all four corners, constructed of material which looked like
+blocks of natural glass, the fairylike structure was crowned by a
+gigantic tower of something which resembled obsidian. Up and up this
+tower soared until its gleaming black tip seemed almost to touch the
+glassy-radiant sky of the cavern.
+
+No people showed themselves, and Kirby saw that the bronze-studded
+portals set in the front of the castle were closed.
+
+Admiringly, he glanced at the surrounding land laid out in checkerboard
+patches of gardens and orchards where grew a bewildering variety of
+unknown fruits and blooms. Butterflies drifted past, and the air was
+freighted with the scent of flowers. Inside a walled enclosure, Kirby
+saw a good-sized plot heavily grown with the plant on which he had been
+subsisting. As they passed this ground, each of the girls, Naida
+leading, made a strange little bowing, gliding genuflection, and Kirby
+wondered.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now, however, new sights distracted him as they crossed a port
+drawbridge above a deep moat which was a fairyland of aquatic plants.
+Although not a sound had come from the castle, the great entrance doors
+were swinging back.
+
+"Be ready," Naida whispered, "for almost anything. The doors are being
+opened by some of the palace guard. I have little doubt that word was
+long ago rushed to the caciques that we are come to them with an
+upper-world man!"
+
+Kirby answered with a nod. Then they passed the outer doors, passed
+inside, and Kirby blinked at what he saw.
+
+In a long hall decorated bewilderingly with a carven frieze in which
+appeared all of the symbols common to early Mexican religions, and many
+new ones, stood a row of bright suits of armor of the Sixteenth Century.
+From each suit peered the glassy face and shovel beard of a dead
+Conquistadore.
+
+So this was what happened to intruders from the upper world! The
+Conquistadore who kept his long watch beside the geyser was not the only
+one! Kirby felt an involuntary chill prickle up his back. But he was not
+given long to think before Naida, ignoring the gruesome array, clasped
+his arm.
+
+"Look! Behold!"
+
+And Kirby saw that with almost magical silence the whole wall at the end
+of the corridor was sliding back to reveal an enormous amphitheatre in
+the center of which stood a vast circular table. Ranged in a semicircle
+about that table, stood fifteen incredibly ancient men clad in long,
+glistening grey robes. Blanched beards trailed down the front of the
+garments until they all but touched the floor.
+
+The caciques!
+
+Kirby, on the threshold of the amphitheatre, squared his shoulders and
+held his head high. Then with Naida on his right, his own eyes boring
+unyieldingly into the smouldering, narrowed eyes which stared at him, he
+advanced.
+
+But in front of him the priests moved suddenly. From Naida burst a
+shriek. In the radiant glare of the council room flashed the long, thin,
+cruel blade of a sacrificial knife.
+
+The cacique who had whipped it from his robe flew at Kirby with a condor
+swoop, talon-hands outstretched, his wrinkled, bearded face contorted
+with fury.
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+Before Kirby was more than half set to fight, the priest was clawing at
+his throat, and a gnarled old fist was poised to drive the knife in a
+death stroke.
+
+Kirby did the only thing he could do quickly--sprang to one side. The
+move saved him. The knife whipped past his shoulder, and the cacique
+nearly fell. But it had been a close enough squeak for all that.
+
+Nor was it over. After Kirby the priest sprang with unexpected agility,
+and before Kirby could snatch at his pistol the talon-hands were lunging
+at his throat once more.
+
+With the gasps of the girls ringing in his ears, Kirby bunched himself
+for another side leap only to find the cacique all over him like an
+octopus. Momentarily the knife hung above his chest, and Kirby, dismayed
+at the powers of his opponent, almost felt that the thing must plunge
+before he could break the octopus hold.
+
+But he had no intention of being defeated, and now he was getting used
+to the fight. The priest's left arm swiftly clenched about his neck and
+shoulders, and the right arm, with the knife, attempted a drive through
+to the heart. Suddenly, however, Kirby lurched sideways and backward,
+and as the octopus grip slackened for a flash, he himself got a
+wrestler's grip that left him ready to do business. As the priest broke
+free, he slid around in an attempt to fasten himself on Kirby's back.
+Quickly, tensely Kirby doubled, and knew that he had done enough. The
+cacique shot over his shoulders, described a somersault in midair, and
+landed with a sharp crack of head and shoulders against unyielding
+stone.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From the semicircle of other priests went up a gasp. From Naida came a
+strangled cry of joy. Kirby made one leap for the knife which had fallen
+from the cacique's hand as he slumped into unconsciousness, and then he
+straightened up with the weapon safe in his possession.
+
+"There, you old billygoat," he croaked in English, "maybe you won't try
+any more fast ones for awhile."
+
+A second later he stepped over the sprawled body to stand beside Naida.
+
+Upon the wrinkled countenances of the remaining caciques was stamped a
+look of dismay and hatred which boded no good. It was plain to Kirby
+that in battering up the man detailed to kill him, he had committed a
+desecration of first order.
+
+"Is there anyone else who cares to fight?" he flung at them in Spanish,
+showing a contempt as great as their rage.
+
+The response he got was instant. From one old gullet, then from others,
+came choking, snarling sounds which presently became words. By those
+words Kirby heard himself cursed with a vituperation which made him,
+even in his temporary triumph, feel grave.
+
+But he did not let that soberness trouble him long. For the main point
+now was that no one made a move to fight further, which was what he had
+expected. He had flung them the challenge, knowing that he was possessed
+of their knife, and suspecting that it was their only weapon. The belief
+that no one would care to try a barehanded conflict, no matter what
+insult was waiting to be avenged, seemed justified as none of the
+caciques advanced, and as even the cursing presently ceased.
+
+"No?" Kirby asked. "There is to be no more fighting?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One of the caciques now came forward a few steps.
+
+"No," he answered with a lameness which was not to be denied. "But you,
+a criminal interloper in our realm, have been marked as a victim for
+sacrifice, and from this there is no power in the universe which can
+save you."
+
+Kirby, after a reassuring glance at Naida, looked at the floored priest
+who was sitting up now, looking stupidly about, and feeling himself all
+over, and Kirby suppressed a grin.
+
+"Ah, I am to be sacrificed, eh? But what happens until that time comes?
+Listen my Wise Ones--"
+
+He stabbed a finger at them, and his eyes flashed.
+
+"Listen! What you mean to say is that I have defeated you, and you must
+lay off me until you can launch another attack. But I have a few things
+to say to that. One is that I am not going to permit myself to _be_
+sacrificed. Another is that I demand, right here and now, that you begin
+to discuss with me certain agreements which are going to regulate the
+future conduct of affairs in this world to which I have come."
+
+A low exclamation answered that, but it came from no priest. They
+remained sullen and staggered. It was Naida who murmured, and there was
+excitement and pleasure in her voice. Suddenly she placed her lips
+against Kirby's ear.
+
+"You must not treat with them," she said. "Tell them you want to see the
+Duca, and will destroy them all unless he comes!"
+
+Understanding burst over Kirby. The Duca! Then these men were only the
+representatives of a High Priest, the Duca!
+
+"Yes," he repeated resolutely to the assembled greybeards, "a meeting is
+going to be held in this chamber of council at once. But I will not
+deal with you! Do you understand me? I must see the Duca. I leave it to
+you to decide whether you will summon him, or force me to fight my way
+through to wherever he is staying."
+
+"The Duca!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The words burst in dismay from the gimlet-eyed cacique who had said
+there would be no more fighting. He looked at Naida, well aware of the
+fact that it was her interference which had made Kirby extend his
+demand. And his look was black.
+
+Kirby slid between Naida and the cacique.
+
+"Yes," he spat out, "the Duca! Will you summon him, or--"
+
+He did not repeat what he would do as an alternative. A second passed in
+silence. It seemed as if the cacique who had been speaking was ready to
+burst.
+
+"Answer me!" Kirby thundered.
+
+And then the priest obeyed.
+
+"Very well," he growled in a voice which quaked with rage. "I obey. But
+you will wish you had never made the demand!"
+
+The next second he swung on his heel, and leaving his company behind as
+a guard, headed toward a stair which led upward from one side of the
+amphitheatre, and which was protected by a door of heavy, grilled metal
+work. The stairway seemed to be spiral, and was all enclosed. Kirby
+realized that it must lead into the tall and beautiful tower of obsidion
+which he had seen outside.
+
+"Oh," Naida whispered as looks and smiles of approval came from all of
+the girls, "you have been magnificent! Mark now, what we must do. You
+must be the one to state our terms, because you have already won a
+victory for us. Tell the Duca that we will not submit to any compromise
+with the ape-men, and least of all will we let any of our number go to
+the ape-men."
+
+A deep flush crept into Kirby's cheeks at thought of what he would like
+to do to the man who had proposed that sacrifice.
+
+"Then tell him," Naida continued, "that we want men brought to our world
+from the world above. And finally tell him we will live under his
+dictatorship no longer, and hereafter demand a voice in all councils
+affecting temporal affairs."
+
+"All right," Kirby spoke grimly. "I'll tell him. Naida, is this high
+priest we're waiting for, the one who proposed sacrifice of some of you
+to the apes?"
+
+Naida nodded.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Next moment, she, Kirby, and all the others, including the row of
+glowering caciques, became silent. At sounds from above, all looked
+toward the grilled doorway to the tower. Then Kirby realized that all of
+the girls, as well as the caciques, were dropping to their knees.
+
+"No!" he commanded quickly. "Get up! You must not abase--"
+
+He had not finished, and Naida had scarcely risen, when the heavy door
+swung on noiseless hinges.
+
+The light in the amphitheatre seemed to become more intense. Then,
+against the great glow, Kirby beheld majesty, beheld one who represented
+the apotheosis of priestly rank and power.
+
+Clad in robes of filmy material which glimmered white beside the gray
+robes of his underlings, the Duca wore about his waist the living flame
+of a girdle composed of alternate cut diamonds and blood red rubies each
+larger than a golf ball. And Kirby, searching for comparisons, realized
+that the Duca's face, upheld to others, would be as remarkable as his
+jewels must be when compared to ordinary gems. It was a chiseled face,
+seamed by a thousand wrinkles, which a god might have carved from ivory
+before endowing it with the flush and glow of life. A mane of snow white
+hair cascaded back from a tremendous forehead to fall about thin but
+square shoulders and mingle with the downward sweep of pure white
+beard. The eyes, black as polished jet, flamed now with the glare of
+baleful fires.
+
+As Naida, stealing close to Kirby, trembled, and even the abased
+caciques trembled, Kirby himself felt as if icy water was trickling over
+him.
+
+He fought the sensation off. For suddenly he knew that in spite of first
+impressions which made the man seem a living god, the old Duca was
+human. And what was more, he was in the wrong. All of which being true,
+the thing to do was keep a level head and fight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+All at once Kirby spoke across the silence in the great room.
+
+"I have sent for you," he said, weighing words carefully.
+
+"And I,"--the Duca's voice was mellow and deep--"have come. But I am not
+here because you summoned me."
+
+"Oh!" Kirby let sarcasm edge his words. "Well, I won't quibble about
+your motives for coming. Did my messenger tell you why we are here and
+demand your presence?"
+
+"Your messenger," the old man said calmly, "told me."
+
+"Very well. Do you consent to listen to Naida's and my terms? If you
+_will_ listen--"
+
+"But wait a moment," the Duca interrupted, still calmly, but with a look
+in his eyes which Kirby did not like. "Are you asking _me_, to my face,
+whether I will listen to terms which you offer as self-styled victor of
+a battle with my caciques?"
+
+Kirby nodded. His apprehension increased.
+
+"Ah," said the Duca softly. And then, amazingly, a smile deepened every
+wrinkle of his parchment face. "But do you not remember that I said I
+had _not_ come here because you summoned me?"
+
+"Yes," Kirby said solidly. "I remember very well."
+
+"The thing which brought me here was the failure of my followers to
+accomplish an assignment which I had given them--namely, that of ending
+your life."
+
+"Hum." Kirby scratched behind his ear. "You are _not_ interested in
+arranging terms of peace, then."
+
+"I am here,"--suddenly the Duca's voice filled the room--"to do that
+which my priests were unable to do. And the moment has come when the
+Gods will no longer trifle with you. You dog! You thieving intruder!
+You--"
+
+Swiftly the Duca plunged one withered but still powerful hand into the
+folds of his robe above the flaming girdle. Then his hand flashed out,
+and in it he held--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But Kirby did not get to see.
+
+A strangled cry of terror smote his ears. Naida leaped toward him from
+one side, while Elana, the lovely youngest girl, sprang from another
+direction, hurled Naida aside, and stopped in front of Kirby.
+
+Through the glaring room flickered a tiny red serpentine creature which
+the Duca hurled from a crystalline tube in his hand. As the minute snake
+struck Elana's breast, she gave a choked cough, and then, as she half
+turned to smile at both Naida and Kirby over her shoulder, her eyes went
+blank, and she collapsed gently to the polished stones of the
+floor--dead.
+
+A second later came squirming out from under her the ghastly, glimmering
+little snake which had struck.
+
+Slowly, while every mortal in the room stood paralyzed, Kirby stepped
+forward and set his heel upon the writhing thing. When he raised his
+boot, the snake was only a blotch on the floor.
+
+The Duca was standing as still as girls and caciques. The laughter with
+which he had started to greet what he had thought would be Kirby's
+extermination had faded to a look of wonder--and fear. He was an easy
+mark.
+
+Up to him Kirby rolled, and with all the force of soul and muscular
+body, drove his fist into the Duca's face.
+
+"By God," he roared, "you want war, and you shall have it!"
+
+The Duca was simply out--not dead. Since Kirby did not want him dead, he
+did not strike again, but swung back from the sprawled body, faced
+Naida, and pointed to the tower door.
+
+"Up there!" he snapped. "Seize the tower. I have a reason!"
+
+At the Duca's crashing downfall, had come to the caciques a tension
+which made Kirby know they would not be dummy figures much longer. His
+eyes never left them.
+
+"Quick, Naida!" he snapped again. "We must hold the tower!"
+
+Naida, all of the girls, were staring dazedly at Elana, dead.
+
+"The tower!" she choked. "But we cannot go there. It is the Duca's!"
+
+"Because it is the Duca's," Kirby said firmly, "is exactly why we must
+hold it. Come, Naida, please--"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And then he saw comprehension begin to dawn at last.
+
+He also saw two of the caciques glide from the wooden line, and slink
+toward him past the unconscious Duca, stealthily.
+
+As Naida suddenly cried out to her companions, pushed at two of them,
+and then darted like a rainbow nymph toward the silent and forbidding
+upward spiral of steps, Kirby faced the gliding caciques.
+
+One he clutched with viselike hands, and lifted him. As the other
+shrieked and sprang, he was mowed down by the hurtling body of his
+fellow priest which Kirby flung forward mightily.
+
+The rest of the caciques were howling. While Naida waited beside the
+tower door, the other girls flashed up the steps. The Duca still lay
+where he had fallen, a thread of blood oozing from his mouth. Kirby,
+after his last look over all, solemnly stooped and gathered in his arms
+the limp, radiant little body of the girl who had given her life that
+her friends might be left with a leader.
+
+A moment later, he was standing on the steps. Naida, unopposed by the
+still stupefied caciques, swung shut the tower door and shot a double
+bolt.
+
+"Naida--" Kirby whispered as he held Elana closer to him, "oh, I am so
+sorry that we could have won only at such a price."
+
+As Naida stooped to kiss the pale little forehead with its halo of
+golden hair, sobs came. But then she raised her eyes, and they were, for
+Kirby, alight with the message that she could and would accept Elana's
+sacrifice, because she would gladly have made it herself.
+
+"We will not forget," she whispered. "Carry her tenderly, and come."
+
+For better, for worse, the Duca's tower was theirs.
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+At the end of an hour, Kirby was taking a turn of guard duty at the foot
+of the steps, while the others remained with Elana in a chamber above.
+To Kirby, with things thus far along, it seemed that the seizure of the
+tower had proved a shrewd stroke.
+
+It seemed that the tower was to the Duca what hair was to Sampson. From
+Naida had come the information that the Duca lived hidden within the
+great shaft of obsidion, and appeared but seldom even before his
+caciques. Apparently a large part of his hold upon his subjects was
+maintained by the mystery with which he kept himself surrounded. And now
+his retreat was lost to him! Such had been the moral effect of the loss
+upon both Duca and caciques, that his whole first hour had gone by
+without their doing anything.
+
+Kirby, standing just around the first turn of the winding stairway,
+presently cocked his ears to listen to the conclave being held in the
+amphitheatre.
+
+"Why not starve them out, O Holy One?" he heard one of the caciques ask
+of the Duca, only to be answered by a growl of negation.
+
+The Duca, Kirby had gathered before this, wanted to fight.
+
+"But there is no food in the tower, is there?" the cacique still pressed
+on, and this time he was supported by other voices.
+
+"No," the Duca rumbled back. "But am I to be deprived of my retreat,
+left here like a common dog amongst other dogs, while these accursed
+fiends starve slowly to death? No! I tell you, you must fight for me!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But he had told them so several times before and nothing had happened.
+Kirby grinned at the thought of the caste the Duca was losing by being
+driven to this belittling parley.
+
+"Holy One," exclaimed a new priest in answer to the urge to fight, "what
+can we do against the golden haired fiend? The stairs are so narrow that
+he could defend them alone. And then there are the gates of bronze. If
+we could shatter the first, at the foot of the steps, we should only
+encounter others. The Duca must remember that his tower was built to
+withstand attack."
+
+"Even so," the Duca snapped back, "it must be attacked! I--"
+
+But then he fell silent, having been made so by the sounds of dissension
+which arose amongst his caciques. Kirby, laughing to himself, turned
+away from his listening post, and tip-toed up the steps.
+
+After he had closed and bolted behind him three of the bronze portals so
+feared by the caciques, he turned to the entrance of the chamber in
+which he had left Naida and the others. Here all was silent, and he
+found his friends grouped about a couch on which lay Elana. Feeling the
+solemnity of the moment, he would have taken his place quietly amongst
+the mourners.
+
+Naida, however, came to him at once, and in a low voice asked for news
+from the amphitheatre, and when Kirby answered that the caciques were
+unanimously in favor of leaving them alone until they starved, she
+exclaimed:
+
+"Oh, then it is good news!"
+
+After that, however, a shadow of doubt flickered in her great eyes.
+
+"And yet, is it? It means temporary immunity, of coarse.
+But--starvation!"
+
+Kirby assured her with a grin.
+
+"If we had to starve we might worry. But there is more food here than
+the Duca thinks. Look!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From a bulging pocket of his tunic he fished a strip of the roots on
+which he had subsisted so comfortably. Naida's eyes widened, and several
+of the girls gave low cries.
+
+"Yes," Naida exclaimed, "but such food! Why--why, do you know what you
+are offering us? Why, this is the sacred Peyote! Only the Duca eats it,
+and, at rare intervals, his priests."
+
+Kirby was really startled now.
+
+"But surely you and the others have taken quantities of the stuff away
+from the Valley of the Geyser. Do you mean--"
+
+"Because we gathered the Peyote does not mean that we have ever tasted
+it. We gather it for the Duca. To taste would be complete, utter
+sacrilege. Have _you_ been eating it?"
+
+Inwardly Kirby was chuckling at this added proof of the buncumbe with
+which the Duca--and other Ducas--had fooled all.
+
+"Of course I've been eating the Peyote."
+
+"And--and nothing has happened to you?" Naida asked.
+
+"Hardly. I certainly haven't been blasted by the Lords of the Sun and
+Moon, or the Serpent either!"
+
+Naida and all the others were silent. The conflict between their
+reverence for the food and their clear desire to eat it, now that it was
+become the food of their leader, was pathetic.
+
+Kirby put one of the strips in Naida's hand.
+
+"Why not?" he asked. "We have bested the Duca in fair fight. We have
+seized his tower. Why not eat his food?"
+
+As he had hoped it would, the suggestion at last settled the matter. A
+moment later, as Naida nibbled her first bite, she smiled.
+
+"Why, it--it's good!"
+
+With the question of provisions settled at least for a time, Kirby's
+next thought was of the tower. The present lull of peace seemed made for
+exploration.
+
+"Come along," he said to Naida, "we've plenty to do," and then, when he
+explained, they set out, accompanied by Nini, a cousin of Naida's, and
+Ivana, a younger sister.
+
+All of the others remained with little Elana.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+While they climbed spiral stairs, Naida explained that the chamber they
+had just left was used by the Duca as a place in which he prayed before
+and after contacts with caciques or subjects. A sort of halfway station
+between earth and heaven, as it were, where the Duca might be purged of
+any sullying influence gained from human relationships.
+
+At thought of the rank, egotistical hypocrisy implied by the story,
+Kirby smiled grimly. Then they came to a new door, heavier than that
+which barricaded the prayer chamber. Unlocked, the thing swung
+ponderously at Kirby's push, and with the three girls pressing close
+beside him, he entered--and stopped.
+
+"Naida!" he gasped.
+
+"Oh, _oh_!" she cried, and while Nini and Ivana gasped, she clapped her
+hands in an instinctive, feminine reaction of joy. "But there are things
+here which I believe none but the Ducas of our race have ever seen! Oh!
+Why, the sacred girdle is as nothing compared to this display!"
+
+By "display" she meant a treasure which took Kirby's breath away, which
+made his heart act queerly.
+
+The walls of the chamber were fashioned of polished blocks of obsidion
+on which stood out in heavy bas-relief a maze of decorative figures
+fashioned of pure, beaten gold--the same kind of gold which had gone
+into the making of the cylinder of gold. With his first glance at the
+gorgeously wrought motifs of Feathered Serpent and Sun and Moon symbols,
+Kirby knew to a certainty whence the golden cylinder had come
+originally.
+
+But even the gold--literally tons of it there must have been--was
+nothing compared to the gems.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+They were spread out in blinding array upon a great table in the center
+of the room. There were pearls as big as turkey eggs and whiter, softer
+than the light of a June morning growing in the East. There were rubies.
+One amongst the many was the size of a baseball and glowed like the
+heart of a red star. The least of the two or three hundred gems would
+have outclassed the greatest treasures of the Crown jewels of England
+and Russia combined.
+
+Most overwhelming of all, however, was the jewel which rested against a
+square of black cloth all its own in the center of the table. While his
+heart still acted queerly, while Naida, Nini, and Ivana hung back,
+delighted, but still too bewildered to move, Kirby advanced and took
+gingerly in his hands a single white diamond about eighteen inches long,
+and almost as wide and deep as it was long.
+
+The thing was carved with exquisite cunning to a likeness of the living
+head of Quetzalcoatl, the Feathered Serpent.
+
+Kirby dared not guess how many pounds the carven hunk of flashing,
+blue-white carbon weighed. He knew only that like it there was no other
+diamond in the world, and that the thing was real. Naida and the two
+girls were silent now, and suddenly Kirby realized that to their awe of
+the gem was added awe of deepest religious nature. Slowly he put the
+diamond head of the Serpent back upon its square of cloth.
+
+"We--we had heard that this thing existed," Naida said presently, voice
+hushed, "but no one except the holy men of our race has ever beheld
+it."
+
+"But, what is it?" Kirby asked. "Whence came it?"
+
+However, when Naida would have answered, he interrupted.
+
+"But wait! Tell me as we go. We could stay here for the rest of our
+lives without much trouble, but we've got to cover the rest of the tower
+and get back to the others."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was after they had closed the door to the treasure room that Naida
+told him the story.
+
+"There is not so much to tell," she began. "The diamond itself is so
+gorgeous that it is hard to talk about. But here is the story. A great
+many ages ago one of the Ducas of our race found the diamond, decided to
+carve it into a perfect likeness of the head of the Serpent God. All of
+the craftsmen of the race helped him and when they were done, they took
+their image to Quetzalcoatl himself, and showed him what they had done.
+
+"Quetzalcoatl was pleased. So pleased, that he promised all of the wise
+men that he would cease to prey upon them as he had in the past, and
+henceforward would take his toll of sacrifice from the ape-men alone.
+Them he hated and would continue to hate because they worshipped not him
+but Xlotli.
+
+"And so it came about," Naida went on slowly, looking up at Kirby as
+they still mounted wide steps to the upper reaches of the tower, "that
+our people gained immunity from a God which had always before harmed and
+destroyed them. Our race presently began to build this castle here on
+the high plateau, and Quetzalcoatl kept his compact with them. He still
+comes out of his chasm at intervals and preys upon the ape-men, but no
+one of our race has seen him for thousands of years, and he has always
+let us alone. And there is the whole myth and explanation of why the
+great diamond is revered among us as a holy of holies."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+They had mounted to a new door which Kirby guessed might give entrance
+to the Duca's living quarters. But he was in no mood to open it at
+once.
+
+"Wait a minute," he said as they all paused. "You say that, although
+none of your race has seen Quetzalcoatl since the diamond head was
+carved, he still comes out of his chasm and makes trouble for the
+ape-men. Just what does that mean?"
+
+"Why--" Naida looked at him wonderingly. "I mean what I have said. The
+Serpent comes out of his chasm and--"
+
+"What chasm?" Kirby asked sharply.
+
+"Why, the one we crossed this morning. It extends to the far reaches of
+our country, beyond the Rorroh forest, where the ape-men dwell but which
+our people never visit. It is in that distant part of the chasm that the
+Serpent dwells."
+
+"But--but--Oh, good Lord!" Kirby whistled softly. "Naida, do you mean to
+tell me that Quetzalcoatl was not simply a mythical monster, but an
+actual, living serpent which is alive _now_?"
+
+Naida and the others shrugged.
+
+"Why not?" she answered. "Sometimes we have captured a few ape-men, and
+they tell us stories of how Quetzalcoatl kills them. _They_ say he is
+very much alive."
+
+"But," Kirby mumbled in increasing wonder, "is this living creature the
+same which your ancestors worshipped first as long ago, perhaps, as a
+million years?"
+
+"That," Naida answered unhesitatingly, "I'm not sure of. Our caciques
+believe that the Serpent, although it lives longer than any other
+sentient thing, finally dies and is succeeded by a new Serpent which is
+reproduced by itself, within its own body."
+
+So overwhelming did Kirby find this unexpected sequel to their discovery
+of the great diamond head, so staggered was he by the fact that
+Quetzalcoatl, of Aztecan myth, might exist as a sentient creature here
+in this cavern world, that he had little heart left for exploring other
+wonders.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Nevertheless, he presently pushed open the new door before which they
+had paused, and behind it found, as he had expected, the Duca's living
+quarters.
+
+These were as severe as the jewel chamber had been gorgeous. A thin
+pallet spread upon a frame of wood formed the bed, and beside it stood a
+single stiff chair. That was all. The walls of glistening obsidion were
+bare.
+
+There was, however, a door in one circular wall, and as Kirby flung this
+open, his previous disappointment changed to delight. For shelves along
+the walls of the small chamber held roll after roll of parchment covered
+with script. And in one corner lay six undamaged, almost new Mannlichers
+and several hundred rounds of ammunition!
+
+"Naida," he exclaimed, "do you know what those are?"
+
+"I suppose that they are weapons of the sort you used against the
+ape-men this morning?"
+
+Kirby grinned.
+
+"They are the same kind I used, and then some. With these weapons we can
+do what we never could with the smaller one. How did they get here?"
+
+"They came when I was much younger," Naida answered with a shade of
+sadness in her voice. "The men who had them penetrated the Valley of the
+Geyser, coming by a different route from the one you followed. When the
+Duca learned they were there, he sent such men of the race as were still
+able to fight to kill them. That order of the Duca's was one of the
+first things to turn me against him. The men were not harming us, and
+they should have been permitted to go away. But the Duca insisted that
+they be killed, and in the fight were lost eight of our youngest and
+strongest men."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kirby stooped to inspect the rifles.
+
+"Has no one learned to use these weapons?"
+
+"No," Naida answered. "The Duca kept them for himself."
+
+"We think," put in Ivana, "that he hoped to learn to use them, and was
+afraid for us to have the knowledge."
+
+Kirby filled one of the magazines, and felt the heft of the gun with
+pleasure.
+
+"Very well," he said. "It looks to me as though your time to learn the
+art of shooting has come at last. Come, I think we had better be getting
+back downstairs."
+
+Kirby took three guns himself, and with the others lugging the rest,
+they started back. The parchment rolls, he decided, must be left for
+examination later on.
+
+They were all elated when they rejoined the girls in the prayer chamber,
+and high spirits were still further increased by the report, promptly
+given, that all had remained quiet in the amphitheatre. Save only for
+the presence of Elana, radiant and calm in death, the give and take of
+questions would have been accompanied by actual gaiety.
+
+But the time of peace did not last much longer. While Naida was in the
+midst of answering incessant questions about the wonders of the jewel
+chamber, Kirby heard a sound from below, and suddenly went over to the
+downward-winding steps.
+
+"Listen," he called sharply back to the others.
+
+He had not been mistaken. Many footsteps echoed from the amphitheatre,
+and he made out that the caciques were coming toward the bolted gate at
+the foot of the steps. While he listened, and Naida came eagerly to his
+side, silence fell.
+
+But then clear words came up to them.
+
+"Let the upper-world man come to the foot of the steps," called the
+Duca. "I have an offer to make him!"
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+To himself Kirby chuckled. Such real entreaty filled the Duca's voice
+that there seemed no danger of further treachery from him at the
+moment.
+
+With a grin, Kirby took Naida's hand and led her down the steps,
+unbolting each bronze gate but the last.
+
+"What do you want?" he asked in a cool voice a moment later, when he
+stopped on the final step and faced the Duca from behind the protection
+of the final gate.
+
+Clearly the parley was going to be a blunt one.
+
+"I want you to leave our world," the Duca rumbled promptly.
+
+He was drawn up in a posture intended to display dignity. But his left
+cheek, where Kirby had hammered him, was pulpy and discolored, and
+somehow he seemed to Kirby more than ever merely human.
+
+"Under what conditions am I to leave?"
+
+"If you will vacate my tower at once," the Duca said with a flush of
+eagerness which he could not conceal, "I will permit Naida and one of my
+caciques to escort you back to the Valley of the Geyser. I will also
+give you directions by which you may travel in safety from there to the
+outer world."
+
+Kirby, wanting more details, made himself seem thoughtful.
+
+"And what will happen to me, and to the girls, if I decline?"
+
+Encouraged, the Duca made an impressive gesture.
+
+"You will be left in the tower to die of starvation. Mine is not a
+complicated offer. It should require no complicated decision. What is
+your answer?"
+
+Kirby dropped his carefully assumed mask of thought.
+
+"My answer is this," he lashed out. "I will not leave! The tower is
+ours, and we will hold it until you have accepted Naida's peace terms on
+your priestly oath!"
+
+"But if you stay in the tower you will starve!" thundered the Duca.
+
+"No, we won't starve! We won't starve because we eat the food of
+Ducas!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In silence, Kirby took from his pocket a strip of the sacred Peyote and
+bit off one end of it. Suddenly the hush in the amphitheatre became
+complete. As he watched Kirby chewing, the Duca gasped and choked.
+
+"Moreover," Kirby announced with slow emphasis, "I have taken possession
+of the weapons which you took from men of the upper world, and which
+have already sent men of your race to their death. I have no wish to
+kill either you or your caciques, but if you do not presently discuss
+peace with me, you will certainly find yourself embroiled in a struggle
+more bitter than the mild one of this morning."
+
+With that said, he swung on his heel, and taking Naida's hand again,
+started with her up the steps.
+
+"I have nothing more to say," he called over his shoulder to a Duca
+whose white haired majesty had been stripped from him.
+
+"We're getting on," he whispered to Naida a moment later. "The best
+thing for us is just to sit still now, and wait."
+
+With the questions he wanted to ask Naida about her world becoming
+insistent, he found himself, as a matter of fact, glad for the prospect
+of further respite. As both of them rejoined the girls in the Duca's
+prayer chamber, the first thing he did was to take from his tunic the
+cylinder of gold which he had found in the canyon.
+
+"What is this, Naida?" he asked, hoping to start talk that would make
+all of them forget the Duca and politics, and at the same time help him
+to learn much that he wished to know.
+
+But a queer thing happened. Naida's reaction to the carven gold was as
+unexpected as it was marked.
+
+"_Oh!_" she cried in a voice which suddenly trembled with surprise, with
+blank dismay. Somehow, the cylinder of gold brought to her face things
+which not even the Serpent's head of the diamond had evoked.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The prospect of a long session of talk began to fade out in Kirby's
+mind.
+
+"But Naida, whatever is there about this fragment of gold to startle you
+as it does?"
+
+By this time all of the thirty-odd other girls had come flocking about
+them, and all were staring at the cylinder as fascinatedly as Naida.
+
+"Do you see what he has there?" Naida finally asked, ignoring Kirby in
+her continued excitement.
+
+"Do we _see_?" answered the girl she had addressed. "Naida, surely it is
+the carving which was lost!"
+
+Naida was quivering with feeling now.
+
+"Do you realize what it means to our cause that it should have been
+returned to us in this way?"
+
+The girl to whom she had spoken, and the others, simply looked at her,
+but in one face after another presently dawned awe and joy.
+
+Kirby stood still, puzzled and interested, until at last Naida was
+recovered enough to speak to him.
+
+"Where did you get this thing which you call 'a fragment of gold'?" she
+asked in a hushed voice.
+
+"I found it," Kirby answered, "lying beside the skeleton of an
+upper-world man, while I was ascending the canyon which brought me to
+the Valley of the Geyser."
+
+"And you do not know what the cylinder is? But no, of course you could
+not."
+
+"_What_ is it, Naida?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Naida glanced at her friends, then laid her hand on Kirby's.
+
+"Next to the great diamond, it is the most cherished possession of our
+race. In some respects it is even more holy than the Serpent's head. The
+cylinder happens to be the first work in gold which was ever produced by
+our people. It was made when the race was new. It was because our first
+wise men had found they could create things of beauty like this
+cylinder, that they decided to attempt the creation of the Serpent's
+head, which is supposed to have brought all of our blessings upon us."
+
+Kirby thought he was beginning to understand the excitement which his
+introduction of the cylinder had created. He also thought he could see
+what Naida had meant by implying that the cylinder could be made to aid
+their cause.
+
+"Tell me," he asked in a mood approaching reverence, "how the cylinder
+came to be lying beside a dead man's bones."
+
+"It was stolen," Naida answered in the breathless silence which the
+others were keeping. "When I was very young, an upper-world man found
+his way here, and the Duca captured and meant to sacrifice him. But
+while they were leading him to the temple where such special ceremonies
+are held--the building stands on another plateau, beyond this--the man
+broke away. Some of the priests in the procession were carrying the
+cylinder, for it was an occasion of great importance. The prisoner
+knocked them down, got the cylinder away from them, and finally escaped
+by the same route over which you came."
+
+"And he escaped," said Kirby wonderingly, "only to be killed by a
+rattlesnake before he ever reached the civilized world. But do you mean
+that you never knew your sacred cylinder was so close to you all these
+years?"
+
+Naida shook her head.
+
+"We never got to the canyon of which you speak, for a special reason
+which I shall explain some day. And besides that, I think the Duca was
+afraid of this man who fought so bravely. So he counted the cylinder as
+lost. And that is one of the reasons why he killed the men with the
+rifles, who appeared in the Valley a few years later."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kirby looked at her thoughtfully. The mood for discussing all the
+wonders of this lower world, which had made him bring out the cylinder
+originally, had quite vanished.
+
+"I suppose," he said, "that anyone who was responsible for the return of
+the cylinder to its rightful owners, would be held in some respect?"
+
+Naida nodded vigorously, while little lightnings of excitement flickered
+in her eyes.
+
+"He might be held in more than respect."
+
+"What, then, do you suggest that we do next?"
+
+Again the small lightnings darted, and Naida reached for the cylinder.
+
+"Do you mind if I take it for a moment?"
+
+"Of course not."
+
+Promptly then she faced around.
+
+"Wait here, everyone," she ordered.
+
+And with that she waved the cylinder in a flashing little arc before
+their eyes, and darted to the door.
+
+It was all so unexpected that she was gone before Kirby could speak.
+Slowly, with all of the suddenly gay company of girls following after
+him, he went to the doorway, and stood on the steps leading to the
+amphitheatre.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A minute passed. He heard voices downstairs. He heard Naida's voice
+ringing clearly, though he could not distinguish her words. He heard a
+great cry from a score of male throats. More minutes passed. Words that
+were low and tense poured out in a rumbling volume. Above the rumble,
+Naida's voice presently sounded again, clear and sweet, but incisive.
+Then, when no more than five or six minutes had gone, Kirby heard the
+clang of the bronze gate at the foot of the steps, heard light, swift
+footsteps ascending.
+
+"Naida!" he called softly.
+
+She flashed upward toward him around the last curve in the stairway.
+Straight to his outstretched arms she went.
+
+"It is done! It is done!" she whispered.
+
+"Tell us!" cried first one girl and then others.
+
+Naida drew away from Kirby at last.
+
+"I told the Duca," she said to all of them, "that our leader would keep
+the cylinder for a period of time equal to one upper-world year. If the
+Duca grants all the terms of peace which we will ask of him, and if he
+accepts the upper-world man as our temporal ruler, and all goes well for
+a year, then we will consider replacing the cylinder where it belongs."
+
+"And what," Kirby asked exultantly, "does the Duca say?"
+
+Suddenly, without warning, Naida dropped before him on one knee, and
+from that position gazed up at him laughing.
+
+"He says he will make you our King, to govern all temporal affairs
+within our realm! He is waiting for you to come and hold a conclave
+now."
+
+"_What?_"
+
+Still kneeling half in fun, half in sincere reverence, Naida held out
+the precious, potent cylinder of gold.
+
+"Guard it carefully!" she exclaimed. "So long as you keep it away from
+the Duca, making him hope to win it back, he will consent to almost
+anything. Yes, he is waiting with the caciques in the amphitheatre now;
+waiting to draw up terms of peace."
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+To be King amongst these people! A queer sensation tugged at Kirby's
+heart as he descended the steps with Naida at his right, and all of
+her--and his--dainty and gracious friends following after. Yet, intense
+as his emotion was, never for a second was he able to doubt the evidence
+of his senses which told him that all of this was real. As they
+descended the black steps of the tower, Naida's sweetness, her grace,
+the warm humanity of her, made him humble with gratitude for the
+extraordinary fortune which had come to him, an unromantic aviator born
+in Kansas.
+
+Then they were standing in the brilliant light of the amphitheatre, and
+the Duca, surrounded by his caciques, was advancing to meet them.
+
+It was not a long conference which followed. Kirby saw from the start
+that the Duca was indeed ready to come to terms. So treasured an object,
+it seemed, was the cylinder of gold, that the mere fact that Kirby
+possessed it made the Duca respect the possessor, whether he would or
+no. With this initial advantage, it did not take long to make demands
+and win acceptance.
+
+It was agreed that some systematic campaign of extermination should be
+planned and carried out against the ape-men. Further, the project for
+eventually bringing other upper-world men to the realm was accepted.
+Most notable of all, it was agreed that while the Duca should retain a
+voice in the regulation of temporal affairs, Kirby should possess an
+absolute veto over his word.
+
+Naida said there must be some formal ceremony to celebrate Kirby's
+ascendency to power. To this the Duca consented, and established the
+date as a fortnight hence, and the place as the temple on the plateau
+beyond the plateau of the castle, where the Ducas had been invested with
+their robes of state from time immemorial. At the end, it was decided
+that little Elana should be left in the prayer chamber until a burial
+ceremony could be held on the morrow.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In less than an hour, Kirby, Naida, and the others withdrew from the
+amphitheatre to return to the regular dwelling places of the girls. Deep
+in his mind, Kirby did not know how sincere the Duca was, and fear
+lingered, somehow, but he put it aside for the present.
+
+As they came out of the castle, proceeding in a gay procession across
+the drawbridge above the moat of beautiful aquatic plants, Kirby saw
+that the light from the glass sky was fading to a glow like that of
+spring twilight in the upper world. Naida answered his question about
+the phenomenon by saying that day and night in the cavern corresponded
+to the same period above. What quality of the glass sky gave out light,
+she did not know, but it seemed definite that the element was sensitive
+to the presence of light in the upper world, and when the sun sank
+there, the glow faded here.
+
+A flower embroidered path led them around the castle to a group of
+little crystalline houses all overgrown with bougainvillea vines and
+honeysuckle. In front of the first, Naida paused, and while the others
+went on to the other houses, she looked at Kirby.
+
+"It is Elana's dwelling," she said simply, "and it will be vacant now.
+Elana would want you to take it. Will you, please?"
+
+The twilight was deepening swiftly. Kirby nodded reverently, then drew
+close to Naida.
+
+"Naida?"
+
+"Yes?"
+
+He took her hand.
+
+"I can stay here, I can consent to become, after a fashion, a King, only
+if you will reign with me as Queen. Will you, Naida? Will you love me as
+I have learned to love you during this single day in Paradise?"
+
+She did not answer. But presently Kirby's mind went blank for sheer joy.
+For then Naida raised her face, and he kissed her lips.
+
+It made no difference then that, despite the day's victory, Kirby could
+see trouble ahead, and feared, rather than rejoiced at, the Duca's too
+easy acceptance of terms. The future could take care of itself. This
+moment in the dusk belonged to him and Naida.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The two weeks which passed for Kirby after that particular twilight sped
+quickly. During the first morning, all attended the ceremony which was
+held for Elana's burial in the plot of gardened ground where lay her
+ancestors. Ensuing mornings were devoted to conferences in the
+amphitheatre with Duca and caciques.
+
+After the fourth day Kirby, at Naida's insistence, moved into splendid
+quarters in the castle--a suite of chambers across the amphitheatre from
+those in which the caciques dwelt. In practically forcing the move on
+Kirby, Naida won his consent finally by agreeing to have their wedding
+ceremony performed on the day of his coronation; then she would come to
+the castle with him.
+
+The afternoons of that first fortnight before the wedding and coronation
+were spent in hunting and fishing. Also Kirby and Naida visited often
+the aged people of the race, who dwelt in crystalline, vine covered
+houses like those of the girls, but removed from them. Naida's relatives
+were dead, but she had relatives there, and to all these aged ones, who
+sat living in the past, she did what she could to explain present
+developments in the affairs of the younger generation.
+
+Last but not least, Kirby set aside certain hours each afternoon which
+he devoted to the formation of a rifle squad amongst the girls. Six
+rifles he had, and in turn he trained each of the girls in their use,
+having set up a range at the foot of the plateau cliffs. The results he
+gained made him feel that the day would come soon enough when he would
+dare launch an offensive against the ape-people; and especially pleasing
+was the sense of power over the Duca which he gained. The Duca showed no
+sign of treachery. Yet Kirby did not trust him. Never did he quite
+forget the misgivings which had lingered in his mind after the first
+conclave.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As for his relationship with Naida, that grew with every moment they
+could steal to spend with each other. And side by side with their
+growing knowledge of each other grew, for Kirby, an increasing store of
+knowledge of the realm.
+
+He learned, amongst other things, what seemed the origin of the worship
+of the Serpent, Quetzalcoatl, amongst primitive Mexican races. The time
+had been when the People of the Temple had mingled freely with the races
+above them; and, that they might have ready means of egress to the
+world, they had built the tunnel through which Kirby had entered the
+Valley of the Geyser. Thus, going and coming as they did, they had
+spread their cult of the worship of Quetzalcoatl; and when, eventually,
+strife arose between the peoples of upper world and lower, and the
+People of the Temple withdrew to their realm, they left behind them the
+Serpent myth which was to live through countless centuries.
+
+The tunnel, Naida said, had been abandoned when her people left the
+upper world once and for all, and its use for any reason prohibited.
+This, Naida gave as the reason why none of them went near the tunnel
+now, and why the cylinder of gold had lain in the canyon undiscovered.
+It was the explanation she had promised on the day in the tower, when
+first she saw the cylinder.
+
+So the days passed, until the day set aside for wedding and coronation
+dawned. On that morning, Kirby, having concluded a long conference with
+the Duca, was walking with Naida in the gardens outside the castle.
+
+"Tell me," he said to her: "do you yourself believe that this Serpent
+has the powers of a God?"
+
+Naida looked at him quickly, a sudden fright in her eyes.
+
+"I believe the Serpent exists to-day, somewhere in the distant reaches
+of the chasm, beyond the Rorroh forest."
+
+"Yes, but do you believe the Serpent is God?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Actually frightened now, she looked swiftly about. But when she saw that
+they were alone, confidence returned.
+
+"No!" she exclaimed. "I do not believe Quetzalcoatl is a god. I believe
+he is the most terrible creature anywhere in our realm, and that men
+first worshipped him through fear. I believe our race would be better a
+hundred times if they had never made him their God."
+
+Kirby whistled.
+
+"Then you do _not_ believe that the Ducas of past ages talked with him.
+You do not believe it was Quetzalcoatl's pleasure over the great diamond
+which made him cease preying on your people?"
+
+"No! Long habit makes me show respect for these myths, and adhere to the
+customs of our cult, but I do not believe. I think our race gained
+immunity for the Serpent's ravages, not through a compact with
+Quetzalcoatl, but because our builders were intelligent enough to erect
+the castle up here on the plateau, where Quetzalcoatl could not reach
+them. To tell the truth, I think the whole cult is false and wrong, and
+I wish Quetzalcoatl were dead and gone from the world!"
+
+Kirby smiled. In spite of Naida's reverence for certain features of the
+cult, he had long suspected that her true feelings were those she had
+just expressed. And he was glad for this new bond of understanding
+between them. He glanced at her with understanding and perfect trust.
+
+"Naida, since we have talked so frankly, there is one more thing which I
+must bring out."
+
+She looked up at him.
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"The Duca."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She drew closer, her perfumed body brushing his, her great eyes
+caressing him.
+
+"Naida, I am afraid of the man."
+
+"And so am I!" she confessed suddenly.
+
+"It has all been too easy," Kirby said in a slow voice. "There is no
+doubt whatever that our possession of the cylinder of gold has had great
+influence on the Duca, and yet--"
+
+He paused, taking her hand.
+
+"And yet," she went on for him, "you do not believe he would have
+conceded what he has, unless he intends to make trouble?"
+
+Kirby nodded twice, emphatically.
+
+"Well, you have trained all of us to use the rifles."
+
+He smiled gravely at her understanding.
+
+"Yes, I have. And your skill, and that of the others, with the rifles,
+will always help us. Yet even so--"
+
+Closer still she drew now, and there was sadness in her eyes.
+
+"I think I see," she said in a voice which choked. "When do you think he
+will make a move to start trouble?"
+
+Kirby hesitated, then drew a long breath.
+
+"To-day!"
+
+"On--on the day of our union?" Naida echoed in dismay. "Can you tell
+where or how he will strike at us?"
+
+Kirby shook his head.
+
+"There are a hundred things he could do. Naida, I--I--Well, somehow I am
+afraid of the ceremony this afternoon--the wedding ceremony!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He felt a little shiver go through her, and would have taken her in his
+arms, save that a gay cry rang in the garden then.
+
+"Naida, Naida!" It was her cousin, Nini, a bronze-haired youngster as
+elfin and Pucklike as her name. "I thought we should never find you! Do
+you realize this is your _wedding_ day, and that you're acting as if
+there was nothing to be done?"
+
+Nini darted a mocking glance at Kirby, who grinned.
+
+"Do come, Naida!" cried another girl. "Your gown is ready, and we want
+you to ourselves for awhile."
+
+Other girls joined them, some singing and some carrying an obligato on
+the sweet, flutelike instruments which Kirby had first heard as he hung
+in the throat of the geyser. In front of them all, Kirby laughed and
+kissed Naida on the forehead. But as he took leave of her thus, he
+whispered:
+
+"We must not let our guard relax for a second this afternoon. And I
+think there is a more definite precaution which I will take, besides."
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+Some hours later, Kirby smiled with tight-lipped satisfaction at thought
+of that precaution which he had taken. What it was only he, Nini, Ivana,
+and three other girls knew, which secrecy pleased him as much as the
+precautionary measure itself.
+
+Seated alone in a dimly-lighted, thick-walled cell of the ancient temple
+in which the dual ceremony of wedding and coronation would take place,
+he was waiting for the moment when the festivities would begin. Thus far
+the Duca had done nothing. Yet Kirby's uneasiness would not leave him,
+and he continued to be thankful that, if trouble should start, the Duca
+might not find as many trumps in his hand as he expected.
+
+A couple of hours after Kirby had left Naida and the other girls in the
+garden, all had begun the two-mile journey from the castle to the small
+plateau on which stood this temple, where the ceremony would be held.
+Now, while Kirby waited alone, the Duca and his caciques had gone to
+another wing of the temple. Naida, attended by her bridesmaids, had been
+assigned to a cell of their own, and the rest of the girls were waiting
+in the nave of the temple. Unable to attend the walk from their plateau
+to this, the old people of the race had remained in their crystal
+houses.
+
+With ten minutes more to wait, Kirby rose from a bench on which he had
+been seated, and began to pace his cell. It was this archaic pile of
+stone, he finally decided, which was causing his depression. Unlike the
+bright and cheerful castle, this place, older than any other building in
+the realm, was squat, thick-walled, and gloomy. Here, in the dusky cells
+which lined labyrinthine corridors, the early generations of the race
+had found protection from outside dangers. All of which was all right,
+Kirby thought, but just the same he wished he had insisted upon being
+wedded in the brilliant and cheerful amphitheatre.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But presently he stopped pacing and faced the door of his cell. Then he
+breathed a sigh of relief.
+
+From down the twisting corridors which wound out to the central nave,
+stole the high sweetness of soprano voices, the whisper of flutes, and
+the mellow resonance of little gongs of jade and gold. It was the signal
+for which he had waited.
+
+It had been the Duca's instructions that he should come out into the
+temple when the music began, and meet Naida there. Both would advance to
+the altar, and when they were in place, the Duca would come to them.
+Kirby, therefore, after a glance at the blue trousers and tunic of
+tanager scarlet which the girls had made for him, opened the door of his
+cell, and stepped out.
+
+In a moment he traversed the windings of the corridor, and halted under
+a flat arch at one side of the temple nave.
+
+As he paused so, to await the appearance of Naida and her bridesmaids
+under a similar arch directly across the temple, he held his breath. Not
+even nymphs could be as graceful as were the twenty-six girls who were
+performing the dance of Life Immortal, which tradition decreed should be
+given before the ceremony by which, in this realm, two souls were
+wedded. The flash of rainbow gowns was like the swirling of light in a
+sky at dawning. The music of voices, flutes, and the little gongs of
+jade, would have stirred the souls of the dead.
+
+If only the confounded sense of approaching disaster would leave him,
+Kirby thought grimly, this would be a magnificent moment. As it was, he
+turned his eyes away from the girls, and began to examine the temple.
+
+Just as Naida had told him the case would be, he found both sides of the
+nave surrounded by arches similar to the one under which he was
+standing. Everywhere, dim and tortuous corridors led to cells like the
+one he had just left. Then, in one end of the nave, loomed a closed door
+from behind which the Duca and caciques would appear when the couple to
+be wedded were in place, before the altar.
+
+The altar itself, a rectangular mass of some jadelike stone, stood at a
+distance of perhaps twenty paces in front of the closed door. On top of
+the greenish stones, resting on a cushion of some crimson material,
+flashed the crown which would be used at the coronation. Kirby's eyes
+widened as he beheld a single rose-cut diamond two inches in diameter,
+mounted in an exquisitely simple bandeau of wrought gold. But, a moment
+later, even the crown which would be his--if nothing happened--seemed
+only a bauble compared to the other prize which he had won in this world
+beneath the world.
+
+Naida!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He realized that the dance was ended, the music stilled, and that the
+rainbow garbed girls had formed a double line in the center of the
+temple. Suddenly his heart beat fast, and for just a moment, as he dared
+look full and deeply at Naida, and she smiled back at him across the
+distance, he even forgot to be depressed.
+
+But even as he advanced to meet her, his uneasiness returned.
+
+Now the girls were singing again, their voices raised in a triumphant
+chorale as beautiful as Naida's face with its warm red lips and smiling
+eyes, as beautiful as her wedding gown that might have been woven, in
+its filminess, of mist from the sea. The bridesmaids, silent, their
+lovely faces alight, paused. But Naida came on.
+
+From her floated to Kirby a fragrance more overwhelming than even the
+perfume of the geyser. Presently he felt her hand on his arm, and at
+last they stood side by side. Now again, his premonition of evil left
+him for a flash; but again it returned.
+
+"I love you," he whispered.
+
+"I love _you_."
+
+"But I am still afraid."
+
+Naida's smile faded.
+
+"And I too. Oh, I've been terribly afraid! We will keep our guard!"
+
+"Yes."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In front of them, on the altar, the crown diamond winked and shimmered
+in a dim light. The swelling chorus of triumph, in which the bridesmaids
+had joined now, made the whole temple ring. Slowly, while Naida moved
+easily beside him, Kirby began to march to the altar.
+
+Then it was done, and they were halted. After both of them had given a
+lingering glance at the crown whose diamond shimmered now within their
+reach, they raised their eyes to the closed door behind the altar.
+
+The thing was swinging open. An inch it moved, two inches.
+
+Kirby waited, never taking his eyes away from the widening crack. With a
+crashing final volume of sound, the chorus swept magnificently to its
+climax. Then the door was flung wide.
+
+Still Kirby stood stiffly before the altar, with Naida drawn up
+splendidly beside him. After two seconds, however, he moved.
+
+Duca and caciques were not standing in the corridor.
+
+In the semi-darkness, the only figures visible there were squatting,
+grotesque things whose bodies were covered with whitish hair and whose
+leathery faces were disfigured by gashes of mouths filled with enormous
+teeth.
+
+A feeling of standing face to face with final disaster, turned Kirby
+sick. As he jerked back from the altar, sweeping a paralyzed Naida with
+him, the ape-men let out gibbering howls, half-human. With gigantic,
+hopping strides, the foremost rank of the creatures swung forward,
+straight into the temple.
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+Kirby, already falling back toward the other girls, caught Naida up in
+his arms, and ran.
+
+"Nini!" he bellowed. "Ivana! Get the rifles!"
+
+While the two whom he had ordered sprang to a corridor, and four others
+followed, Kirby fell in with the others and dropped Naida on her feet.
+Sick as he was, there was still a ray of hope, because the hard-headed
+precaution he had taken against treachery this morning was to have Nini
+and Ivana bring the rifles here and hide them.
+
+The first of the ape-men, snarling, laughing, had hopped beyond the
+altar, and the yellow foam of madness was slavering from his jaws. Over
+his shoulder he howled some jargon which made his hairy legion struggle
+to catch up with him.
+
+"Have you got any puff balls?" Kirby snapped at Naida.
+
+She shook her head numbly, just as Nini and Ivana swung forward with the
+Mannlichers.
+
+"No. But you had sense enough to bring the rifles! Oh, what does it
+mean?"
+
+"The Duca has sold himself out to the ape-man! He was helpless against
+us, and has brought them to destroy us for him. Here, Ivana, give me a
+rifle! Everyone for herself!"
+
+The next moment he had a Mannlicher at his shoulder.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As the thing kicked, an ape who would have reached him in two more jumps
+crashed over with his heart torn out, the temple echoed with sound which
+threatened to rip its solid walls apart, and bright flashes at Kirby's
+right and left told him that other rifles were getting under way.
+
+He fired again, twice more, slaughtering an ape with each shot. The five
+other rifles were creating havoc.
+
+Blocked by a dozen torn and bleeding bodies on the floor, the
+reenforcements which still poured from the corridor, began to mill
+around amongst themselves, and the forward charge slowed down. All the
+panic which had sent the ape-men scuttling from the beach at their first
+experience of gunfire, seemed ready to break loose again now.
+
+Kirby felt it was good enough for the work of a minute.
+
+"Get into line as I showed you how!" he shouted. "Rifles in the front
+rank, the others behind them. We're all right now! Keep firing!"
+
+"Keep behind me!" he ordered Naida, still unarmed.
+
+Then he placed a shell in the chest of one brute who was broader and
+heavier than the others--a leader--and saw that he had increased the
+demoralization; and from the hastily-formed front rank a volley leaped
+hot and jagged.
+
+Then the rout which had threatened broke loose. As eight ape-men slumped
+into blubbering, bleeding heaps, the milling remainder of the horde
+turned, and in a fighting, scrambling frenzy attempted to get back to
+the corridor.
+
+Kirby let his triumph take the form of thoughts about what he would do
+to the Duca when that personage could be rounded up.
+
+"Follow after them!" he ordered. "Don't stop until we have located the
+Duca. He is the one we must settle--"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But he never finished.
+
+As he himself, holding fire for a second, prepared to follow up the
+retreat, he found himself confronted by the utterly unexpected.
+
+A voice unquestionably the Duca's began to shout orders at the ape-men
+from somewhere down the corridor! And, riot or no riot, the tones of
+that voice seemed to inspire the creatures with more fear than the rifle
+fire.
+
+So suddenly the change came, that by the time Kirby flung his rifle
+again to his shoulder, the crazy retreat had been halted, and as he
+fired again, the ape-men swung in their tracks and began to charge!
+
+There was no time to guess by what power the Duca had turned the tables.
+There was not even time for orders. Kirby fired twice, knowing that the
+ape-men had been infused with some spirit which would bring them on in
+spite of rifle fire.
+
+Naida, unarmed, cried out behind him, and he shoved his gun at her.
+
+"Take it!"
+
+He had just inserted a new clip. He handed her others.
+
+"Fire for your lives!" he shouted to the girls.
+
+"But you!" Naida gasped. "You are unarmed!"
+
+"I'll be all right."
+
+On the floor lay a jagged, hand-chipped knife of obsidion which had
+fallen as some ape died. Kirby grabbed it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In another second the flood of ape-men had burst in all its fury over
+him. Crashing, thundering shots were dinning in his ears, animal death
+screams and the Valkyrie battle cries of the girls filled the temple. He
+could not tell how many of the apes were fighting him. As a cave-man's
+club whizzed past his head, he drove his knife once, and yanked it
+dripping from hairy, yielding flesh to plunge it again. A sudden
+side-step carried him away from another assailant. He dropped the knife
+to snatch the gigantic club of one of the creatures he had killed.
+
+Quicker in every movement than the ape-men, he laid on, right and left,
+with such power that blood spurted in a dozen places, and heads were
+split open on every side. And because of his speed, the frantic, clumsy
+blows and knife thrusts which were directed at him proved harmless.
+
+A terrific drive which smashed a snarling face into pulp, left Kirby
+free for a second, and he emerged from the first round of battle ready
+to cut in and help the girls. But then he saw that he had gotten
+separated from the main body.
+
+"Naida!" he called. "Naida!"
+
+A series of shots answered him, and as several apes fell, a gap was
+opened through which he saw her conducting a well ordered retreat of all
+the girls toward the dark corridors surrounding the temple. Again Kirby
+fell to with his club, swinging, hacking, fighting with his whole
+strength to catch up. He made headway, and hope began to come again. The
+ape-men would not kill, or even harm, the girls. What they wanted was to
+carry them off. If he and Naida together could get their party rounded
+up in the corridors, the chances were good.
+
+"Naida!" he shouted again. "Coming!"
+
+Battering down an ape in front of him, he jumped up on the corpse, and
+saw that already the vanguard of girls had reached the first sheltering
+corridor. Naida had been cut off from the others by eight or ten apes.
+But even so her fire made her mistress of the situation, and she seemed
+all right.
+
+It was just as Kirby started to jump down from the corpse that he saw
+something which put another complexion on the matter, and left him
+frozen where he was.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Behind Naida, directly in the path in which her slavering aggressors
+were slowly forcing her, a huge stone slab in the temple floor had begun
+to tilt up as if it were a trapdoor raised by an invisible hand. Within
+the yawning opening, Kirby caught a glimpse of stone steps winding down
+into blackness.
+
+In a flash he saw that it was Naida, and her alone, that the ape-men
+were after. The Duca's determination was to capture her, and it was the
+presence of this trapdoor, making capture possible, which had brought on
+the second charge of the apes.
+
+A scream, high and wild, from Naida released Kirby from his trance of
+horror. He leaped off the corpse, and smashed a suddenly presented skull
+like an egg shell. Momentarily he saw Naida, too terrified to fire,
+staring at the open trapdoor. Kirby felled two apes and felt their blood
+on his arms.
+
+"Ivana!" he yelled. "Help Naida, for God's sake!"
+
+An answering shout, not from Ivana alone but from many girls, encouraged
+him, and he swung his club with a speed and force which would let
+nothing stand before him. But then another scream from Naida rang in his
+ears.
+
+"Naida!" he shouted. "It's all right! We're coming!"
+
+He knew, though, that it _wasn't_ all right. Fighting like a maniac, he
+opened another lane down which he glimpsed her. Fighting still, in a
+last terrific effort to force his way down the lane to her side, he saw
+the black opening gape at her feet; and, as Naida screamed again, a
+dozen hairy arms reached it at once, twisted the empty rifle out of her
+hands, and lifted her shining body as if it had been a feather.
+
+Shouts and murderous fire were coming from the other girls, and Kirby
+swung his club as never before. But even as he fell upon the last two or
+three apes which kept him away from Naida, those who had snatched her,
+bolted down the steps.
+
+Kirby was left with the memory of Naida's great eyes fixed upon his,
+fear-filled, beseeching his protection. In a second, the ponderous
+trapdoor crashed into place, and she was gone.
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+Dazed and grief-stricken, Kirby stood in the bloody, corpse-filled nave
+of the temple, surrounded by thirty-two girls whose faces were blanched
+and most of whose eyes were tear-bright. The fight was over, and they
+were assembled to decide what must be done, but for a time no one
+spoke.
+
+Gaining the trapdoor just as it was pinioned from beneath, Kirby had
+torn at it with bare hands. But that had been hopeless. Then he had
+begun to fight again. But that had been hopeless also. With howls and
+screams they started to retreat, and it had not taken Kirby long to find
+out that every part of their raid had been carefully planned, even to
+this retreat under fire. Straight into the damp black tunnel which led
+away from the corridor behind the altar, the ape-men had leaped. And
+Kirby, in hot pursuit, had heard the Duca's voice driving them on. Too
+much the soldier to follow in that darkness where the Duca knew every
+foot of the way, and he knew nothing, Kirby had seen that he must go
+back to the girls and take stock.
+
+Now he looked at the strewn ape corpses, smelled the corrosive reek of
+burned powder, and tried to put aside his grief.
+
+"The Duca," he said at last, "must have been planning this with the apes
+ever since the first morning in the castle."
+
+Ivana, Naida's sister, nodded.
+
+"The Duca brought the ape-people here, kept them in the tunnel, and then
+herded them back when their work was done. I suppose it was one of the
+caciques who opened the door when the time was right."
+
+"Does anyone think we ought to try the tunnels now?" Kirby asked.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Several girls shook their heads. He knew that already they felt he had
+been wise in giving up the pursuit. Ivana spoke.
+
+"If the Duca and his horde stay underground, we shouldn't have a chance
+against them. And if they don't, we're better here."
+
+Kirby shot a searching glance at her, somehow sure that her thoughts
+were running parallel with his.
+
+"You don't think they're going to stay here, do you?"
+
+"No, and you don't either," Ivana answered.
+
+"It seems to me that they will retreat into the Rorroh as fast as they
+can," Kirby then observed.
+
+"And do you think the Duca and all the caciques will go with the apes?"
+This time it was Nini who spoke, and with the council so well launched,
+Kirby began to feel better.
+
+"I think," he answered Nini, "that the Duca has gone over to Xlotli
+altogether. We fooled him to-day. Instead of killing or capturing us
+all, he--he only got Naida. But he won't give up. I think he is taking
+the apes off to some place from which he can launch a new attack. And
+we've got to stop him before he is ready to deliver another blow."
+
+"What do you mean?" Ivana now asked.
+
+"Do you know where the villages of the ape-people are?"
+
+"Yes. None of us has been very far into the Rorroh, but I could guess
+where some of the villages may stand."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Silence fell after that, but Kirby knew from the glint in Ivana's eyes,
+and the quick breaths which other girls drew, that they understood.
+
+"Ivana," he said suddenly, "will you go with me into the Rorroh jungle,
+and stay with me, facing down every danger it may conceal, until we have
+found Naida and brought her back?"
+
+A flush of life crept into Ivana's pallid cheeks.
+
+"Yes!"
+
+Kirby faced the other girls, all of them keyed up now.
+
+"Nini, will you go?"
+
+Nini, bronze-haired, dainty nymph of a girl, who had yet the stamina of
+a man, looked at him with brave eyes. Then her hands tightened on her
+rifle, and she stepped forward.
+
+"When will you have us start?" Ivana asked in a low voice.
+
+"Now!" Kirby answered, and, taking up the rifle which lay beside
+him--the same with which Naida had fought--he looked at the other
+girls.
+
+"There is not one of you," he said slowly, "who would not go willingly
+on this quest. But the pursuit party must be small and mobile. And
+there is another duty. To all of you I leave the care of the castle and
+the plateau. Take the three rifles I shall leave behind, do what you can
+to reassure the old people, and hold the plateau safe until we return."
+
+A murmur of girls' voices sounded in the temple. Kirby motioned to Nini
+and Ivana, and followed by a low cheer, they moved off together.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The night was on them, where they crouched in a cave above a swiftly
+flowing river. Kirby, rifle across his knees, sat peering out across the
+black, invisible stretches of the forest. His nostrils quivered to this
+mingled smells of fresh growth and fetid decay of the grotesque land. In
+his ears shrilled the creaking and scraping of insects, the flap of
+unseen wings, the distant bellowing grunt of some unseen, unknown
+animal.
+
+"I cannot sleep," Ivana said presently, from back in the cave.
+
+"Hush," he whispered, "you will wake Nini."
+
+"But I am already awake!" came her answer. "I--I cannot forget the white
+snakes which slid from that tree when you tried to cut firewood."
+
+"Hush," Kirby murmured again. "Presently the moon will rise on the earth
+above, and light will come here. Even if the jungle is terrible, were
+you not born with courage? Go to sleep now, both of you, because you
+must relieve me soon."
+
+As silence fell again, he knew that the real thing behind their
+nervousness was their ghastly doubt about what the night was bringing to
+Naida. But none of them spoke of Naida. So sickening were the
+possibilities that Kirby would not permit conjecture to occupy even his
+mind when, at length, the sound of even breathing told him that Nini and
+Ivana slept.
+
+After dreary passing of an hour, a faint light grew over the jungle,
+silver and clear, and Kirby let his mind run back to the two deserted
+ape-men communities which they had found and searched before dusk sent
+them to the cave. From the signs of hasty departure, it looked as though
+a far-reaching order had taken the brutes away from their dwellings, and
+sent them--somewhere.
+
+That somewhere seemed likely to be the great central community which
+Ivana said was rumored to exist in the far reaches of the Rorroh. The
+problem was how to locate the community through the hideous country. But
+Kirby presently drove the question from his head. To-morrow's evils
+could best be faced when morrow dawned.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Enough light had grown now so that the swirling bosom of the river, and
+a strip of sand directly below the cliff in which their cave was set,
+were visible. As Kirby let his eyes wander to the lush growth beyond the
+sand, he heard something which made him stir uneasily. Some creature
+which suggested power and hugeness immeasurable was moving there.
+
+The brush parted, and he saw plainly an animal with the bulk of a
+two-story house. On two feet the nightmare thing stood, as lightly as a
+cat, and then came down on all four feet as it ambled out on the sand
+and extended into the lapping river a tremendous beak studded with
+teeth. A smell of crushed weeds and the musty odor like that of a lion
+house filled the night. The tyranosaur--it was more like a tyranosaur
+than anything else--breathed heavily and guzzled in great mouthfuls of
+water.
+
+Kirby sat perfectly still. He hoped the thing would go away. But the
+tyranosaur did not go away. All at once it hissed loudly and stood up,
+its eyes glowing green and baleful, and Kirby leaned forward.
+
+From the water was slithering another creature with a gigantic,
+quivering, jelly body. Kirby saw to his horror that, in addition to four
+short legs with webbed, claw-tipped feet, there sprouted from the body a
+number of octopus tentacles. From the scabrous mottle of the head,
+cruel, unintelligent, bestial eyes glared at the rearing tyranosaur.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One of the serpentine tentacles whipped out, slapped against the
+tyranosaur's fore-shoulder to call forth a hiss and a short bellow. Then
+other tentacles waved in the moonlight, and in a flash the tyranosaur
+was enmeshed as by a score of slimy cables. He was not altogether
+helpless. Suddenly the steam shovel of a beak buried itself in the jelly
+body of the water animal, and there spurted out a flood of inky liquid.
+The water animal emitted a sickening gurgle. But the tyranosaur's
+advantage was only temporary. Closer and closer drew the ugly, scabrous
+tentacles. The tyranosaur never had a chance. Its green eyes flared, the
+shovel beak plunged and slashed, but never for a second did the
+tentacles relax. As Kirby stared, he saw the water animal begin to back
+up, dragging its gigantic enemy with it. For a second the whole night
+was hideous with the sound of hisses, gurgles, dashing water. Then the
+river boiled once and for all, and both animals sank in its depths.
+
+Kirby chafed cold hands together and shivered a little, then turned to
+see if Nini and Ivana had heard the struggle.
+
+Fortunately, however, they still slept. And as if this peace which was
+upon them were an omen of good, the jungle continued quiet for the next
+hour. Kirby wakened them at last, and after a snatched nap, was in turn
+awakened.
+
+The three of them started again when the first glimmerings of dawn came
+to the forest. Of food there was plenty--fruits which grew in profusion,
+and some roots which Nini grubbed out of the earth. Having started along
+the first trail which they encountered beside the river bank, they ate
+as they walked.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kirby judged they had kept their steady gait for more than two hours
+before a slight widening of the trail roused him from the preoccupation
+into which he had fallen.
+
+"See there," he exclaimed to both girls, and pointed at a grove of trees
+with fanlike leaves which towered up to the right of the trail. "What
+are those big bundles fastened to the lower limbs?"
+
+Ivana glanced at Nini, who nodded as if in answer to a question.
+
+"This must be one of the places where the ape-people leave their dead,"
+Nini answered. "The bundles--But come over to them."
+
+Kirby forced his way ahead until he stood beneath a huge, unsavory
+bundle wrapped in roughly woven brown fibre, and wedged in a fork
+between two limbs. Judging from the ugly odor which overhung the grove,
+there could be no question about what the bundle contained. Nini and
+Ivana, glancing at the scores of similar bundles which burdened the
+trees of the whole grove, made wry faces. Kirby slung his rifle in the
+crook of his arm, and nodded toward the trail.
+
+"There must be a village somewhere near," he said.
+
+A mile farther on they found what they were seeking, a colony of seventy
+or eighty conical dwellings of mud and thatch, which were ranged in a
+double circle about a central common of bare, well-trodden earth. It
+took no long reconnaissance to discover that the town was deserted
+completely of all inhabitants.
+
+Ivana beckoned and darted to one of the nearest huts, and Kirby,
+following her, found lying on the uneven earth floor within, a
+half-skinned animal which resembled a small antelope. An obsidion knife
+beside the carcass, the disordered condition of a couch of grass, the
+sour odor of recent animal occupancy, all told their story.
+
+"The owner left in a hurry," Kirby observed aloud.
+
+Nini, who had gone beyond, to a larger hut which might have belonged to
+a king ape, called out excitedly to them.
+
+"A great number of apes have eaten a hurried meal here!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kirby entered the shadowed, foul-smelling interior of the central hut to
+find her statement true. Broken meats, some raw, some cooked, lay on the
+dirt floor, and scattered bits of fruit were mingled with them. The
+ashes of a burned out fire at the hut entrance were cold, but had not
+been for long.
+
+"Do you think--" Ivana began.
+
+"I think the whole of the Duca's horde came this way, fed, and went on,
+taking everyone with them," Kirby finished.
+
+"But which direction did they take?" asked Nini, who was standing at the
+door of the big hut and had already begun to examine the crowding,
+green, inscrutable walls of jungle which foamed up to the clearing on
+all sides.
+
+No less than seven trails wound away into the dark country beyond, and
+Kirby saw that the question would not be an easy one.
+
+Having hastily circled the clearing and peered down one trail after
+another without finding a clue, he knew that it was the Duca's
+intelligence which had made the ape-people depart without leaving even
+tracks behind them. He did not like the situation.
+
+"Well," he rumbled to his companions, "we may as well take our choice.
+One chance in seven of coming out right!"
+
+But the words were hardly out of his mouth before he pulled himself up
+with a jerk, and cursed himself for having given in.
+
+"Ivana! Nini!" Sharpness, a sudden ring of hope edged his voice. "Am I
+seeing things, or is that--"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As he pointed to a huge aloe bush down one of the trails to their left,
+they started to run. Then Kirby knew that he was not seeing things. What
+his first inspection of the trails had failed to show, he saw plainly
+now.
+
+Tied loosely to one branch of the aloe bush, almost concealed amidst the
+deep green of foliage, was a bit of white cloth! In a second Kirby was
+holding out to his companions a tiny strip of Naida's wedding gown.
+
+"She knew we would come!" He stared down the trail with narrowed, keen
+eyes.
+
+How Naida had contrived to leave her signal was more than they knew. The
+fact that she _had_ done so, sent all three of them down the trail at
+driving speed.
+
+An hour passed, then another, and the morning which had been barely born
+when they first took the trail, wore on to the sultriness and vast,
+colored light of a tropical noon. Twice the main trail forked, and twice
+they found an unobtrusive bit of cloth to guide them beyond the works.
+When the hands of Kirby's still useful watch pointed to twelve, they
+paused to eat and rest. Then they pushed on.
+
+Meanwhile, the country through which they passed left Kirby with a clear
+understanding of why Naida and her people had shunned the Rorroh forest
+down the centuries of time.
+
+Just one thing which stuck in his head was the sight of a small creature
+like a marmoset, sticking an inquisitive nose into the heart of a
+sickly-sweet plant which resembled a terrestrial nepenthe. No sooner had
+the little pink snout touched the green and maroon splotched petals,
+than the plant writhed, closed its leaves, and swallowed the monkey
+whole. Little squeaks of agony and terror sounded for a moment, and
+ceased.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At midafternoon they paused in a spot where a forest of trees with
+whorled tops were slowly being strangled to death by immense orchids of
+every conceivable shape and color, and by a kind of creeping mistletoe
+which grew almost as they watched. Here also, the ground was covered
+with fluffy, grey-green moss which seethed constantly as if it were a
+carpet of maggots. Both Ivana and Nini warned Kirby on his life not to
+touch or go near the moss, and a moment later he knew why.
+
+From the forest came the flash of a small, five-toed horse being pursued
+by some animal with a hyena head that barked. At the edge of the mossy
+glade the hyena swerved aside, but the terrified horse plunged straight
+out on the carpet of moss. Instantly the air was filled with the sound
+of animal screams, and a series of tiny, muffled explosions. A cloud of
+greenish-red mist swirled about the horse. Quivering, still screaming,
+the animal went down on its knees, and as the reddish green smoke fell
+on him and settled, it became a mass of growing moss spores.
+
+Before Kirby's eyes, the pitiful animal was covered by a shroud of green
+that spread over him and cloaked him, licking over all with tiny sounds
+like far off muffled drums as fresh spore cases developed and burst. The
+screams died. Even as Kirby drew the girls to him and they passed on,
+the horse's nostrils, eyes, mouth were filled with choking green moss;
+and he lay still.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On and on, deeper into the jungle Kirby pushed, and never for a moment
+did his companions falter. But the way was not so easy now, for nerves
+were jaded, muscles sore, and no human will could have been powerful
+enough to cast aside the growing fear for Naida.
+
+Fear came finally to a head when, toward dusk, Kirby sighted a fork
+ahead of them, approached it confidently to look for Naida's sign, and
+found nothing.
+
+"Oh Lord!" he muttered, and realized that it was the first time any of
+them had spoken for long.
+
+"There must be something to guide us!" Ivana exclaimed as she searched
+with questing eyes through the swiftly deepening gloom of evening.
+
+Nini, making an effort to keep up hope in spite of the paleness which
+came to her lovely face, darted down both paths, glancing as she went at
+every bush and shrub. But she returned in a moment, and as she shook
+her head, her great eyes were somber.
+
+Kirby grunted, scratched behind his ear. Then, however, he stifled an
+exclamation, and clutched at the hands of both girls.
+
+On one of the two trails appeared suddenly in the dusk an ape-creature.
+Kirby saw at once that the thing was small--a female undoubtedly--and
+that it had spied them and was moving toward them with all speed. And
+borne in upon him most certainly was the fact that the ape-woman was
+making signals of peace. In her outstretched hand flickered through the
+gloom a strip of cloth that was gauzy and white.
+
+Again--a strip of Naida's gown.
+
+"If you know any words of her tongue, call to her," Kirby said sharply.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ivana obeyed. All three of them started forward. The ape-woman, after
+returning the hail in creaking gutturals, came up to them, and with an
+unexpected look of pathos and entreaty in her face, began to address the
+girls with a flood of talk.
+
+Word after creaking word she poured out while Nini and Ivana listened in
+silence. Finally Kirby could stand the suspense no longer.
+
+"What is it, Ivana? What does she say? Your eyes are lighting up with
+hope! Tell me--"
+
+Ivana smiled and turned toward him, while the ape-woman still looked her
+entreaty.
+
+"She says," Ivana announced bluntly, "that she and the other women
+amongst their people, do not want any of the girls of our race to be
+taken by their males. Already the men are quarreling about Naida. They
+will not look at their own women. Naida told this woman that we would be
+following, and sent her to lead us to the place where the ape-people are
+assembling!"
+
+Kirby felt his lips tightening in a grim smile at the thought that
+jealousy was not unknown even to the semi-human creatures of this
+neither world. He looked at Nini and Ivana during a stretched out
+second. Then he moved.
+
+"Good," he snapped. "We go on at once."
+
+That was his only recognition of what was surely one of the important
+happenings of a lifetime. But for all that, his tired brain, which so
+lately had felt the chill of black depression, was suddenly set on fire
+with triumph and thanksgiving.
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+As they marched rapidly, the ape-woman, who called herself Gori,
+succeeded in making them understand that most of the ape-tribes,
+commanded by the Duca and his caciques, were assembled in the central
+community toward which they were heading, that grave danger of some sort
+threatened Naida, and that the need for haste was great. But what the
+danger was, the two girls could not understand.
+
+"We can't make out what is going to happen--what they plan to do
+to-night," Ivana whispered at last to Kirby. "All Gori says is that we
+must rescue Naida and take her away, and must take the Duca away so that
+he cannot influence the men any more. And she keeps repeating that we
+must hurry."
+
+"And you can't find out what we must rescue Naida _from_?"
+
+Ivana shook her head.
+
+"I'm afraid we're facing something of an appalling nature, as dangerous
+to ourselves as to Naida. But I know nothing more."
+
+By the time the silver glow which corresponded to moonlight flooded the
+jungle, Gori had left the open trail, and was leading them across
+country which humans could not have negotiated without the guidance she
+offered. Advancing cautiously always, she stopped for long seconds at a
+time to reconnoitre, shifting her huge ears about and changing their
+shape, twitching her nostrils, and glancing hither and thither with
+bright little eyes. Sometimes they passed immense spike-tipped flowers
+ten feet in diameter, with fleshy yellow leaves which gave out a
+nauseating stench. Vines with long, recurved thorns and blossoms of deep
+scarlet, laced the undergrowth together and made passing dangerous.
+Fire-flies drifted past, and all above and about them flapped moths as
+big as bats.
+
+Kirby, his clothes almost torn from his body, sweat pouring from every
+pore, heard the labored breathing of the girls, and wondered how they
+could hang on. But they did, and after a long time, Gori, halting in the
+midst of a slight clearing, held up a warning hand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A queer sensation came over Kirby. As he stared and listened, he
+realized that the twinkles he saw far ahead were not fire-flies, as he
+had thought, but lights. In the frosted moon glow, Nini and Ivana drew
+close, and Kirby clasped their hands and pressed them for a second. Too
+tired to exult further he was, even though they seemed close to their
+goal of goals.
+
+Gori swung her hairy arm in a signal, and with rifles clasped carefully,
+they began to advance. When, five minutes later, they stood in the heart
+of a rank glade beyond which they could see nothing, Gori spoke to the
+two girls in her creaking whisper, and Nini laid a restraining hand on
+Kirby's.
+
+"We have gone as far as Gori dares! She says we must climb a tree here,
+and watch what will go on in a clearing just beyond this thicket."
+
+"And we still don't know what we're getting into," Kirby muttered.
+
+But at any rate they had reached the end of their march.
+
+Exultation did come to Kirby now, but still he was too completely
+fagged, as were both girls, to give much sign. Gori pointed to a tree
+some fifty feet away, which shot up to a great, foliage-crowned height.
+They moved toward it, and in a moment were climbing, Gori first, the
+girls after her, and Kirby last.
+
+"Here we are," Ivana presently whispered, at the same time drawing
+herself out on a limb just beneath one on which Gori and Nini had
+crawled.
+
+Kirby found himself hedged in by tasselated leaves through which he
+could not see. The foliage thinned, however, and soon Ivana halted,
+perched herself in a comfortable position. Kirby, making himself at ease
+beside her, and seeing that Nini and Gori were in place, turned his eyes
+slowly, expectantly downward.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At first, all that he saw from his bird's-eye perch, was a circular
+clearing two hundred yards across, which was surrounded on all sides by
+lowering jungle. In the exact center of the circle, like a splotch of
+ink on gray paper, there gaped a deep hole which might have measured six
+feet in diameter. Around this hole, eight poles as tall and stout as
+telephone poles stood up in bristling array. The moonlight showed that
+the whitish earth of the clearing was tamped smooth as though thousands
+of creatures had danced or walked about there for centuries. But not a
+living form was visible.
+
+A grunt of disappointment escaped Kirby after that one look. When he
+looked beyond the clearing, however, a change came to his feelings.
+
+A quarter of a mile away, lights were twinkling--the same ones which had
+been visible on the last stretch of the journey. And the moonlight
+touched the little conical roofs of fully two hundred huts of the
+ape-people. No sound was audible save the soughing of night wind in the
+trees, the shrilling of insects. Nevertheless, there stole over Kirby
+all at once a feeling that the great ape-village was crowded to
+overflowing. What was more, he felt himself touched by an eery
+sensation--familiar these days--of evil to come.
+
+Ivana, seated with her rifle across her knees, stirred on the limb
+beside him.
+
+"Oh," she whispered suddenly, "I am afraid of this place!"
+
+Kirby took her hand.
+
+"I know. Maybe it is the sensation of all the legions of the apes herded
+together so silently in their village. I wish we knew what to expect
+from them. I wish--"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But he broke off, and called softly to Nini on the limb above. She
+looked down with a drawn expression about her mouth.
+
+"Are you all right?" Kirby whispered.
+
+"Yes. But--Well, are both of _you_ all right? Gori says we have reached
+here in time, but I--" A gasp of uneasiness escaped her, and Kirby heard
+Ivana echo it. "There is something about that black, silent hole out
+there in the clearing, and about those poles sticking up like fangs,
+that makes me terribly, terribly afraid. Oh, what are they planning?
+Where is Naida? What are they going to do to her?"
+
+Kirby whistled in a low key. He had not thought about the black hole in
+the clearing.
+
+"Hum," he muttered, "that's interesting. Ivana, Nini, what do you
+suppose--"
+
+But he got no answer. Gori's twitching lips grimaced them to silence.
+
+The next instant, the stillness of the night was hurled aside by a
+howling, gurgling shout from a hundred, a thousand hysterically
+distended ape throats. With the sickening sound came from the village
+the sullen roaring of drums.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ten minutes later, a Kirby who was cold with apprehension and wonder
+looked down from his leaf-crowned height at such a spectacle as he knew
+human eyes had never before seen. The shouting had died away, the drums
+were silenced. Crammed into the clearing, their foul, hairy bodies
+packed close together, the silver light glinting against rolling red
+eyes and grinning white teeth, stood fully a thousand apes!
+
+Once the first tumult of shouting in the village had died, they had come
+on in silence, and in orderly procession. Those who bore the
+drums--huge gourds with heads of stretched skin--had formed a line
+entirely around the outer diameter of the circular clearing. Then
+others, lugging vats of a dark, heady-smelling liquor, had deposited
+their burden beside the drums, and formed a second circle. The balance
+of the thousand had crowded itself together as best it might, leaving
+bare the center of the clearing with its black hole and fangs of poles.
+Kirby, looking down at these legions, did not wonder that cold sweat
+wetted his back.
+
+Capable of thinking about only one thing--Naida--he was trying with all
+his strength not to think. Ivana, her face blanched in the light which
+filtered their camouflage of leaves, sat rigid, her hands locked about
+her cold rifle. On the branch above, Nini and Gori were as still as
+mummies. No one had spoken since the vanguard of apes had appeared.
+
+But at last Nini leaned close to Kirby.
+
+"Have you any idea of what all this means?"
+
+A draught of hot night air carried up a stench of drunkenness, and the
+goaty odor of massed animal bodies.
+
+"No," Kirby whispered. "I suppose, from Gori's having brought us here,
+that Naida is going to appear somehow. We've simply got to trust that
+Gori knows what she is about."
+
+"But listen--" Ivana suppressed a shudder. "Suppose they should bring
+Naida here presently to force her to take part in some ceremony at which
+we can only guess. Gori, who thinks we can work miracles, supposes we
+can rescue Naida. But I--I'm not so certain. Is there _anything_ we can
+do?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was exactly that question which had made Kirby fight to keep himself
+from thinking. His face turned gray before he answered. But answer he
+did, finally.
+
+"Yes, there is one thing we can do, Ivana. We've got to be frank with
+each other, and so far, this is the _only_ thing I've been able to
+figure out. If Naida is brought here, and they make any move to harm her
+or torture her, we can, and we will, shoot her quickly, before harm or
+pain comes."
+
+A grim silence settled once more. During the last miles of march in the
+jungle, there had persisted in Kirby's heart the hope that there would
+be at least _something_ favorable in whatever situation they might
+encounter. His spirits were so low now that he dared not speak again.
+
+Amongst the noiseless sea of ape-men below them came, every now and
+again, a little ripple of motion as some anthropoid shadow fell out of
+his place, approached the liquor vats, and swilled down the black brew,
+a quart at a gulp. But mostly there was little commotion. Ivana drew a
+sibilant breath and said that she wished something would happen.
+
+"I wish," Kirby answered tensely, "that we knew _what_ is going to
+happen."
+
+But the nightmare waiting was not to go on forever. Kirby leaned forward
+and pointed.
+
+It was only instinct that had made him know action must come. For a
+second, no change in the expression of the ape-men, no movement in their
+crammed ranks, was visible. Then, however, a queer, subdued grunting
+rumbled deep down in many throats, and those who had faced the
+hundred-foot space in the center of the clearing squatted down on their
+hams.
+
+In the back of the crowd necks were craned. The stronger shoved the
+weaker in an effort to get a better view of the cleared stage, and a few
+ape-men who had been drinking hurried on unsteady legs to their places.
+
+"The drums!" Kirby whispered then.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+With almost military precision, the scores of leather-faced creatures
+who had led the procession into the clearing, clasped the skin-headed
+gourds to their shaggy bellies, and stood with free arm raised as
+though awaiting a signal. Nini moved in her position, and Kirby felt
+Ivana shiver and edge close to him.
+
+From the front rank of the crowd, there sprang up a great male creature
+with the face of a gargoyle and the body of a jungle giant. Just once he
+reeled on his feet, as though black alcohol had befuddled him, then he
+steadied himself, flung both arms above his head, and rolled out a
+command which burst upon Kirby's ears like thunder.
+
+It was as if the whole cavern of the lower world, and the whole of the
+round earth itself, had been rocked uneasily, dreadfully by the
+bellowing, crashing explosion of the drums. Maddened by the turmoil he
+had let loose, the gargoyle-faced giant ape-man leered about him with
+blood-shot, drunken eyes, and beat on his cicatrized chest with massive
+fists. Suddenly he let out a bellow. Straight up into the air he sprang
+in a wild leap. When he came down, he was dancing, and the portentious,
+the sickeningly mysterious ceremony for which such solemn preparation
+had been made, was begun.
+
+Kirby drew a rasping breath. Knowing that there must be some definite
+reason for the dance having begun just when and as it had, he looked
+beyond the solitary dancing giant, on beyond the crowded legions of the
+apes, toward the village. There, where the main trail from the community
+approached the clearing, he saw precisely the thing which he had both
+hoped desperately and dreaded terribly to find.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Headed directly toward the clearing, moving down the trail with slow,
+majestic pace, came a procession headed by a bodyguard of ape-men and
+augmented by other men whose nakedness was covered by unmistakable,
+unforgetable priestly robes of gray.
+
+All at once the ape-people in the clearing began to scuffle apart,
+opening a lane down which the procession might pass to the central
+stage with its dancer, its ink spot orifice, and its fangs of tall
+poles. Kirby, watching the congregation, watching the majestic approach
+of gray robes through the night, wiped away from his forehead a sweat of
+fear.
+
+"I think," Nini called in a voice pitched high to outsound the drums,
+"that the--the Duca is with them!"
+
+"Yes." Kirby pointed jerkily. "In the middle of the procession, there,
+surrounded by his caciques!"
+
+The Duca!
+
+Yet his approach did not hold Kirby. Directly behind the priests were
+emerging now from the jungle a new company of ape-men. Squinting his
+eyes, Kirby saw that two of them were lugging on a pole across their
+shoulders a curious burden--a sort of monstrous bird cage of barked
+withes. Crouched on the floor of the cage in a little motionless, white
+heap--
+
+But Kirby closed his eyes. Ivana, cowering against him, gulped as though
+she were going to be sick. Nini leaned down from above and looked at
+them with dilated eyes. Although none of them spoke, all knew that they
+had found Naida at last.
+
+Kirby was the first to pull himself up. Opening his eyes, he stared long
+at the white gowned, motionless shape within the cage. Next summing up
+the whole situation--the cage surrounded by an armed band, the clearing
+crammed with a thousand ape-men--he shook his head. Afterward, he made a
+quick movement with his hands.
+
+Ivana, seeing that movement, seeing the expression on his face, started
+out of her daze.
+
+"No! No! Oh, there must be some other way out for her! There must--"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Her cry, half a shriek, did not change Kirby's look. What he had done
+with his hands was to throw a shell into the chamber of his rifle. Now
+he held the rifle grimly, ready to carry it to his shoulder.
+
+The procession with the bodyguard of ape-men at its head, the renegade
+Duca and his caciques following next, and the cage bringing up the rear,
+advanced relentlessly down the lane to the central stage. The
+gargoyle-faced ape-man who held the stage alone danced with increasing
+wildness, writhing, twisting, with weird suppleness. Upon the dancing
+giant the procession bore down, and before him it finally halted.
+
+The halt left the Duca and the king ape facing each other, and the ape
+ended his dance. After each had given a salute made by raising their
+arms, both Duca and the king ape turned to face the creatures who were
+standing with the cage slung across their shoulders. Whereupon the
+bearers of the cage advanced with it until they stood between two of the
+tall poles. There, facing the ominous hole in the center of the
+clearing, with a pole on either side of them, the ape-men lowered the
+cage to the ground.
+
+Kirby felt his last hope and courage ebbing. Now he noticed that each
+pole was equipped with a rope which passed through a hole near its top,
+like a thread through the eye of a needle. And while he stared at the
+dangling ropes, the ape-men made one end of each fast to a ring in the
+top of the cage. The next instant they leaped back, and began to heave
+at the other end of the lines.
+
+From the drums came a quicker pounding, a more head-splitting volume of
+thunder. Over all the ape-people who watched the show, passed a shiver
+of what seemed to be whole-souled, ecstatic satisfaction. Slowly, as the
+two ape-men heaved hard, the cage swung off the ground, and slowly rose
+higher and higher into the moonlit air.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When finally the thing hung high above the heads of the multitude,
+swaying midway between its tall supports, the ape-men who had done the
+hoisting fastened their lines to cleats on the poles. Then they turned
+to the Duca and the giant king who stood behind them, executed a queer,
+lumbering bow, and fell back to the rear.
+
+The next moment it seemed as though every creature in the clearing--men
+and those who were only half men--had gone crazy. The king flung himself
+into the air as if he were a mass of bounding rubber. Following his
+lead, the whole assembly let out howls that drowned even the drums, and
+then began to sway, to squirm, to leap, even as their king was doing
+before them.
+
+The caciques and the Duca joined in the madness of foul dancing as
+heartily as any there. Their eyes were flaming, their long robes
+flapping, their beards streaming.
+
+On his perch in the tree Kirby muttered an oath which was lost, swept
+away like a breath, in the shrieking turmoil of sound. Then he turned to
+Ivana.
+
+"They've brought Naida here to sacrifice her."
+
+"But _why_?" Ivana's sweet face was frozen in lines of horror. "I've
+been able to guess what was going to happen to her. But--_sacrifice_.
+Why will it be that?"
+
+"Don't you see?" Looking up to include Nini, Kirby found his hands
+quivering against his rifle. "It is easy to understand. In the temple
+yesterday, what the Duca hoped to do was to kidnap most, or all, of the
+girls for the ape-people. But he was able to get only Naida. The first
+result was that the ape-men started to quarrel over the one girl. From
+what Gori says, trouble started on all sides at once. It became
+inadvisable to let Naida live. So the Duca, in his shrewdness, planned a
+sacrifice. By sacrificing Naida, he rids himself of a source of
+contention amongst the ape-men. He also hopes his act will win favor
+from his Gods, and make them help him when he is ready to launch a new
+attempt to capture _all_ the girls."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ivana and Nini looked at each other, then at Kirby, and horror was
+etched deeper into their faces.
+
+"I think," gulped Ivana, "that you--are right. I--begin to understand."
+
+Nini leaned close to them.
+
+"Tell us, then, _how_ this sacrifice is to be made."
+
+Silent at that, Kirby presently made a heavy gesture toward the
+maelstrom of howling, leaping animals below them.
+
+"I couldn't guess at first. Now I think I can. They have placed her in
+that cage and swung it high above the black hole you were afraid of.
+What can that mean except that she is to be offered to--to--"
+
+It was a monstrous theory which had stunned his hope and courage, and to
+voice the thing in words was too gruesome.
+
+His bare suggestion, however, made Ivana pass a hand limply over her
+forehead and look at him with blank, stricken eyes. Nini tottered so
+uncertainly that Gori, who had remained motionless and silent
+throughout, had to steady her with muscular arms. If it was impossible
+for Kirby to utter his fears aloud, he had no need to speak to make them
+understood.
+
+"And--and we can do nothing?" Nini choked at last.
+
+"You can see for yourself how she is surrounded. If we had been able to
+get here sooner, we might have done something. Now--"
+
+Kirby's voice trailed off, and he gave an agonized look at his rifle.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The terrific dance in the clearing was going forward with madness which
+increased second by second. It had been a general debauch at first, with
+the whole thousand of the apes bellowing and squirming. Now a change was
+becoming apparent. Red eyes which had caught the glare of ultimate
+madness, focused upon the caciques, the Duca, and the great king, all of
+whom were swaying together on the central stage. As they looked, the
+horde of ape-men broke loose with a heightened frenzy of noise and
+movement too overwhelming for Kirby to follow. He leaned forward, making
+an effort to see what actions of Duca and king could be so influencing
+the congregation. And then he saw.
+
+Both of those central figures, the one with hair-covered giant's body
+and evilly grimacing face, the other with white robes and whipping
+silver hair, were definitely emulating the motions of a serpent!
+
+It was as if the angles and joints had disappeared from their bodies.
+They were become gliding lengths of muscle as swift, as loathsome in
+their supple dartings and coilings as any snake lashing across the
+expanses of primeval jungle. Lost in what they did, unconscious of the
+nightmare, demoniac legion before which they danced, they had eyes only
+for the empty, ominous hole beneath Naida's cage. As they circled the
+hole, drawing ever and ever closer to it, they opened and closed their
+arms with the motion of great serpent jaws biting and striking.
+
+"God in Heaven!" Kirby cried in a voice which shrilled with horror and
+then broke.
+
+It was not alone the Duca's dance which had wrung the shout from him. As
+Nina and Ivana shrieked and cowered, as Gori twitched, gasped, buried
+her head in trembling arms, Kirby knew that Naida was fully aware of
+what was going on--had been, perhaps, from the beginning.
+
+Slowly, numbly she raised herself from her huddled position, rose to her
+knees, and clutching with despairing hands at the sides of her cage,
+looked out from between the bars.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The king and Duca edged closer to the hole until they were dancing upon
+its very brink. From that position, they stared down into the depths,
+their faces tense and strained. And then their look became radiant,
+exalted, joyous. Suddenly the Duca leaped back. He shrieked something
+at the gargoyle ape, and they flung their arms high in a commanding,
+mighty signal which was directed across the nightmare legion of ape-men,
+to the drums.
+
+As Kirby winced in expectancy, the drums ceased to roar. Over the night
+smashed a hideous concussion of silence, deafening, absolute. And the
+ape-men--all of them--and the Duca, his caciques, and the king, ceased
+to dance. As if a whirlwind had hurled them, the caciques scattered in
+all directions. The Duca, having already leaped back from the gaping
+orifice, suddenly turned and ran with blurred speed over to the
+slobbering, deadly still front rank of the congregation. An instant
+later the king crouched down beside him, and the whole stage was left
+bare and deserted.
+
+Kirby gave one look at Naida, found her staring down, deeper and deeper
+down, into the hole which yawned beneath her so blackly. Then Kirby
+lowered his eyes until he, too, stared at the opening.
+
+Amidst the pressing silence there stole from the earth an uneasy sound
+as of some immense thing waking and stirring. Came a hissing note as of
+escaping steam. The tribes of the ape-men waited in silent rapture.
+Kirby saw Naida still looking down, and felt Ivana crouch against him,
+fainting. He held his rifle tighter, and continued to stare.
+
+Something red, like two small flames, licked up above the edge of the
+pit. Then Kirby gasped and all but went limp. Up and out into the
+moonlight slid a glistening white lump that moved from side to side and
+licked at the night with flickering black and red tipped forked tongue.
+
+The glistening white lump was the head of Quetzalcoatl, buried God of
+the People of the Temple. It was wider and bigger than an elephant's,
+and the round snake body could not have been encircled by a man's two
+arms. Kirby guessed at the probable length of the Serpent in terms of
+hundreds of feet.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sick, numb, he glanced at Naida, who was still staring silently, and
+hitched his rifle half up to his shoulder. But he did not look down the
+sights yet. Although it was time, and more than time, that he fired, he
+would not do it until the last possible second, when nothing else
+remained.
+
+Slowly from the hole slid a fifteen or twenty-foot column of the body,
+and Quetzalcoatl, thus reared, looked about him with a pair of eyes
+immense and not like snake's eyes, but heavily lidded and lashed; eyes
+that stared in a wise, evil way; eyes glittering and round and black as
+ink. After a time the mouth opened in a silent snarl, showing great
+white fangs and recurved simitars of teeth. The head was snow white,
+leperous in its scabby, scaly roughness, with here and there a patch of
+what looked like greenish fungus. From the rounded body trailed a short,
+unnatural, sickening growth of--feathers. Old and evil and very wise the
+Feathered Serpent seemed as his forked tongue flickered in and out and
+he stared at the ape horde, who stared back silently.
+
+He seemed in no hurry to devote his attention to the cage set forth for
+his delectation. The black eyes rolled beneath their lashes, staring now
+at the Duca in his robes, and again at the huddled ape-people. But after
+ghastly seconds, Quetzalcoatl at last had seen enough.
+
+Again the moonlight glinted against simitar teeth as the great, white,
+puffy mouth yawned in its silent snarl. Quetzalcoatl reared his head a
+little higher, slid further from his hole, and then looked up at the
+dangling cage of barked withes.
+
+In Kirby's mind stirred cloudily a remembrance of moments in the past:
+the feel of Naida's first kiss, her look as they advanced to the altar
+in the temple. Then he saw things as they were now, with Naida
+surrounded by all the tribes of the apes, and with Quetzalcoatl staring
+from beneath heavily lidded lashes at the whiteness of her.
+
+Suddenly Kirby stirred to free his shoulder of Ivana's supine weight
+against it, and he made himself look down his rifle. He let the breath
+half out of his lungs, and nursed the trigger.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But he did not fire.
+
+All at once he started so violently that he almost hurtled from the
+tree. Suddenly, trembling, he lowered his rifle.
+
+"Oh, thank God!" he yelped in the silence of the night.
+
+The idea which had transformed him was perhaps the conception of a
+lunatic. But it was still an idea, and offered a chance.
+
+Again Kirby peered down his rifle. But he no longer aimed at Naida. As
+Quetzalcoatl lifted white fangs, Kirby aimed deliberately at him, and
+turned loose his fire.
+
+With the first shot, the Serpent lurched back from the cage, snapped his
+jaws, and closed evil, black eyes. From one lidded socket squirted dark
+blood. As a second and third shot crashed into the cavernous fanged
+mouth, and others ripped into the flat skull, Quetzalcoatl seemed dazed.
+His head wavered back and forth and his hiss filled the night, but he
+did nothing.
+
+But all at once Kirby felt that he was _going_ to do something in a
+second, and a great calm came upon him. He quickly jammed home a fresh
+clip of shells.
+
+"Nini! Ivana! Fire at the Serpent. Give him everything you've got! Do
+you understand? Fire! He thinks that the ape-people have hurt him, and
+he will be after them in a second. If we have any luck, he will do to
+them what we never could have done, and maybe destroy himself at the
+same time! Me, I'm going down there and get Naida now!"
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+No sooner did Kirby see comprehension in the girls' faces than he swung
+around and let go of his perch. As he crashed, caught the next limb
+below him, and let go to crash to another, he had all he could do to
+suppress a yelp of joy. For all at once every voice in the ape
+congregation was raised in howls and screams of devastated terror.
+
+He did not care how he got down from the tree. Seconds and half seconds
+were what counted. From the last limb above the ground he swung into
+space, and a split second later staggered to his feet, clutched his
+rifle, and started for the clearing. His lungs seemed collapsed and both
+ankles shattered. He did not care. Not when the ape screams were growing
+louder with every step he took. Not when he heard Nini and Ivana pouring
+down from their tree a continuation of the scorching fire he had
+started.
+
+Panting, his breath only half regained, but steeled to make the fight of
+his life, he tore from the jungle into the clearing just in time to see
+a twisting, pain-convulsed seventy-foot coil of white muscle lash up and
+strike Naida's cage a blow which knocked it like a ball in the air.
+Naida screamed and hung to the bars.
+
+But she was all right. It was not against her that Quetzalcoatl was
+venting his wrath: the blow had been blind accident. As Kirby stood at
+the clearing's edge, he knew to a certainty that Quetzalcoatl's reaction
+to sudden pain had been all he had dared hope.
+
+In front of him forty or fifty ape-bodies lay in a crushed heap. While
+yard after yard of the Serpent's bleached length streamed out of the
+hole, the hundreds of feet of coils already in the clearing suddenly
+whipped about a whole squadron of ape-men, and with a few constrictions
+annihilated them as if they had been ants. Across the clearing, the
+leperous head reared up as high as the trees and swooped down, fangs
+gleaming. The howls of the ape-men trying to flee, the screams of those
+who had been caught, rose until they became all one scream.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But Kirby had not left the safety of the tree merely to get a ringside
+view of carnage. He faced his next, his final task unhesitatingly.
+Straight out he leaped from the shadows of the jungle into the clearing,
+out into the presence of the beleagured, screaming ape-men. Well enough
+he knew that those creatures, despite their frenzy, might sight him and
+fall upon him at any second; well enough he knew that a single flick of
+the white coils all over the clearing could crush him instantly. But the
+time to worry about those hazards would be when they beset him. With a
+yell as piercing as any in the whole bedlam, Kirby rushed forward.
+
+High up in the moonlit vault of the night, swaying between the two poles
+which supported it, hung the white cage which was Naida's prison. By the
+time Kirby had sprinted fifty yards, he knew that his yells had reached
+Naida. For she staggered to her knees and looked straight at him. A
+second later, though, he realized that the almost inevitable recognition
+of him by ape-men had come to pass.
+
+Eight or ten of the creatures, left unmolested for a second by the
+Serpent, halted in the mad run they were making for the sheltering
+jungle, and while one pointed with hairy arm, the others let out
+shrieks. Kirby gritted his teeth in something like despair. Then he
+realized that the worst danger--Quetzalcoatl's blurred coils--was not
+threatening him so far. And he went on, straight toward the ape-men.
+
+He did not look where, how, or at whom he struck. All he knew was that
+his rifle blazed, and as he clubbed at soft flesh with the butt, blood
+spurted, and new screams filled the night. He felt and half saw big,
+stinking bodies going down, and clawed his way forward, around them,
+over them. Then he felt no more bodies, and knew that he was through. A
+little farther he ran over the trampled earth, and stopped and looked
+up.
+
+The howls of the living, the shrieks of the dying deafened him. Renewed
+shots from the rifles in the tree, made the Serpent lash about in a
+dazzling white blur, smashing trees, apes, everything in its path. But
+Kirby, finding himself still safe, scarcely heard or saw. His eyes,
+turned upward, saw one thing only.
+
+"Naida!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She had snapped two of the withes of the cage and was leaning forward
+through the opening. Her face was livid with horror and exhaustion, but
+she was able to look at him with eyes that glowed.
+
+"You--you came!" she gasped. "You came to me!"
+
+In a flash Kirby jumped over to the poles and began to cast off one of
+the lines which held the cage aloft.
+
+"Get ready for a bump!" he shouted, as he lowered away, arms straining.
+
+Paying out the one line left the cage suspended from the second, but let
+it sweep from its position between the poles, down toward one pole. As
+the thing struck the tall support, Kirby bounded over to stand beneath
+it, only too sharply aware of the death waiting for him on every side,
+but ignoring it. Naida still hung suspended a good twenty feet above
+him, but there was no time to let go the other line. He braced himself
+and held up his arms.
+
+"Jump!" he yelled.
+
+Then he saw the white gown sweeping down toward him, felt the crash of a
+soft body against his, and staggered back. Recovered in a tenth of a
+second, he drew a deep breath, and looked at Naida beside him, tall and
+brave, unhurt.
+
+"Are you able to run?" he snapped, and then, the moment she nodded,
+motioned toward the jungle.
+
+Behind them, in front, on all sides, rose screams so horrible that he
+wondered even then if he would ever forget. As he started to run, he
+realized that when Naida had finally landed in his arms, the nearest
+squirming loop of the Serpent had been no more than four yards away, and
+that, right now, if their luck failed, a single unfortunate twist of the
+incredible hundreds of feet of white muscle could still end things for
+them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But luck was not going to fail. Somehow Kirby knew it as they sprinted
+side by side, and the sheltering jungle loomed closer every second. And
+a moment later, something beside his own inner faith made him know it,
+too.
+
+"Look, Naida! Look!" he screeched all at once.
+
+At the upper end of the clearing, where an unthinkable slaughter was
+going on, there leaped out from amongst a surging mass of apes, leaped
+out from almost directly beneath a downward smashing blur of white snake
+folds, a figure which Kirby had not seen or thought about for many
+seconds.
+
+The Duca's robe hung in tatters from his body. Blood had smeared his
+white hair. His eyes were those of a man gone mad from fear. And as he
+escaped the tons of muscle which so nearly had engulfed him, he began to
+run even as Kirby felt himself running.
+
+Straight toward him and Naida, Kirby saw the man spurt, but whether the
+mad eyes recognized them or not, he could not tell, nor did he care. All
+at once his feeling that they would escape the clearing, became
+conviction.
+
+For suddenly the same single twitch of Quetzalcoatl's vast folds which
+might have finished them, if luck had not held, put an end to the Duca's
+retreat. At one moment the man's path was clear. The next--
+
+Kirby, running for dear life, gasped, and heard Naida cry out beside
+him.
+
+The great loops flashed, twisted, and where had been an open way for
+the Duca, loomed a wall of scaly white flesh. The living wall twitched,
+closed in; and as the Duca dodged and leaped to no avail, a cry shrilled
+across the night--a cry that cut like a knife.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kirby saw no more. But it was likely that most, if not all, of the
+caciques had gone with the Duca.
+
+Somehow, anyhow, in but a few seconds more, Kirby dove into the spot
+from which he had left the jungle to enter the clearing. As Naida
+pressed against him, winded but still strong, he found his best hopes
+for immediate retreat realized, for Gori, Nini, and Ivana, down from
+their tree, ran toward them.
+
+"She is all right," he said with a gesture which cut short the outbursts
+ready to come. "But we've got to keep going. Ivana, tell Gori that her
+people are gone, wiped out, but that if she will cast her lot with us,
+we will not forget what she has done. Come on!"
+
+With Gori leading them they ran, stumbling, recovering themselves,
+stumbling again. To breathe became an agony. But not until many minutes
+later, when they plowed into the cover of a fern belt whose blackness
+not even the moonlight had pierced, did Kirby call a halt.
+
+Here he swept a final glance behind him, listened long for sounds of
+pursuit, and relaxed a little only when none came to disturb the night
+stillness. However, that relaxation, now that he permitted it at last,
+meant something.
+
+The complete silence gave him final conviction that what he had said
+about the whole ape-people being destroyed was true. As for the
+Serpent--well, perhaps he was destroyed even as they were. Perhaps not.
+In any case the grip which Quetzalcoatl held upon the imagination of the
+People of the Temple had been destroyed by this night's work, and that
+was what counted most. The Serpent would be worshipped no longer.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kirby reached out in the darkness and found Naida's hand.
+
+"Come along," he said to all of the party. "I think the past is--the
+past. And with Gori to guide us out of the jungle, and our own brains to
+guide us through the jungle of self-government after that, I think the
+future ought to be bright enough."
+
+Ivana and Nini both chuckled as they moved again, and Gori, hearing her
+name spoken in a kindly voice, twitched her ears appreciatively. Naida
+drew very close to Kirby.
+
+"What are you thinking about?" she asked presently.
+
+"The--temple," he answered.
+
+"About the crown which probably is still lying on the altar there?"
+
+Kirby looked up in surprise.
+
+"Why, I had forgotten about that!"
+
+"What was it, then?"
+
+"But what could I have been thinking about except how you looked when we
+came together in that gloomy place, and walked forward, side by side?
+_Now_ have I told you enough?"
+
+Naida laughed.
+
+"There is so much to be done!" Kirby exclaimed then. "As soon as
+possible, we must climb to the Valley of the Geyser, go on into the
+outer world, and there seek carefully for men who are willing, and fit,
+to come here. And that is only one task. Others come crowding to me
+every second. But first--"
+
+"What?" Naida asked softly.
+
+"The temple. Naida, we will reach the plateau sometime to-morrow. All of
+the girls who kept watch there will be waiting for us, and it will be a
+time of happiness. May we not, then, go to the temple? There will be no
+priests. But we will make our pledges without them. Tell me, may I hope
+that it will be so--to-morrow?"
+
+Naida did not answer at once. She did not even nod. But presently her
+shoulder, still fragrant with faint perfume, brushed his. She clasped
+his hand then, and as they walked on in silence, Kirby knew.
+
+
+
+
+The Reader's Corner
+
+[Illustration: The Readers' Corner
+
+A Meeting Place for Readers of
+Astounding Stories]
+
+
+"Literature"
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+After comparison with various other magazines which specialize in the
+publication of Science Fiction, we--The Scientific Fiction Library
+Ass'n, of 1457 First Ave., New York City--have found that your magazine,
+Amazing Stories, publishes stories to which the term "literature" may be
+applied in its real sense. A fine example of this is the story "Murder
+Madness," by Murray Leinster. Others of the finer novels are: "The
+Beetle Horde," by Victor Rousseau, and, up to the present installment,
+"Earth, the Marauder," by Arthur J. Burks. "Brigands of the Moon," by
+Ray Cummings, was interesting and well-written, but it was not
+literature (not a story which you will remember and read over again). Of
+the shorter stories, the novelettes, the best are: "Spawn of the Stars,"
+by Charles W. Diffin, "Monsters of Moyen," by Arthur J. Burks, and "The
+Atom Smasher," by Victor Rousseau.
+
+Since the magazine started, there are only three stories that did not
+belong in the magazine, and were not even interesting. These are: "The
+Corpse on the Grating," by Hugh B. Cave; "The Stolen Mind," by M.
+Staley, and the last (I wonder that the editors who used such good sense
+in picking the other finer stories, let it pass), "Vampires of Venus,"
+by Anthony Pelcher. May you keep up the high standard of fiction you are
+publishing at present.--Nathan Greenfeld, 873 Whitlock Ave., New York
+City.
+
+
+You See--It Didn't!
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+Firstly, let me say that I am sending a year's subscription to
+Astounding Stories, which will tell you that they are good.
+
+On the average, the stories are of good literary merit and plot.
+However, there is one thing that seems to be getting rather pushed
+into the background and that is the second part of your title,
+"Super-Science." If this is to be a Science Fiction magazine let us have
+it so. I am kicking against stories like "Murder Madness" and the like.
+They are really excellent in every way but just need that tincture of
+a little scientific background to make them super-excellent. "Brigands
+of the Moon" and "The Moon Master" seem to me more the type of story
+"our mag" should publish, from its name.
+
+No doubt this criticism will leave you cold and this effusion find its
+way into the nearest waste paper basket, but I find that a number of
+your readers in Australia think somewhat the same as I do.
+
+More brickbats--I hope not! and more bouquets--I hope so! the next time
+I write.--N.W. Alcock, 5 Gaza Rd., Naremburn, N.S.W., Australia.
+
+
+Not in de Head!!
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+I shall be glad to take advantage of your cordial invitation to come
+over to "The Readers' Corner." In the first place, I find your magazine
+the best of its kind on the market, and you are to be congratulated on
+having such excellent authors as Ray Cummings, Murray Leinster and
+Captain S. P. Meek. Nevertheless, there are so many things to be
+criticized that I hardly know where to begin.
+
+Let's start of with stories of future warfare. Although this class is
+potentially one of the most interesting, it is at the same time one of
+the most abused. Ray Cummings can write classics in this field, but the
+efforts of most the others are atrocities. I'll wager that their
+favorite childhood sport was mowing down whole regiments of lead
+soldiers with oxy-acetylene torches. It shows in their writings. Why
+can't they think of something original? Why can't they make their
+stories logical? The merits of a story are not dependent on the number
+of people wiped out by one blast of a death ray! But they all stick to
+the same old plot. A merciless but well-meaning scientist, or hordes
+from a foreign planet, wipe out thousands of American citizens at one
+blow. Hundreds of airplanes are disintegrated before they discover that
+the enemy is invulnerable. An ultimatum in domineering tones gives the
+terror-stricken populace forty-eight hours in which to surrender. But,
+all unknown to the dastardly villains, an obscure young scientist labors
+to save his country and the girl he loves. Fifteen minutes before the
+time set in the ultimatum he perfects a new weapon that soon sends the
+invaders to their well merited fate.
+
+Surely you realize how ridiculous the whole affair is. It is only
+slightly less nauseating than the plot used in the stories of advanced
+civilizations where the hero is conducted on a sight-seeing tour by the
+individual in whose path he popped upon entering this new world. I can't
+believe that more than a handful of my fellow beings are of such low
+intelligence that they can find enjoyment in such trash. You will notice
+that although every reader has a different list of favorite authors, Ray
+Cummings has his name in practically every list. He is easily your
+favorite author. Ray Cummings does not wipe out whole cities at one
+time. His heroes do not save the world by inventing a new weapon at a
+moment's notice. His wars are not of forty-eight hours' duration. His
+conquerors do not attempt to win the war by one great attack on New York
+City. Do try to have your authors write logical stories.
+
+I would now like to criticize the love element in your stories. I do not
+claim that there should be none whatever from cover to cover of your
+magazine, but I do claim that there should be none unless it really
+helps the plot. Most of your authors seem to think that a girl is
+necessary in every plot and so they bring her in, disregarding the fact
+that they do not know how to handle such material. The way it stands
+now, the heroine is introduced in a lame, routine fashion; is rescued
+once or twice; and accepts the hero as a husband in an altogether lame
+fashion.
+
+There are many other points but they can wait. Logical war stories, no
+Utopias or sight-seeing tours, sensible love element, plus your present
+policy will make a corking magazine.--Philip Waite, 3400 Wayne Ave., New
+York, N.Y.
+
+
+No Present Plans
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+Thanks for the new color cover. It certainly is a big improvement. The
+picture on the front of "our" magazine was just as astounding as the
+story by R. F. Starzl from which it was drawn. Let's have more stories
+from the pen of Mr. Starzl.
+
+In my opinion "Beyond the Heaviside Layer" is the best story I have read
+in Astounding Stories to date. I am very pleased that you intend to
+print a sequel to it.
+
+Now I would like to ask you a question. Do you intend to print an Annual
+or Quarterly, or do think you will ever enlarge the size of this
+magazine? I don't care so much whether you enlarge the magazine or not,
+but I certainly would like to read an Annual or Quarterly.
+
+Even though this letter meets the fate of thousands of other such
+letters and sees the inside of your wastebasket, I will at least have
+had the pleasure of writing to you and wishing "our" magazine success to
+the nth degree.--Forrest J. Ackerman, 236-½ N. New Hampshire, Los
+Angeles, Calif.
+
+
+"Excellent" to "So-So"
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+I notice a large number of subscribers are giving their opinions of
+Astounding Stories. I hate to be with the crowd, but I have to side with
+the majority in this case and say it's just about right.
+
+My favorite writers are R. F. Starzl (that "Planet of Dread" was a
+peach). Chas. W. Diffin, A. Merritt, Ralph Milne Farley, Murray Leinster
+and Ray Cummings.
+
+Now as to the August issue, here is how I rate them:
+
+"Planet of Dread"--more than 20c. worth at the first crack. A real
+story.
+
+"Lord of Space"--excellent. I meant to include Victor Rousseau in my
+list of favorites above.
+
+"The Second Satellite"--so-so.
+
+"Silver Dome"--so.
+
+"Earth the Marauder"--too deep for me. And that Beryl stuff is sheer
+bunk.
+
+"Murder Madness"--a real story. Get more like this.
+
+"The Flying City"--too much explanation and description and not enough
+action.
+
+Perhaps it looks like I'm sort of critical after all, but I didn't mean
+it just that way. What I'm driving at is that Astounding Stories is by
+far superior to its competitors, and I'm telling you so because it might
+make you feel better to know it. If you want to print this testimonial,
+go to it. To tell the truth, I'll be looking for it.--Leslie P. Mann,
+1227 Ogden Ave., Chicago, Illinois.
+
+
+"Too Many Serials"
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+I have just finished the August issue, and I would like to tell you my
+opinion of it and the magazine as a whole.
+
+The stories in order of merit were:
+
+1--"The Second Satellite"; 2--"The Flying City"; 3--"Silver Dome";
+4--"The Lord of Space"; 5--"The Planet of Dread."
+
+I won't pass judgment upon the serials, as I have not read all the
+parts.
+
+In "The Flying City" there are a number of points I am hazy about. How
+could Cor speak English? However, this could be cleared up by saying
+that Cor sent out men to get the language, etc.
+
+As a whole, Astounding Stories is a good magazine. There are too many
+serials, however, but since other readers like them I won't complain.
+
+You have a fine array of Science Fiction authors. With such writers as
+Vincent, Meek, Hamilton, Starzl and Ernst, your magazine can't be
+anything but a success.
+
+The September layouts look good to me. I hope it is.--E. Anderson, 1765
+Southern Blvd., New York, N.Y.
+
+
+Thanks, Mr. Glasser
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+Somewhat belatedly I am writing to commend you most heartily on the
+August issue of Astounding Stories, which I consider by far the finest
+number since the inception of the magazine last January. The authors
+whose work appeared in this issue are among the greatest modern writers
+of fantasy and scientific fiction. Leinster, Burks, Hamilton,
+Rousseau--what a brilliant galaxy! And Starzl, Vincent, Rich; all
+writers of note. If ever a magazine merited the designation "all-star
+number," your August issue filled the bill.
+
+However, I am confident that even this superb achievement will be
+surpassed by some future edition of Astounding Stories, for each
+succeeding number to date has improved on the one before. And with a new
+Cummings novel in the offing, it seems the August issue, despite its
+excellence, will speedily be eclipsed.--Allen Glasser, 1510 University
+Ave., New York, N.Y.
+
+
+Are Our Covers Too "Gaudy"?
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+This is the first time that I have ventured to air my views to any
+magazine, but as yours interests me greatly I hereby shed my reticence.
+
+I believe, of all magazine of your type, you have come nearest
+perfection. But there are just a few things that bother me, and, no
+doubt, others like me. In the first place, must you make your covers as
+lurid and as contradictory to good design as they are? Really, I blush
+when my newsdealer hands me the gaudy thing. People interested in
+science do not usually succumb to circus poster advertising.
+
+Then there are the stories. I realize that you must cater to all tastes,
+but some of them are very childish, slightly camouflaged fairy tales.
+Science Fiction can be written very convincingly, as is testified by the
+stories of H. G. Wells, Ray Cummings, Jules Verne, and others. These
+writers attain their effects by the proper use of the English language,
+without silly and obviously tacked-on romance, the use of known
+scientific facts elaborated sensibly and by not trying to make a novel
+out of a short story.
+
+The stimulation of the imagination from Science Fiction is most
+enjoyable and I shall continue to read your magazine even though my
+fault finding is not considered, for, as I said before, you certainly
+have come nearer my ideal than any of the others.--Hector D. Spear, 867
+W. 181st St., The Tri-Sigma Fraternity, New York City.
+
+
+Nossir--Our Astronomy Is O. K.
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+I am taking advantage of your invitation to write to you. Since
+Astounding Stories is available you have given me a lot of pleasure, and
+I hope you may get a little pleasure out of reading this.
+
+First, I want to say that you're hitting the ball as far as I'm
+concerned. I could hardly suggest an improvement.
+
+In the August issue I liked "Planet of Dread," by R. F. Starzl, best.
+When that thing in the "pipe" grabbed me, I mean Gunga, wow! And it gave
+me a lot of satisfaction to see the Master in "Murder Madness," by
+Murray Leinster, get it in the neck. "Lord of Space" was good, too. In
+fact all the stories were good. I have only read two or three I really
+did not like since you started.
+
+Say, I never heard of a planet named Inra. Don't you think your author
+ought to brush up on his astronomy? I also noticed some other authors
+are a little weak on astronomy; not that I'm complaining. The stories
+are O. K. with me.--Harry Johnson, 237 E. 128th St., New York City.
+
+
+Mr. Yetter Checks Up on Us
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+As I am a constant reader of Astounding Stories I wish to say that
+though S. P. Meek is one of my favorite authors his story, "Cold Light,"
+was a little wrong when he called the "Silver Range" by the name of
+"Stillwater Range." I also think it would have been better if he had had
+a car take Dr. Bird and Carnes out to the hills, became even in Fallon a
+burro is a strange sight.
+
+But Meek, Cummings, Burks and all the rest of our famous authors'
+stories should be in the magazine often. If Verrill, Wells, Nathenson
+and Hamilton would also write, the magazine would be perfect.
+
+I like all the stories, though some seem to be copies, and others lack
+science.
+
+Here is for a long life for Astounding Stories!--Frank Yetter, 369
+Railroad Ave., Fallon, Nevada.
+
+
+"Charm All Its Own"
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+Let me congratulate you. I have just read "The Planet of Dread," by R.
+F. Starzl, in your August issue of Astounding Stories.
+
+Real science, you know, is pretty rigidly limited, but super-science of
+the kind you seem to run has a freshness and charm all its own.
+
+I came upon your magazine quite by accident, and from now on no doubt
+will look for it as I stand before the racks of magazines, trying to
+decide upon something to read--Anton J. Sartori, 1330 W. 6th St., Los
+Angeles, Calif.
+
+
+Inra Could Exist
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+You will have to excuse this old telegraph office typewriter. It is all
+I have to express my appreciation to you for the tremendously
+interesting magazine you put out. I have only read the last three
+issues, but those are enough to convince me that Astounding Stories
+fills a long-felt want. I read all the others too, but from now on I'm
+going to look over their offerings at the stand before I buy. They have
+to go some to come up to the standard set by you, especially in the
+August copy.
+
+That story, "The Planet of Dread," was the most weird, exciting,
+thrilling, satisfying--in short, the most "astounding" story I have ever
+read. Nothing has seemed so real since I first read Wells' stories. I
+liked the characters. Poor Gunga. I could just see him, trying to
+sacrifice the man he obviously worshipped to stop that horrible noise.
+The picture of Gunga on the cover was just exactly what I would expect
+the Martian to look like. You have a good artist. I liked Mark
+Forepaugh, too. He didn't lose his nerve for one minute--not Mark. Who
+says civilization is going down, when the future holds men like that?
+
+Next to "The Planet of Dread" I liked "The Lord of Space." That was a
+vivid and well-drawn story, too. Those two, I think, were the
+outstanding stories for August. But I must not forget "Murder Madness,"
+the serial; it was thrilling and convincing. That's the only kick I
+have: so many stories sound thin. I don't believe them when I read them.
+I also want to mention "The Forgotten Planet" and "From An Amber Block."
+Good, exciting, and you can believe them without too much strain.
+
+Oh, by the way, the author of "The Planet of Dread" made a mistake when
+he chose a mythical planet for his terrific adventures. Why not Venus or
+Mercury? If they have water the conditions on them would be similar to
+what he described for Inra. There ain't no such planet. But why expect
+perfection! I'm satisfied.
+
+I wish you success. That's a late wish. You're a success already.--Tom
+P. Fitzgerald, Newcastle, Nebraska.
+
+
+Thus Ended the Quest
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+This is my first letter to your magazine, and right away I'm asking for
+a pair of sequels. One of these is to "The Moon Master," by Charles W.
+Diffin. These sad endings depress me greatly, but if I looked at the
+ending first to see whether or not it was sad it would ruin the story;
+and besides sad endings usually have good stories in front of them. The
+other sequel I want is to "From The Ocean's Depths," by Sewell P.
+Wright, and its sequel "Into The Ocean's Depths."
+
+In looking over my back copies of the magazine I find that I have not
+disliked a single story. Thus endeth my quest for a brickbat.
+
+Are you going to put out a quarterly? Both the other Science Fiction
+magazines that I get do so, and I observe that it gives opportunity for
+a story of full novel length all in one piece. Not that I object to
+serials, but I like once in a while to sit down to a long story without
+having to dig out three or four magazines. However, please continue the
+long serials, for what is life without the element of suspense?--Hugh M.
+Gilmore, 920 N. Vista St., Hollywood, Cal.
+
+
+"The Readers' Corner"
+
+All Readers are extended a sincere and cordial invitation to "come over
+in 'The Readers' Corner'" and join in our monthly discussion of stories,
+authors, scientific principles and possibilities--everything that's of
+common interest in connection with our Astounding Stories.
+
+Although from time to time the Editor may make a comment or so, this is
+a department primarily for _Readers_, and we want you to make full use
+of it. Likes, dislikes, criticisms, explanations, roses, brickbats,
+suggestions--everything's welcome here; so "come over in 'The Readers'
+Corner'" and discuss it with all of us!
+
+_The Editor._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber Notes
+
+Typographical and hyphenation inconsistencies have been standardized.
+
+Otherwise, archaic and variable spelling is preserved, including
+'obsidion' and 'tyranosaur'.
+
+Passages in italics indicated by _underscores_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Astounding Stories of Super-Science,
+December 1930, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ASTOUNDING STORIES, DEC. 1930 ***
+
+***** This file should be named 30691-8.txt or 30691-8.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/3/0/6/9/30691/
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+<title>Astounding Stories of Super-Science, December 1930</title>
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+<pre>
+
+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Astounding Stories of Super-Science,
+December 1930, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Astounding Stories of Super-Science, December 1930
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: December 17, 2009 [EBook #30691]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ASTOUNDING STORIES, DEC. 1930 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Katherine Ward, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+
+</pre>
+
+
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_1' id='linki_1'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/cover.jpg' alt='' title="ASTOUNDING STORIES OF SUPER-SCIENCE" width='360' height='547' /><br />
+</div>
+<h1>ASTOUNDING STORIES OF SUPER-SCIENCE</h1>
+<p class='center smaller padtop'><i>On Sale the First Thursday of Each Month</i></p>
+<table summary="masthead2" width="100%">
+ <col width="30%" />
+ <col width="40%" />
+ <col width="30%" />
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">W. M. CLAYTON, Publisher</td>
+ <td class="center">HARRY BATES, Editor</td>
+ <td align="right">DR. DOUGLAS M. DOLD, Consulting Editor</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+<blockquote class="smaller">
+<p>The Clayton Standard on a Magazine Guarantees</p>
+<p><i>That</i> the stories therein are clean, interesting, vivid, by leading writers of the day and
+purchased under conditions approved by the Authors&rsquo; League of America;</p>
+<p><i>That</i> such magazines are manufactured in Union shops by American workmen;</p>
+<p><i>That</i> each newsdealer and agent is insured a fair profit;</p>
+<p><i>That</i> an intelligent censorship guards their advertising pages.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<div class="center">
+<p><i>The other Clayton magazines are</i>:</p>
+<p>ACE-HIGH MAGAZINE, RANCH ROMANCES, COWBOY STORIES, CLUES, FIVE NOVELS
+MONTHLY, ALL STAR DETECTIVE STORIES, RANGELAND LOVE STORY MAGAZINE,
+WESTERN ADVENTURES, and WESTERN LOVE STORIES.</p>
+</div></blockquote>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='center'><i>More than Two Million Copies Required to Supply the Monthly Demand for Clayton Magazines.</i></p>
+<hr class='mini' />
+<div style="margin-bottom:1em">
+<table summary="masthead" width="100%">
+ <col width="30%" />
+ <col width="45%" />
+ <col width="25%" />
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">VOL. IV, No. 3</td>
+ <td class="center larger">CONTENTS</td>
+ <td align="right">DECEMBER, 1930</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<table summary="TOC" width="100%">
+ <col width="45%" />
+ <col width="45%" />
+ <col width="10%" />
+ <tr>
+ <td>COVER DESIGN</td>
+ <td>H. W. WESSOLOWSKI</td>
+ </tr>
+ <tr>
+ <td colspan="2" class="toc_desc hang1st"><i>Painted in Oils from a Scene in &ldquo;The Ape-Men of Xlotli.&rdquo;</i></td>
+ </tr>
+
+<tr><td>SLAVES OF THE DUST</td><td>SOPHIE WENZEL ELLIS</td><td align="right"><a href="#SLAVES_OF_THE_DUST_BY_SOPHIE_WENZEL_ELLIS">295</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2" class="toc_desc hang1st"><i>Fate&rsquo;s Retribution Was Adequate. There Emerged a Rat with a Man&rsquo;s Head and Face.</i></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>THE PIRATE PLANET</td><td>CHARLES W. DIFFIN</td><td align="right"><a href="#THE_PIRATE_PLANET__PART_TWO_OF_A_FOURPART_NOVEL__BY_CHARLES_W_DIFFIN">310</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2" class="toc_desc hang1st"><i>It is War. Interplanetary War. And on Far-Distant Venus Two Fighting Earthlings
+Stand Up Against a Whole Planet Run Amuck.</i> (Part Two of a Four-Part
+Novel.)</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>THE SEA TERROR</td><td>CAPTAIN S. P. MEEK</td><td align="right"><a href="#THE_SEA_TERROR_BY_CAPTAIN_S_P_MEEK">336</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2" class="toc_desc hang1st"><i>The Trail of Mystery Gold Leads Carnes and Dr. Bird to a Tremendous Monster of
+the Deep.</i></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>GRAY DENIM</td><td>HARL VINCENT</td><td align="right"><a href="#GRAY_DENIM_BY_HARL_VINCENT">354</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2" class="toc_desc hang1st"><i>The Blood of the Van Dorn&rsquo;s Ran in Karl&rsquo;s Veins. He Rode the Skies Like an Avenging
+God.</i></td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>THE APE-MEN OF XLOTLI</td><td>DAVID R. SPARKS</td><td align="right"><a href="#THE_APEMEN_OF_XLOTLI_BY_DAVID_R_SPARKS">370</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2" class="toc_desc hang1st"><i>A Beautiful Face in the Depths of a Geyser&mdash;and Kirby Plunges into a Desperate Mid-Earth
+Conflict with the Dreadful Feathered Serpent.</i> (A Complete Novelette.)</td></tr>
+
+<tr><td>THE READERS&rsquo; CORNER</td><td>ALL OF US</td><td align="right"><a href="#linki_9">421</a></td></tr>
+<tr><td colspan="2" class="toc_desc hang1st"><i>A Meeting place for Readers of Astounding Stories.</i></td></tr>
+</table>
+
+<div class="smaller">
+<table summary="masthead" width="100%">
+ <col width="55%" />
+ <col width="35%" />
+ <tr>
+ <td align="left">Single Copies, 20 Cents (In Canada, 25 Cents)</td>
+ <td align="right">Yearly Subscription, $2.00</td>
+ </tr>
+</table>
+</div>
+
+<p class='padtop'>Issued monthly by Readers&rsquo; Guild, Inc., 80 Lafayette St., New York, N.Y. W. M. Clayton, President;
+Francis P. Pace, Secretary. Entered as second-class matter December 7, 1929, at the Post Office at
+New York. N.Y., under Act of March 3. 1879. Title registered as a Trade Mark in the U.S. Patent Office.
+Member Newsstand Group&mdash;Men&rsquo;s List. For advertising rates address E. R. Crow &amp; Co., Inc., 25 Vanderbilt
+Ave., New York; or 225 North Michigan Ave., Chicago.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_295' name='page_295'></a>295</span>
+<a name='SLAVES_OF_THE_DUST_BY_SOPHIE_WENZEL_ELLIS' id='SLAVES_OF_THE_DUST_BY_SOPHIE_WENZEL_ELLIS'></a>
+<h2>Slaves of the Dust</h2>
+<p><i>By Sophie Wenzel Ellis</i></p>
+</div>
+<blockquote>
+<p><i>It&rsquo;s a poor science that would hide
+from us the great, deep, sacred infinitude
+of Nescience, whither we can
+never penetrate, on which all science
+swims as mere superficial film.</i></p>
+<p class='ralign'>&mdash;<i>Carlyle</i>.</p>
+</blockquote>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_2' id='linki_2'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/295.jpg' alt='' title='' width='478' height='500' /><br />
+<p class='caption'>
+<i>Sir Basil showed his teeth in his ugly smile. &ldquo;A creator is never merciful.&rdquo;</i><br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> two <i>batalões</i> turned from
+the open waters of the lower
+Tapajos River into the <i>igarapé</i>,
+the lily-smothered shallows that
+often mark an Indian
+settlement
+in the jungles of
+Brazil. One of the two half-breed
+rubber-gatherers suddenly stopped his
+<i>batalõe</i> by thrusting a paddle against a
+giant clump of lilies. In a corruption
+of the Tupi dialect, he called over to
+the white man occupying the other
+frail craft.</p>
+<p class='sidebarright'>Fate&rsquo;s retribution was adequate. There
+emerged a rat with a man&rsquo;s head and face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We dare go no farther, master. The
+country of the Ungapuks is bewitched.
+It is too dangerous.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Fearfully he
+stared over his
+shoulder toward a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_296' name='page_296'></a>296</span>
+spot in the slimy water where a dim
+bulk moved, which was only an alligator
+hunting for his breakfast.</p>
+<p>Hale Oakham, as long and lanky and
+level-eyed as Charles Lindbergh, ran
+despairing fingers through his damp
+hair and groaned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But how can I find this jungle village
+without a guide?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The <i>caboclo</i> shrugged. &ldquo;The village
+will find you. It is bewitched,
+master. But you will soon see the path
+through the <i>matto</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t you stay by me until time to
+land? I don&rsquo;t like the looks of these
+alligators.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is better for a white man to face
+an alligator than for a <i>caboclo</i> to face
+an Ungapuk. Once they used to kill
+and eat us for our strength. Now&mdash;&rdquo;
+Again his shrug was eloquent.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now?&rdquo; Hale prompted impatiently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The white god who put a spell on
+these one-time cannibals will bewitch
+us and make us wash and rejoice when
+it is time to die.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>He</span> shuddered and spat at a cayman
+that was lumbering away from
+his <i>batalõe.</i></p>
+<p>Hale Oakham laughed, a hearty boyish
+laugh for a rather learned young
+professor.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is that all they do to you?&rdquo; he
+asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. All who enter this magic
+<i>matto</i> die soon, rejoicing. Before the
+last breath comes, it is said their bodies
+turn into a handful of silver dust&mdash;poof!&mdash;like
+that.&rdquo; He snapped his
+dirty fingers. &ldquo;Then the life that
+leaves them goes into rocks that walk.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hale sighed resignedly. There
+wasn&rsquo;t any use to argue.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Unload your <i>batalõe</i>,&rdquo; he ordered
+testily, &ldquo;and get your filthy carcasses
+away.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The half-breeds obeyed readily. As
+the departing <i>batalõe</i> turned from the
+<i>igarapé</i> into the open water of the
+river, the young man repressed a sudden
+lifting of his scalp. He was in for
+it now!</p>
+<p>His long body sprawled out in the
+<i>batalõe</i>, he paddled about aimlessly for
+several minutes until he found an aisle
+through the jungle&mdash;the path that led
+to the jungle village which he was visiting
+in the name of science, and for a
+certain award.</p>
+<p>Before plunging into that waiting
+tangle where life and death carried on
+a visible, unceasing struggle, he hesitated.
+Instinctively he shrank from
+losing himself in that mad green world.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>He</span> had first heard of the Ungapuks
+at the convention of the Nescience
+Club in New York, that body of
+scientists, near-scientists and adventurers
+linked together for the purpose
+of awarding the yearly Woolman
+prizes for the most spectacular addition
+of empiric facts to various
+branches of science. One of the members
+of the club, an explorer, had told
+a wild yarn about a tribe of Brazilian
+Indians, headed by Sir Basil Addington,
+an English scientist, who was conducting
+secret experiments in biochemistry
+in his jungle laboratory. The explorer
+had said that the scientist, half-crazed
+by a powerful narcotic, had
+seemingly discovered some secret of
+life which enabled him to produce
+monsters in his laboratory and to
+change the physical characteristics of
+the Ungapuk Indians, who, in five
+years, had been transformed from cannibals
+into cultured men and women.</p>
+<p>And now Hale Oakham, hoping to
+win one of the Woolman prizes, was
+here in the country of the Ungapuks,
+entering the jungle path that lead to
+the unknown.</p>
+<p>Fifty feet from the <i>igarapé</i>, the path
+curved sharply away from a giant tree.
+Hale approached the bend with his
+hand on his gun. Just before he
+reached it, he stopped suddenly to listen.</p>
+<p>A woman&rsquo;s voice had suddenly
+broken forth in a wild, incredibly
+sweet song. Hale stood entranced,
+drinking in the heady sounds that
+stirred his emotions like <i>masata</i>, the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_297' name='page_297'></a>297</span>
+jungle intoxicant. The singer approached
+the bend in the path, while
+the young man waited eagerly.</p>
+<p>The first sight of her made him gasp.
+He had expected to see an Indian girl.
+No sane traveler would imagine a
+white woman in the Amazon jungle,
+with skin as amazingly pale as the
+great, fleshy victoria regia lilies in the
+<i>igarapé</i>.</p>
+<p>When she saw Hale, she stopped instantly.
+With a quick, practiced twist,
+she reached for the bow flung across
+her shoulders and fitted a barbed arrow
+to the string.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>She</span> was a beautiful barbarian,
+standing quivering before him. In
+the thick dull gold braids hanging over
+her bare shoulders flamed two enormous
+scarlet flowers, no redder than
+her own lips pouted in alarm. There
+was a savage brevity to her clothing,
+which consisted only of a short skirt
+of rough native grass and breastplates
+of beaten gold, held in place by strings
+of colored seeds.</p>
+<p>The girl held out an imperious hand
+and, in perfect English, said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go back!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hale drew his long body up to its
+slim height, folded his arms, and gave
+her his most winning smile. His insolence
+added to his wholesome good
+looks.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; he exclaimed. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve come
+a couple of thousand miles to call on
+you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He saw that the eyes which held his
+levelly were pure and limpid, and of an
+astonishing orchid-blue.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who are you?&rdquo; Her throaty, vibrant
+voice was a thing of the flesh,
+whipping Hale&rsquo;s senses to sudden madness.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m Hale Oakham,&rdquo; he said, a little
+tremulously, &ldquo;a lone, would-be scientist
+knocking about the jungle. Won&rsquo;t
+you tell me your name?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She nodded gravely. &ldquo;I am Aña. I,
+too, am white.&rdquo; Her rich voice was
+quietly proud. &ldquo;Come; I&rsquo;ll see if Aimu
+will receive you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With surprising, childlike trust,
+she held out her little hand to him.
+The gesture was so delightfully natural
+that Hale, grinning boyishly, took
+her hand and held it as they walked
+down the jungle path.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sing for me,&rdquo; he demanded abruptly.
+&ldquo;Sing the song you sang just
+now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That?&rdquo; asked the girl, turning the
+virgin-blue fire of her eyes on him.
+&ldquo;That was my death-song that I practice
+each day. Perhaps soon I shall be
+released from this.&rdquo; She passed her
+hands over her beautiful, half-clothed
+body.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Hale&rsquo;s</span> warm glance swept over
+her. &ldquo;Do you want to die?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes; don&rsquo;t you? But you do not,
+or you would not have retreated from
+my poisoned arrow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, Aña; I want to live.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To live&mdash;and be a slave of <i>this</i>?&rdquo;
+Again her hand went over her slim
+body. &ldquo;A slave of a pile of flesh that
+you must feed and protect from the
+agonies that attack it on every side?
+Bah! But I am hoping that my turn
+will come next.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your turn for what, Aña?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To enter the Room of Release. Perhaps,
+if Aimu approves of you, you,
+too, may taste of death.&rdquo; Her gentle
+smile was beatific.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you speak of Sir Basil Addington?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He was called that once, before he
+came to us. Now he has no name. We
+can find none holy enough for him;
+and so we call him Aimu, which means
+good friend.&rdquo; Her beautiful face was
+sweet with reverence.</p>
+<p>And now, in the distance, Hale saw
+that the path led into a large clearing.
+He slowed his pace, for he wanted to
+know this lovely girl better before he
+joined the Ungapuks.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who are you, Aña?&rdquo; he asked suddenly,
+bending closer to the crinkled,
+dull-gold hair.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am Aña, a white woman.&rdquo; She
+looked at him frankly.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_298' name='page_298'></a>298</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;But who are your parents, and how
+did you get among the Ungapuks?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Aña&rsquo;s red lips curved into a dewy
+smile. &ldquo;I thought all white men were
+wise, like Aimu. But you are stupid.
+How do you think a white woman
+could appear in a tribe of Indians who
+live in the jungle, many weeks&rsquo; journey
+from what you call civilization?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hale looked a little blank and more
+than a little disconcerted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose I am stupid,&rdquo; he said
+dryly. &ldquo;But tell me, Aña, how did you
+get here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; she exclaimed, &ldquo;he made
+me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Made you? Good Lord! What do
+you mean?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Just what I said, Hale Oakham. If
+he can take a few grains of dust and
+make a shoot that will grow into a
+giant tree like yonder monster itauba,
+don&rsquo;t you think he can create a small
+white girl like me?&rdquo; Her orchid-blue
+eyes glowed innocently into his.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> eager questions that he would
+have asked froze upon his lips, for
+a party of Indians approached.</p>
+<p>The six nearly naked red men came
+close and surveyed him, toying nervously
+with their primitive, feather-decorated
+weapons.</p>
+<p>A tall, handsome young fellow who
+possessed something of the picturesque
+perfection of the North American
+plains&rsquo; Indian stepped forward and, in
+perfect English, said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good morning, white stranger.
+What is it you wish of the Ungapuks?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I came to see your white <i>cacique</i>,&rdquo;
+said Hale.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Aimu? What is it you wish of
+Aimu? He is ours, white stranger.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, he is yours. I come as a friend,
+perhaps to help him in his great work.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps!&rdquo; The young Indian folded
+his bronze, muscular arms over his
+broad chest and continued his cool survey
+of Hale. &ldquo;White men before you
+have come: spies and thieves. Some
+we poisoned with curari. Others Aimu
+took into the Room of Release.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He turned to Aña, who was still
+standing by Hale, and his expression
+softened.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What shall we do with him, Aña?&rdquo;
+he asked the question, a fleeting look
+of hunger swept his fine, flashing eyes.</p>
+<p>Aña flushed beautifully, and, moving
+closer to Hale, with an impulsive, almost
+childish gesture, slipped her arm
+through his.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let us take him to our village,
+Unani Assu!&rdquo; she suggested. &ldquo;I like
+him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was Hale&rsquo;s turn to flush, which he
+did like a schoolboy.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Unani Assu&rsquo;s</span> brows drew together
+in a scowl. The hand
+holding his blow-pipe jerked convulsively.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Aña! Come away!&rdquo; he growled.
+&ldquo;You mustn&rsquo;t touch a stranger!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Aña&rsquo;s blue eyes stretched with astonishment.
+&ldquo;But I like to touch him,
+Unani Assu!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The tall Indian, with a half comical
+gesture of despair, said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t misunderstand her, stranger.
+She is young, very young, ah! And
+she has known only the reborn men of
+the Ungapuks.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He stepped firmly over to Aña, and,
+taking the girl by the arm, drew her
+away.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Run ahead,&rdquo; he commanded, &ldquo;and
+tell Aimu that we come.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Aña, her feathered bamboo anklets
+clicking together, sped away.</p>
+<p>Unani Assu bowed courteously to
+Hale.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, stranger. If you are an enemy,
+it is you who must fear.&rdquo; He
+motioned for him to proceed down the
+jungle path.</p>
+<p>The path ended at a clearing studded
+with <i>moloccas</i>, the Indian grass huts
+made of plaited straw. Altogether the
+scene was peaceful and sane and far
+removed from the strange tales that
+Hale had heard concerning the Ungapuks.</p>
+<p>Hale was conducted to a long, low
+stone building, where, in the doorway,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_299' name='page_299'></a>299</span>
+stood a tall and emaciated white man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Aimu!&rdquo; said the Indians reverently,
+and bowed themselves.</p>
+<p>Over the bare, brown backs, the
+white man looked at Hale.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sir Basil Addington?&rdquo; asked the
+young man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. You are welcome. Come in.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hale entered the building.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>He</span> was in a book-filled study, furnished
+with hand-made chairs
+and a desk. Sir Basil asked him to be
+seated. He offered the young man
+long, brown native cigarettes and a
+very good drink made from yucca.</p>
+<p>After several minutes of conversation,
+Sir Basil suddenly changed his
+manner.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And now,&rdquo; he shot out, eyeing the
+young man through narrowed lids,
+&ldquo;will you please state the purpose of
+this visit?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hale looked squarely at his questioner.
+&ldquo;Frankly, Sir Basil, I have
+called on you because I am so intensely
+interested in your work among the
+Ungapuks that I wish to offer my services.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He gave in detail his family history,
+his education, and his experience as a
+teacher and a scientist.</p>
+<p>Sir Basil tapped his teeth thoughtfully
+with a pencil.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But why do you think you can be
+of assistance to me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That, of course, is for you to decide.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hale thought that the scientist
+looked like a huge, starved crow in his
+loose-fitting coat. He was so fleshless
+that, when the light fell strongly on
+his face as it now did, the bones of his
+head and hands showed through the
+skin with horrible clearness.</p>
+<p>Hale, under Sir Basil&rsquo;s scrutiny, decided
+instantly that he did not like
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I need a helper,&rdquo; the scientist went
+on, with the air of talking to himself.
+&ldquo;A white assistant who neither loves
+nor fears me. Unani Assu is good
+enough in his way, but I need a helper
+who has had technical training.&rdquo; Suddenly
+he wheeled on Hale and asked
+sharply, &ldquo;How are your nerves, young
+man?&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Hale</span> started, but managed to answer
+calmly. &ldquo;Excellent. My
+war record isn&rsquo;t half bad, and that was
+surely backed with good nerves.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you say you have no close relatives,
+no ties of any sort to interfere
+with work that is dangerous&mdash;and
+something else?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not a soul would care if I passed
+out to-day, Sir Basil.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good! And now tell me this: are
+you one of those scientists whose minds
+are so mechanical, so mathematically
+made, as it were, that your entire outlook
+on science is based on old, established
+beliefs, or do you belong to that
+rare but modern type of trained
+thinker and dreamer who refuse to
+permit yesterday&rsquo;s convictions to influence
+to-day&rsquo;s visions?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hale smiled quietly. &ldquo;I recently
+lost my chair in a famous university
+because of my so-called unscientific
+teachings regarding ether-drift.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Expressing himself in purely scientific
+terms, he went into an elaboration
+of his revolutionary theory. When he
+had finished, Sir Basil reached out his
+clawlike hand to him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good!&rdquo; he approved. &ldquo;You have
+dared to think originally. Now listen
+to my theory of mind-electrons which
+has grown into the established fact that
+I have discovered the secret of life and
+death.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The long, thin hands reached into a
+pocket for a box of pills. He swallowed
+one greedily, and immediately
+his emaciated face seemed charged
+with new virility.</p>
+<p>He spoke out suddenly. &ldquo;Our world,
+you know, is made up of three powers:
+matter, energy and what you call
+life. I might really say that there are
+but two powers, for matter, in its last
+analysis, is a form of energy. And
+what is life? You can&rsquo;t call it a form
+of energy, for every inorganic atom has
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_300' name='page_300'></a>300</span>
+energy without having life. Life, Mr.
+Oakham, is mind or consciousness.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He began pacing the floor restlessly.
+&ldquo;Everything that lives has this consciousness,
+and I say this in defiance
+of some fixed scientific views. The
+amoeba in a stagnant pool, a thallophyte
+on a bit of old bread, any of the
+myriads of trees and plants that you
+see in the jungle all have consciousness
+as well as you. And why?&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>He</span> brought his fist down upon the
+table. &ldquo;Because they issue from
+the same source as you and I, the almighty
+mind, eternal, indestructible,
+which has permitted itself to be enslaved
+by matter. You are Hale Oakham.
+I am Basil Addington, yet we
+are one and the same. Let me illustrate.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He seized a glass and poured it full
+of <i>masata</i>. &ldquo;Look! Two portions of
+<i>masata</i>. But I pour what is in the glass
+back into the bottle. The molecules
+cohere and the two portions become
+one again. Some day you and I&mdash;our
+individual consciousnesses&mdash;will flow
+back to the Whole. That sounds mystical,
+but listen.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We scientists hold that the electron
+explains nearly all the physical and
+chemical phenomena. I go further and
+say that it explains <i>all</i>. Matter, electricity,
+light, heat, magnetism&mdash;all can
+be reduced to the ultimate unit. So,
+Mr. Oakham, I am going to make clear
+to you how life itself is electronic.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His long finger touched Hale&rsquo;s arm.
+&ldquo;You, I, yonder mosquito on your
+sleeve, even one of the germs that is
+causing my malaria, all being individual
+living things, are the ultimate units
+of what I shall personify as the Mind.
+When I say <i>you</i> I do not speak of that
+mound of flesh in which you exist, and
+which can be reduced to the same familiar
+basic elements and compounds
+as make up inorganic structures; I
+speak of your mind, your consciousness&mdash;for
+that is the real you. Are you
+following me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perfectly, Sir Basil.&rdquo; Hale reached
+for another drink. &ldquo;But do you mean
+to say that you and I are no more than
+a mosquito, a malaria protozoan, or
+even one of those trees in the jungle?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sir Basil&rsquo;s dry skin slipped back into
+a long smile. &ldquo;Startling, isn&rsquo;t it?
+You, I, and all other living organisms
+are nothing but matter, energy and
+consciousness. You and I have a
+larger share of consciousness, because
+our organic structure permits the mind-electrons
+greater freedom over the matter
+than composes our bodies. We are
+more acutely aware of the universe
+about us, have a greater facility for enjoyment
+and suffering, a more intricate
+brain and nervous system. Yet when
+our bodies die and our consciousness is
+released, the mind-electrons enslaved
+by our atoms go back to the elemental
+Whole. This holds good for the
+protozoan, the tree, the man&mdash;for all
+things that live.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Hale</span> was drinking again. &ldquo;You
+mean, Sir Basil, that there is a
+sort of war waged against what you
+personify as the Mind by matter; that
+matter is constantly seeking to enslave
+mind-electrons, so that it may become
+an organism which, for awhile, may enjoy
+what we call life?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sir Basil pushed back his tufted hair
+and looked happy. &ldquo;Yes! And it&rsquo;s Nature&rsquo;s
+supreme blunder! In the end,
+the Mind always conquers and gains
+its release, yet the eternal chain of enslavement
+goes on and on, and will
+continue to go on as long as there is a
+living organism in the world to bind
+mind to matter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hale was excited now, as much from
+the fiery intoxicant as from the scientist&rsquo;s
+weird revelation. &ldquo;I get you,&rdquo; he
+said, rather inelegantly for a professor.
+&ldquo;You mean that if every living
+thing in the world should pass out,
+every man, every plant, every animal,
+even down to microscopic infusoria,
+the Mind would collect all its electrons,
+and through some more jealous
+law of, er, cohesion hold these electrons
+inviolate from matter and energy?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_301' name='page_301'></a>301</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Right! And again, as in the beginning,
+the Mind would rule supreme.
+By what I have proved, you and I and
+all other creatures that now have life
+may, as separate unfleshed electrons,
+enjoy eternal consciousness as a part
+of the Mind.&rdquo; A new passion leaped
+to his dark eyes. &ldquo;When I have finished
+my mission, no more need we be
+slaves of the dust, subject to all the
+frightful sufferings of this dunghill
+of flesh.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He brought his fist down upon his
+skinny leg with a resounding blow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But you cannot reduce your theory
+to fact, Sir Basil!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No?&rdquo; Again came that frightful
+grin to his cadaverous face. &ldquo;Can you
+withstand shock?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you mean shock to the eye, let
+me remind you that I served two years
+in the big fight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then come to my laboratory. Better
+take another drink.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>While Hale helped himself again
+from the <i>masata</i> bottle, Sir Basil swallowed
+another pellet.</p>
+<p>Then the two went into the adjoining
+apartment.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Sir</span> Basil, his hand over the doorknob,
+paused.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Before we go in,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I want
+you to remember that we call natural
+that which is characteristic of the physical
+world. Everything alive in this
+laboratory was produced by nature. I
+merely made available the materials,
+or, rather, I made the conditions under
+which matter was able to enslave mind-electrons.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He opened the door, slipped his body
+through, and, with his ugly, teeth-revealing
+grin, gestured for Hale to follow
+him.</p>
+<p>Hale steeled himself and looked
+around half fearfully. The first glance
+took in a large and well-equipped
+laboratory, somewhat fetid with animal
+odors. The second lingered here and
+there on cages, aquariums, incubators,
+and other containers where creatures
+moved.</p>
+<p>Suddenly, as something scuttled
+across the floor and disappeared into
+a hole in the wall, Hale cried out and
+covered his eyes with a hand.</p>
+<p>Sir Basil laughed aloud. &ldquo;Why
+didn&rsquo;t you examine it closer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hale looked nauseated. &ldquo;My God,
+Sir Basil! A rat with a man&rsquo;s head and
+face!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sir Basil&rsquo;s voice was sharp, decisive.
+&ldquo;Before you leave this laboratory,
+you&rsquo;re going to come out of your foolish
+belief that man is a creature apart
+from other living organisms. You&mdash;the
+conscious you&mdash;is no greater, no
+more important in the final balance
+than the spark of consciousness in that
+rat. When your body and the rat&rsquo;s
+body give up their atoms to nature&rsquo;s
+laboratory, the little enslaved mind-electron
+that is you and the one that
+is the rat will be identical.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Again Hale shivered and turned
+away from that cold, too-thin face.</p>
+<p>The scientist was speaking. &ldquo;Step
+around to all those cages and pens. I
+want you to see all my slaves of the
+dust.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>But</span> long before Hale had encircled
+the room, he was so disturbed
+at what he saw that he could
+scarcely complete his frightful inspection.
+In every enclosure he viewed a
+monstrosity that in some way resembled
+a human. Every reptile, every insect,
+every queer, misshapen animal not
+only looked human in some shocking
+manner, but also seemed to possess human
+characteristics. It seemed as
+though some demented creator with a
+perverted sense of humor had attempted
+to mock man by calling forth monsters
+in his image.</p>
+<p>At last the young man cried out:
+&ldquo;How did you breed these freaks?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are not freaks, and I did not
+breed them. They are nature&rsquo;s parentless
+products whose basic elements
+were brought together in this laboratory,
+and, by a scientific reproduction
+of the functions of creation, endowed
+with the life principle, which is merely
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_302' name='page_302'></a>302</span>
+mind-electrons.&rdquo; He smoothed his long
+tuft of hair nervously. &ldquo;Would you
+like to see how life springs from a
+wedding of matter, energy, and consciousness?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suspect I can stand anything
+now,&rdquo; Hale admitted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then come and peep into a very remarkable
+group of apparatus I have
+developed, where you can watch atoms
+building molecules and molecules
+building living organisms.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You say I can see atoms?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not directly, of course. The light
+waves will forever prevent us from
+actually seeing the atom. But I have
+perfected a system of photography
+which magnifies particles smaller than
+light waves, and, separating their images
+from the light waves, renders detail
+clear in the moving pictures.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>He</span> went to a huge machine or
+series of machines which took up
+all the center floor space of the laboratory,
+where he busied himself in an
+intricate network of wires, mirrors,
+electrodes, ray projectors, and traveling
+metal compartments. Presently he
+called out to Hale.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let me remind you, Oakham, that
+while any scientist can break up any
+of the various proteid molecules which
+are the basis of all living cells, animal
+and vegetable, no scientist before me
+has been able to compound the atoms
+and build them into a proteid molecule.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He bared his teeth in the smile that
+Hale hated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am proud to tell you that the proteid
+molecule can be built up only
+when the third element of nature&rsquo;s
+trinity is added&mdash;the mind-electron. I
+have found a means of capturing the
+mind-electron and of bringing it in
+contact with proteid elements. And
+now it is possible to bring forth life
+in the laboratory. Come closer and
+watch proteid forming protoplasm,
+protoplasm forming a cell, and the cell
+evolving into&mdash;well, what do you want,
+an animal, plant, or an insect?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hale had fallen under the scientist&rsquo;s
+spell. He did not feel foolish when he
+said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let&rsquo;s have a rat!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Hale</span> became so absorbed in the
+wonders of the laboratory that
+when lunch time came, Sir Basil had
+food brought to them. While they
+were eating a very good vegetable stew,
+farina, and luscious tropical fruits, a
+sudden, agonized scream rang out, followed
+by other screams and wails.</p>
+<p>Sir Basil opened the door and looked
+out. Aña came running forward. Her
+blue eyes were flooded with tears.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, Aimu!&rdquo; she moaned. &ldquo;A tree
+fell on Unani Assu.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She buried her beautiful face in her
+hands and sobbed aloud.</p>
+<p>Sir Basil frowned heavily.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t lose Unani Assu yet,&rdquo; he declared.
+&ldquo;He is a wonderful help
+around the laboratory. Is he dead?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. We should rejoice if his time
+of release had come. But his legs,
+Aimu! No one wants to suffer and be
+crippled.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Even in her distress, the girl&rsquo;s voice
+was rich and vibrant, and every tone
+moved Hale curiously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hurry!&rdquo; cried the scientist. &ldquo;Have
+them bring him here before he dies.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The girl leaped to her feet and sped
+away.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come, Oakham,&rdquo; continued Sir Basil.
+&ldquo;Here is a rare opportunity for
+you to see how completely I have mastered
+the laws that govern organic matter.
+Help me prepare.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>For</span> several minutes, Hale worked
+under the scientist&rsquo;s sharply spoken
+directions. By the time the injured
+man was brought to the laboratory,
+Sir Basil was ready for him.</p>
+<p>Unani Assu was still conscious, but
+his pale face indicated that he had lost
+much blood. When the improvised
+stretcher was lowered to the floor, Sir
+Basil sent all the Indians away.</p>
+<p>Unani Assu opened his eyes and
+called feebly, &ldquo;Aña!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_303' name='page_303'></a>303</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Be still!&rdquo; ordered Sir Basil. &ldquo;Aña
+is not here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Please!&rdquo; gasped the dying man. &ldquo;I
+want her&mdash;my Aña!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sir Basil sucked in his breath sharply.
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;s this? Have you been
+making love to Aña again, after my
+warning to you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The sufferer stirred uneasily. &ldquo;No!&rdquo;
+he panted. &ldquo;But perhaps my hour of
+release has come, and I want to look
+at her&mdash;once more.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The scientist smiled unpleasantly as
+he eyed the magnificent body which
+looked like a broken statue in bronze.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Some human characteristics are
+strange,&rdquo; he muttered. &ldquo;In spite of
+everything I do, this fellow continues
+to love Aña: Aña whom I intend for
+myself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He stepped to the apparatus and
+swiftly changed one of the adjustments.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Perhaps,&rdquo; he resumed, with a gleam
+in his eyes that chilled Hale, &ldquo;this will
+forever cure him.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>In</span> another moment, the still, half-dead
+body was lifted and gently
+slipped into a compartment.</p>
+<p>Before Hale&rsquo;s horrified gaze fastened
+on the eye-piece which revealed
+moving pictures of every process that
+went on within, Unani Assu&rsquo;s body was
+reduced almost instantly to a fine, silvery
+dust.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good God!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;You have
+killed him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The scientist&rsquo;s teeth showed in his
+wide smile. &ldquo;Think so? Does a woman
+destroy a dress when she rips it up to
+make it over?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you mean me to understand that
+you can reduce a living body to its
+basic elements and then rebuild these
+elements into a remade man?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Watch!&rdquo; warned the scientist.</p>
+<p>Hale looked again and saw the silver
+dust that was once a living body
+being whirled into a tiny, grublike
+thing. He saw the grub expand into an
+embryo, and the embryo develop into
+a foetus. From now on the development
+was slower, and he often stopped
+to talk with Sir Basil.</p>
+<p>Once he asked: &ldquo;If this man had
+died naturally, could you have brought
+him back to life?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sir Basil shook his head. &ldquo;No.
+When once the mind-electron is completely
+freed from its enslavement by
+matter, it is forever beyond recall by
+the body it has just vacated. Like
+atomic electrons, whose equilibrium
+disturbed break away from their planetary
+system and go dashing off into
+space, only to be drawn into another
+planetary system, the mind-electron
+may be enslaved almost immediately by
+extraneous matter. Had Unani Assu
+died, his liberated mind-electron might
+at once have been captured by a jungle
+flower going to seed. Immediately a
+new seed would be started. And now
+the former Unani Assu would be a
+seed of a jungle flower, later to find
+new life as a plant.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Suddenly the scientist threw up his
+hand and cried: &ldquo;You see? The Mind
+will be eternally enslaved as long as
+there is life! Oh, for the time of deliverance!&rdquo;
+He gazed fanatically into
+space, as though he dreamed magnificently.</p>
+<p>Hale observed him thoughtfully.
+When that great brain weakened, the
+consequences would be frightful.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Sir Basil,</span> as though he had made
+a sudden decision, went over to
+that part of his machine which he
+called the molecule-disintegrator.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oakham!&rdquo; he called out. &ldquo;I have
+taken you partly into my confidence.
+Now I want to show you something.
+Come here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hale obeyed with misgivings. The
+scientist pointed out the window to a
+group of Indians, anxious relatives of
+Unani Assu.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Watch!&rdquo; he ordered.</p>
+<p>Turning one of the projectors on the
+machine toward the window, he sighted
+carefully and pressed a button.</p>
+<p>Immediately one of the Indians fell
+to the ground and struggled. His companions
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_304' name='page_304'></a>304</span>
+began dancing around him in
+evident joy. Faintly to the laboratory
+came a familiar chant, which Hale recognized as
+Aña&rsquo;s death song.</p>
+<table summary=''><tr><td>
+<p class='cg'>Dust to dust<br />
+Mind to Mind&mdash;<br />
+He will shed his body<br />
+As the green snake sheds his skin.</p>
+</td></tr></table>
+<p>As Hale watched, the struggling Indian&rsquo;s
+body seemed to shrink, and then,
+instantly, it disappeared.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Watch them scatter the dust!&rdquo; said
+the scientist.</p>
+<p>One of the Indians stooped and blew
+upon the grass.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What have you done!&rdquo; Hale
+gasped. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve killed this one. Oh,
+I see now! These poor devils are totally
+ignorant that you are killing them
+for practice. They worship you while
+you turn them to&mdash;silver dust!&rdquo; He
+turned angrily on the scientist as
+though he longed to strike him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Keep cool, young man!&rdquo; Sir Basil
+held up his fleshless hand. &ldquo;There is
+no death! Change, yes; but no permanent
+blotting out of consciousness.
+Can&rsquo;t you see the horror of it as nature
+works? When your time for release
+comes, as it inevitably will, your mind-electron
+might find new enslavement in
+a worm!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Hale&rsquo;s</span> reply came hotly. &ldquo;If that
+is true, why do you murder these
+poor devils deliberately!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My dear Oakham, perhaps you are
+not so brilliant as I had hoped! All
+that I have done thus far is only child&rsquo;s
+play, in preparation for my real work.
+Haven&rsquo;t you guessed by now what I
+am getting ready to do?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No; I&rsquo;m a poor guesser.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The scientist made a gesture of mock
+despair. &ldquo;Then let me tell you. The
+molecule-disintegrator is active only
+on organic structures. When I concentrate
+it so&rdquo;&mdash;he reached out again,
+sighted the projector on some point beyond
+the window and pressed a button&mdash;&ldquo;one
+single living organism passes
+out. See that jupati tree by the rock
+disappear?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Before Hale&rsquo;s eyes, the tall, slender
+tree melted into air.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; continued Sir Basil, &ldquo;if I
+should <i>broadcast</i> my molecule-disintegrator
+on electron magnetic waves,
+destruction would pass out in all directions,
+following the curve of the earth&rsquo;s
+surface, penetrating earth, air, water.&rdquo;
+He wet his lips carefully. &ldquo;You understand?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hale stiffened suddenly. &ldquo;I understand.
+No life could survive these vibrations
+of destruction? Through
+every corner of the earth where life
+lurks, they would reach?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes!&rdquo; cried Sir Basil. &ldquo;There
+would be not a blade of grass, not a
+living spore, not a hidden egg! Think
+of it, Oakham! No more would the
+clean air and the sweet earth reek with
+life, and at last the ultimate mind-electron
+would be released forever.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was breathing fast, and his emaciated
+face burned with two red spots.</p>
+<p>Hale thought rapidly. He was convinced
+now that the fate of all life
+lay within that diabolical network of
+chemical apparatus.</p>
+<p>At last he said: &ldquo;And what of you
+and I, Sir Basil? Shall we, too, be
+caught in this wholesale destruction?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not immediately,&rdquo; replied the scientist.
+&ldquo;Of course, I want to remain
+in the flesh long enough to be sure that
+my purpose has been accomplished. I
+have provided a way for my own
+safety. If you desire, you may remain
+with me.&rdquo; He smiled craftily. &ldquo;I have
+planned to keep Aña also, the woman
+whom I called into life and made as I
+wished.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>His</span> words pounded against Hale&rsquo;s
+tortured ears with almost physical
+force. With a supreme effort, the
+young man controlled his rage and despair.
+Aña needed him too much now
+for him to risk defeat by showing his
+emotions.</p>
+<p>To Sir Basil he said: &ldquo;But if all life
+disappears from the earth, what shall
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_305' name='page_305'></a>305</span>
+we do for food&mdash;you, Aña, and I?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sir Basil lifted his brows. &ldquo;You
+don&rsquo;t think I overlooked that, do you?
+What is food? Various combinations
+of the basic elements. I who have conquered
+the atom need never worry
+about starving to death.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>All this time, the machinery had
+been humming, and now the humming
+changed its note to a shrill whistle. Sir
+Basil went to the eye-piece and looked
+into it. Opening a door in the machinery,
+he disappeared inside. He came
+out soon, flushed and evidently elated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bring the stretcher, Oakham,&rdquo; he
+ordered.</p>
+<p>Hale brought the stretcher, placing it
+close to the machine. Then Sir Basil
+opened a metal door and gently eased
+out a human body.</p>
+<p>It was Unani Assu, unconscious but
+alive and breathing. Hale, helping the
+scientist to get the man on the
+stretcher, noticed that the crushed legs
+were perfectly healed. Together they
+bore him to a long seat. The Indian&rsquo;s
+eyes were still closed, but his even
+breathing indicated that he was only
+sleeping.</p>
+<p>Suddenly Hale pointed a finger and
+cried out. &ldquo;My God, Sir Basil, look at
+his hands and feet!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Unani Assu,</span> still lying like a recumbent
+bronze statue sculptured
+by a master, was perfect from shoulder
+to wrist, from thigh to ankle. But,
+somewhere in that diabolical machine
+through which he had passed, his hands
+and feet had undergone a hideous metamorphism
+which had transformed them
+from the well-formed extremities of a
+splendid young Indian into the hairy
+paws of a giant rat!</p>
+<p>Hale turned away his head, sick with
+disgust.</p>
+<p>Sir Basil cut the silence triumphantly:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now he&rsquo;ll never again face Aña with
+love in his eyes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What!&rdquo; broke in Hale. &ldquo;Did you
+plan this monstrous thing?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course! I told you I should forever
+cure him of his mad infatuation.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But why didn&rsquo;t you kill him, as
+you killed the others? It would have
+been the most merciful way.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sir Basil showed his teeth in his ugly
+smile. &ldquo;A creator is never merciful.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A quiver passed through the Indian&rsquo;s
+body and presently, he sighed deeply
+and opened his eyes. He seemed dazed,
+puzzled. He looked from Hale to the
+scientist, and turned seeking eyes to
+other parts of the laboratory.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Aña!&rdquo; he called weakly. &ldquo;Where is
+Aña?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He pulled himself a little unsteadily
+to his feet&mdash;to the spatulated, hairy <i>rodent</i>
+feet that had come out of the
+life-machine. Staggering, he would
+have fallen, had he not thrown out his
+arm to steady himself. Instinctively
+he tried to grasp something for support,
+and then, for the first time, he
+discovered his deformity.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Hale</span> was never to forget that expression
+of horror and disgust
+that swept over the Indian&rsquo;s face as he
+spread open his revolting extremities
+and stared at them.</p>
+<p>A sudden, wild roar of despair rang
+through the room. &ldquo;Aimu! My hands!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The scientist smiled with evident
+amusement. &ldquo;You are a grotesque
+sight, Unani Assu. Do you want to
+see Aña now?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The fright and horror faded from
+the Indian&rsquo;s face, for now he glared
+with hate into the mad, mocking eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You did it!&rdquo; the Indian ground out.
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve made me into a thing from
+which Aña will run screaming.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Through the quiet rage of the perfectly
+spoken English ran a thread of
+sorrow. &ldquo;Aimu, whom we considered
+too holy to name!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Choking, he hobbled away to the
+door, which he unbolted. As he passed
+out into the open, Sir Basil went over
+to the machine and began sighting the
+projector which cast forth the ray of
+destruction.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; cried Hale. &ldquo;You&rsquo;ve done
+enough murder for to-day.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_306' name='page_306'></a>306</span></div>
+<p>The scientist paused. &ldquo;I was trying
+to be merciful. And then, I wonder
+if it is safe to let him go, hating me?
+Oh, well!&rdquo; He shrugged his narrow
+shoulders. &ldquo;I seldom leave the laboratory,
+and certainly nothing can harm
+me here.&rdquo; He touched the death-projector
+significantly.</p>
+<p>Hale made a mental decision. &ldquo;I
+must find out how the damned thing
+works and put it out of commission.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>With</span> this determination uppermost
+in his mind, he assumed a
+more intense interest in the strange
+laboratory. For the next two days, he
+assisted Sir Basil so assiduously that
+he learned much about the operation of
+the life-machine. And gradually he
+stopped being horrified as the fascination
+of producing life in the laboratory
+grew upon him.</p>
+<p>After he had assisted the scientist
+in building living organisms from basic
+elements, he ceased to cringe when he
+remembered that perhaps it was true
+that Aña was created in the mysterious
+life-machine.</p>
+<p>Once the scientist declared, &ldquo;She is
+untainted with inheritance. She is the
+perfect mate that I called into life so
+that before I pass from the flesh I may
+taste that one human emotion I&rsquo;ve
+never experienced&mdash;love.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>That very night Hale kept a secret
+tryst with Aña after the village slept.
+Sweet, virginal Aña, who knew less of
+the world than a civilized child of
+twelve&mdash;what a sensation she would
+create in New York with her beauty,
+her culture, her natural fascination!
+With her in his arms and an orange
+tropical moon hanging low in the hot,
+black sky, he ceased to care that she
+had no ancestors, for now his one passionate
+desire was to save her from
+Sir Basil and to hold her forever for
+himself.</p>
+<p>He might have been content to go
+on like this for months, tampering with
+creation in the day time, courting Aña
+in secret at night, had not Unani Assu
+come back for revenge.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>On</span> the fourth night after Unani
+Assu had disappeared into the
+jungle, Hale went to the <i>igarapé</i> to
+meet Aña. He had gone only half the
+distance when he encountered her, running
+frantically up the path toward
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hale!&rdquo; she gasped, falling into his
+opened arms, where she lay panting and
+exhausted.</p>
+<p>Hale gently patted the long braids,
+shimmering in silver tangles under the
+moonlight, and, crushing the soft little
+trembling body close, he murmured:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter, darling?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She dug her face deeper into the
+bend of his arm. &ldquo;Oh, Hale! I saw
+Unani Assu a few minutes ago.&rdquo; For
+several moments she was unable to go
+on, for sudden sobs cut off her breath.
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s terrible, Hale, what Aimu did to
+his hands and feet, but what Unani&rsquo;s
+going to do to Aimu is still more terrible.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hale placed his hand gently under
+her chin and tilted up her small, pale,
+tear-drenched face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be calm, Aña, and tell me plainly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Still clinging to him, she went on.
+&ldquo;He told me that Aimu is a devil,
+Hale. He showed me his hands and
+asked me if I could ever get used to
+them and be&mdash;his squaw.&rdquo; The round
+gold breastplates and the necklace of
+painted seeds clinked together over
+her panting bosom. &ldquo;I told him about
+you, Hale. And then he seemed to go
+mad. He said he&rsquo;d kill Aimu to-night.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, Aña! Why did he let you go,
+knowing that you would give the
+alarm?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He didn&rsquo;t let me go.&rdquo; Her petaled
+lips parted in a faint smile. &ldquo;I escaped.
+Unani Assu tied me to a tree by the
+<i>igarapé</i>. Because he doesn&rsquo;t ... hate
+me, he could not bear to tie me too
+tightly.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then he must be close to the laboratory
+now. If he breaks in upon Aimu&mdash;oh,
+my God!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hale remembered the death-projector.
+If Sir Basil were in danger of attack,
+he would not hesitate to touch the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_307' name='page_307'></a>307</span>
+waiting button that would broadcast
+death throughout the world.</p>
+<p>He seized Aña&rsquo;s little hand and cried
+out: &ldquo;Run, Aña! The only safe place
+now is Aimu&rsquo;s laboratory. Run!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>As</span> they dashed on madly, Hale
+opened wide his nostrils to scent
+the heavy, flower-laden air of the
+jungle. Any moment all this sweet, rich
+life might vanish instantly. He had a
+horrible vision of a world devoid of
+life, a world of bare rocks, dry sand,
+odorless, dead waters. For it was life
+that greened the landscape, roughened
+the stones with moss and lichen, thickened
+the ocean with ooze, and turned
+the dry sand into loam&mdash;life that
+swarmed underfoot, overhead, all
+around!</p>
+<p>And now, just as they reached the
+laboratory door, panting and frantic, a
+hoarse shriek broke forth. Dragging
+Aña after him, Hale dashed forward,
+conscious of two masculine voices
+raised in passion.</p>
+<p>The door to the room where the life-machine
+performed its vile work was
+locked. Hale pounded against it and
+called out to Sir Basil, but only curses
+and the sound of tumbling bodies came
+from beyond the door. Although originally
+the door had been thick and
+strong, the destructive forces of the
+tropics had pitted and rotted the wood.
+A few blows of Hale&rsquo;s shoulder broke
+it down.</p>
+<p>Under the brilliant electric light, Sir
+Basil and Unani Assu were fighting
+upon the blood-spattered floor. The
+struggle was uneven: the scientist&rsquo;s
+emaciated body was no match for the
+splendid strength of the young Indian.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Help Aimu!&rdquo; cried Aña, pushing
+Hale forward.</p>
+<p>Aimu was being choked to death.</p>
+<p>Hale acted fantastically but efficiently.
+Catching up a bottle of ammonia,
+he moistened a handkerchief
+and clapped it against Unani Assu&rsquo;s
+nose. Instantly the Indian choked, released
+Sir Basil, and fell back, gasping
+for breath.</p>
+<p>Hale thrust the handkerchief into
+his pocket.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Get out!&rdquo; he ordered Unani Assu.
+&ldquo;Quick!&rdquo; He threatened him with the
+ammonia bottle.</p>
+<p>But Unani Assu was not looking at
+the bottle. &ldquo;Aimu!&rdquo; he screamed,
+pointing.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>When</span> Hale saw and understood,
+he leaped across the room to
+plant his body in front of Aña; for
+Sir Basil was behind the life-machine,
+reaching for the controls of the ray
+projector.</p>
+<p>Suddenly, from behind Hale, a silver
+streak shot across the room. Sir Basil
+groaned and sank to the floor of the
+laboratory.</p>
+<p>A keen-bladed dissecting knife,
+thrown by Aña, stuck out from his left
+breast.</p>
+<p>Aña ran forward, sobbing wildly.
+&ldquo;Oh, Aimu! I&rsquo;m sorry! I didn&rsquo;t mean
+for it to strike you there. Only your
+hand, Aimu! I didn&rsquo;t want Hale to
+die, Aimu. I didn&rsquo;t&mdash;oh!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She was on her knees by the scientist&rsquo;s
+side, his head held in her slender
+arms.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He&rsquo;s breathing!&rdquo; she rejoiced. &ldquo;Some
+<i>masata</i>, Hale, quick!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hale found a bottle of good brandy
+which he had contributed from his
+own supplies. Soon Sir Basil gasped
+and opened his eyes. He stared about
+him wildly, then gasped:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m dying, Hale Oakham! Quick,
+the life-machine, before my mind-electron
+escapes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He tried to pull his body up, but fell
+back, weak and panting.</p>
+<p>Hale hesitated, looking doubtfully at
+Aña.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For God&rsquo;s sake, quick!&rdquo; screamed
+Sir Basil. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m dying, I say! I must
+have&mdash;rebirth. Lift me to the disintegrator.
+Hurry!...&rdquo; His voice
+trailed off faintly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He is dying,&rdquo; snapped Hale. &ldquo;We
+might as well try it.&rdquo; He jerked open
+the door to the disintegrator. &ldquo;Here,
+Unani Assu! Lend a hand!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_308' name='page_308'></a>308</span></div>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Instantly</span> the Indian came forward,
+a peculiar, pleased expression
+on his handsome face. In a moment,
+Sir Basil&rsquo;s body was inside, and the
+machine began its weird humming, the
+humming that indicated the transformation
+of a human body into dust.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now!&rdquo; cried Unani Assu exultingly,
+going behind the machine. &ldquo;I have
+helped him enough to understand that
+if one changes this&mdash;and this&mdash;and
+this&rdquo;&mdash;he made some rapid adjustments
+on the machine&mdash;&ldquo;something that is not
+pleasant will happen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stop!&rdquo; cried Hale. &ldquo;What did you
+change?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Indian laughed mockingly.
+&ldquo;Wouldn&rsquo;t you like to know? But, yet,
+you should not worry. You have no
+cause to love him, have you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t be a traitor, Unani Assu!
+Arrange the machine as it was originally,
+and I give you my word of honor
+than when Sir Basil comes out, I&rsquo;ll
+wreck the damned thing beyond repair.
+See, Unani Assu? You and I together
+will smash it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Indian folded his arms so that
+the repulsive things that should have
+been hands were hidden.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s too late now,&rdquo; he admitted,
+shaking his head. &ldquo;Yet I&rsquo;ve done no
+more to him than he did to me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hale went to the eye-piece in the
+machine and started to look inside.
+Unani Assu stepped forward, tapped
+him on the shoulder, and, fingering significantly
+the dissecting knife which
+he had picked up, said:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am operating the machine. Will
+you sit over there by Aña and wait?
+It won&rsquo;t be long. And, white stranger,
+remember this: I am your friend. I
+am turned against none but our common
+enemy.&rdquo; He pointed significantly
+to the machine.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Two</span> hours passed, long, silent
+hours for the watchers in the
+laboratory. Aña fell asleep, in a sweet,
+childish bundle upon the piled cushions,
+her golden hair, still decorated
+with the red flowers which she always
+wore, crushed and withered now. Several
+times Hale caught Unani Assu
+gazing at her sadly, and his own look
+saddened when it rested on the Indian&rsquo;s
+strong, outraged body.</p>
+<p>The humming of the machine
+changed to a whistle. Placing his fingers
+on his lips in a signal of quiet,
+Unani Assu whispered:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let Aña sleep. She mustn&rsquo;t see
+this.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Opening a door in the machine, his
+handsome face lighted with a grim
+smile, he whispered exultingly:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Watch!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A scuttling sound issued forth and
+then, half drunkenly, an enormous rat
+tumbled out&mdash;one of those horrible rats
+with the hairless, humanlike faces that
+had so frequently come from the life-machine.</p>
+<p>Hale could not crush back the cry
+that issued from his throat.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where is Sir Basil?&rdquo; he gasped.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There!&rdquo; cried the Indian, pointing
+to the kicking rat, which was fast gaining
+strength.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Hale</span> staggered back. &ldquo;No! You
+don&rsquo;t mean it, do you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Unani Assu turned the rat over with
+a contemptuous toe. &ldquo;Yes, I mean it.
+Behold Aimu, the man who thought
+himself creator and destroyer&mdash;the man
+who said that a human being was no
+higher than a rat! Perhaps he was
+right, for see this thing that was once
+a man!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hale buried his face in his hands.
+&ldquo;Kill it, Unani Assu! Kill it!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Unani Assu&rsquo;s low laugh was metallic.
+&ldquo;You kill it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Hale uncovered his face. &ldquo;Open the
+disintegrator.&rdquo; Gingerly he reached
+for the rat&rsquo;s tail.</p>
+<p>But his hand never touched the animal.
+The hairless face turned for a
+second, and the little, beady eyes
+blinked up at Hale with an expression
+that his fevered imagination thought
+almost human. Then, like a dark
+shadow, the rat dashed away. Once
+around the room it scampered, hunting
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_309' name='page_309'></a>309</span>
+for an exit. Hale started in pursuit.
+He was almost upon the animal again,
+when, leaping up from his grasp, it
+landed on a low shelf where chemicals
+were stored. Several bottles fell, filling
+the room with fumes.</p>
+<p>Another bottle fell, and, suddenly,
+amid a thunderous roar, the ceiling and
+walls began falling. Some highly explosive
+chemical had been stored in one
+of the bottles.</p>
+<p>Hale was thrown violently against
+the couch. His hand touched Aña&rsquo;s
+body. One last shred of consciousness
+enabled him to pick her up and drag
+her out. In the open, he fell, aware,
+before blackness descended, that
+flames leaped high over the laboratory
+building and that Unani Assu lay dead
+within.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Hale</span> and Aña, leaning over the
+deck-rail of a small steam
+launch, gazed into the dark waters of
+the Amazon.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We ought to reach Para by morning,&rdquo;
+said Hale, &ldquo;and then, dearest,
+we&rsquo;re off for New York!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Aña, wearing one of the first civilized
+dresses she had ever donned, and
+looking as smart as any débutante,
+slipped her little hand into her husband&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Isn&rsquo;t it a shame, Hale,&rdquo; she moaned,
+&ldquo;that the fire burned all the animals
+and insects, the machinery, and even
+your notes?&rdquo; Her beautiful face saddened.
+&ldquo;Just one or two specimens
+might have been proof enough for your
+What-You-Call-It Club!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Nescience Club, darling. No,
+I can&rsquo;t expect to win the Woolman
+prize, but I&rsquo;ve won a prize worth far
+more.&rdquo; He squeezed her little hand
+and looked devotedly into her blue
+eyes. &ldquo;And, Aña, I&rsquo;ve reasoned out
+something concerning mind-electrons
+which even Sir Basil overlooked.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is it, Hale?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He maintained that matter seeks always
+to enslave mind-electrons, but I
+am convinced that mind-electrons seek
+to enslave matter. Understand? It&rsquo;s
+creation, Aña! Had Sir Basil succeeded
+in broadcasting death throughout
+the world, the freed mind-electrons, as
+in the beginning, would have started
+again to vitalize inorganic atoms. And,
+in a few million years, which is no time
+to the Mind, the world would be humming
+with a new civilization. Large
+thought, eh, sweetheart?&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<a name='A_SIGNAL_TO_THE_MOON' id='A_SIGNAL_TO_THE_MOON'></a>
+<h2>A SIGNAL TO THE MOON</h2>
+</div>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> idea of a radio signal to the moon
+may sound fantastic, but is easily within
+the range of possibility, says Dr. A. Hoyt
+Taylor, Chief of the Radio Division of the
+United States Naval Research Laboratories
+at Washington, who plans such an attempt
+in the near future.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We have reason to expect a good chance
+of getting the signal back in a time interval
+of slightly less than three seconds,&rdquo; said Dr.
+Taylor.</p>
+<p>To be exact, a radio signal should be reflected
+back to earth in a time interval of
+2.8 seconds, this being the necessary elapsed
+time for it to carry the 250,000 miles to the
+moon and return at its speed of 300,000 kilometers,
+or 186,000 miles per second.</p>
+<p>The signal would be very weak, Dr. Taylor
+points out, but not impossible of detection
+with the present refinement of receiving instruments,
+provided no great absorption took
+place in interstellar space.</p>
+<p>A high frequency wave will be used, as
+such a wave penetrates readily the earth&rsquo;s
+atmosphere and probably goes far beyond.
+The frequency of the wave will range between
+20,000 and 30,000 kilocycles. Twenty
+kilowats of power will be used, enough to
+furnish current for about forty flatirons.</p>
+<p>The value of a radio signal to the moon
+lies in the confirmation of whether there is
+or not heavy absorption of waves in the
+upper levels of our own atmosphere. If successful
+it would indicate a reasonably good
+reflection coefficient at the surface of the
+moon&mdash;the power of the moon&rsquo;s surface to
+act as a joint agent in the perfection of the
+signal.</p>
+<p>The signal might have some bearing also
+on whether the moon has an atmosphere&mdash;something
+pretty much settled already by
+astronomical observation. It would also lead
+to the possibility of fairly accurate determination
+of wave velocity in free space, all of interest
+to science, either confirming existing
+theories or establishing new ones.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_310' name='page_310'></a>310</span>
+<a name='THE_PIRATE_PLANET__PART_TWO_OF_A_FOURPART_NOVEL__BY_CHARLES_W_DIFFIN' id='THE_PIRATE_PLANET__PART_TWO_OF_A_FOURPART_NOVEL__BY_CHARLES_W_DIFFIN'></a>
+<h2>The Pirate Planet<br /><br /><span class='smcaplc'>PART TWO OF A FOUR-PART NOVEL</span></h2>
+<p><i>By Charles W. Diffin</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_3' id='linki_3'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/310.jpg' alt='' title='' width='483' height='500' /><br />
+</div>
+<h3>WHAT HAS GONE BEFORE</h3>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>A flash</span> of light on Venus!&mdash;and
+at Maricopa Flying Field Lieutenant
+McGuire
+and Captain
+Blake laugh at
+its possible meaning
+until the radio&rsquo;s
+weird call
+and the sight of a giant ship in the
+night sky prove their wildest thoughts
+are facts. &ldquo;Big as an ocean liner,&rdquo; it
+hangs in midair, then turns and shoots
+upward at incredible speed until it disappears
+entirely, in space!</p>
+<p class='sidebarright'>It is war. Interplanetary war. And on
+far distant Venus two fighting Earthlings
+stand up against a whole planet run
+amuck.</p>
+<p>McGuire goes
+to Mount Lawson
+observatory, and
+there he sees the
+flash on Venus repeated.
+Professor
+Sykes, who had observed the first flash,
+confirms it and sees still more. He sees
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_311' name='page_311'></a>311</span>
+the enveloping clouds of Venus torn
+asunder, and beneath them an identifying
+mark, a continent shaped like
+the letter &ldquo;L.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And then the great ship comes again.
+It hovers above the observatory and
+settles slowly down.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_4' id='linki_4'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/311.jpg' alt='' title='' width='390' height='500' /><br />
+<p class='caption'>
+&ldquo;Hold them off as long as you can!&rdquo;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<p>Back at Maricopa Field, Captain
+Blake has tested a new plane for altitude,
+and is now prepared to interview
+the stranger in the higher levels. McGuire&rsquo;s
+frantic phone call sends him
+out into the night with the 91st Squadron
+of planes in support. It is their
+last flight, for all but Blake. The invader
+smothers them in a great sphere
+of gas, but Blake, with his oxygen
+flasks, flies through to crash beside the
+observatory. Only Blake survives to
+see the enemy land, while strange man-shapes
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_312' name='page_312'></a>312</span>
+loot the buildings and carry off
+McGuire and Sykes.</p>
+<p>A bombardment with giant shells
+dispels the last doubt of the earth
+being under attack. The flashes from
+Venus at regular intervals spout death
+and destruction upon the earth; a
+mammoth gun, sunk into the planet itself,
+bears once upon the earth at every
+revolution, until the changing position
+of the globes take the target out of
+range.</p>
+<p>In less than a year and a half the
+planets must meet again. It is war to
+the death; a united world against an
+enemy unknown&mdash;an enemy who has
+conquered space. And there is less
+than a year and a half in which to prepare!</p>
+<p>Far out in the blackness of space
+McGuire and Sykes are captives in the
+giant ship. Their stupor leaves them;
+they find themselves immersed in
+clouds. The clouds part; their ship
+drops through; and below them is a
+strange continent shaped like the letter
+&ldquo;L.&rdquo; Captives of inhuman but man-shaped
+things, they are landing upon
+a strange globe&mdash;upon the planet
+Venus itself!</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER VIII</h3>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Miles</span> underneath the great
+ship, from which Lieutenant
+McGuire and Professor
+Sykes were now watching
+through a floor-window of thick glass,
+was a glittering expanse of water&mdash;a
+great ocean. The flickering gold expanse
+that reflected back the color of
+the sunlit clouds passed to one side
+as the ship took its station above the
+island, a continent in size, that had
+shown by its shape like a sharply
+formed &ldquo;L&rdquo; an identifying mark to the
+astronomer.</p>
+<p>They were high in the air; the thick
+clouds that surrounded this new world
+were miles from its surface, and the
+things of the world that awaited were
+tiny and blurred.</p>
+<p>Airships passed and repassed far below.
+Large, some of them&mdash;as bulky
+as the transport they were on; others
+were small flashing cylinders, but all
+went swiftly on their way.</p>
+<p>It must have come&mdash;some ethereal
+vibration to warn others from the
+path&mdash;for layer after layer of craft
+were cleared for the descent. A brilliant
+light flashed into view, a dazzling
+pin-point on the shore below, and
+the great ship fell suddenly beneath
+them. Swiftly it dropped down the
+pathway of light; on even keel it fell
+down and still down, till McGuire, despite
+his experience in the air, was sick
+and giddy.</p>
+<p>The light blinked out at their approach.
+It was some minutes before
+the watching eyes recovered from the
+brilliance to see what mysteries might
+await, and then the surface was close
+and the range of vision small.</p>
+<p>A vast open space&mdash;a great court
+paved with blocks of black and white&mdash;a
+landing field, perhaps, for about it
+in regular spacing other huge cylinders
+were moored. Directly beneath in
+a clear space was a giant cradle of
+curved arms; it was a mammoth structure,
+and the men knew at a glance
+that this was the bed where their great
+ship would lie.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> smooth pavement seemed
+slowly rising to meet them as
+their ship settled close. Now the
+cradle was below, its arms curved and
+waiting. The ship entered their grasp,
+and the arms widened, then closed to
+draw the monster to its rest. Their
+motion ceased. They were finally, beyond
+the last faint doubt, at anchor
+on a distant world.</p>
+<p>A shrill cackle of sound recalled
+them from the thrill of this adventure,
+and the attenuated and lanky figure,
+with its ashen, blotchy face that glared
+at them from the doorway, reminded
+them that this excursion into space was
+none of their desire. They were prisoners&mdash;captives
+from a foreign land.</p>
+<p>A long hand moved its sinuous
+fingers to motion them to follow, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_313' name='page_313'></a>313</span>
+McGuire regarded his companion with
+a hopeless look and a despondent
+shrug of his shoulders.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No use putting up a fight,&rdquo; he said;
+&ldquo;I guess we&rsquo;d better be good.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He followed where the figure was
+stepping through a doorway into a
+corridor beyond. They moved, silent
+and depressed, along the dimly lighted
+way; the touch of cold metal walls was
+as chilling to their spirits as to their
+flesh.</p>
+<p>But the mood could not last: the
+first ray of light from the outside
+world sent shivers of anticipation
+along their spines. They were landing,
+in very fact, upon a new world; their
+feet were to walk where never man
+had stood; their eyes would see what
+mortal eyes had never visioned.</p>
+<p>Fears were forgotten, and the men
+clung to each other not for the human
+touch but because of an ecstasy of intoxicating,
+soul-filling joy in the sheer
+thrill of adventure.</p>
+<p>They were gripping each other&rsquo;s
+hand, round-eyed as a couple of children,
+as they stepped forward into the
+light.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Before</span> them was a scene whose
+blazing beauty of color struck
+them to frozen silence; their exclamations
+of wonder died unspoken on
+their lips. They were in a city of the
+stars, and to their eyes it seemed as if
+all the brilliance of the heavens had
+been gathered for its building.</p>
+<p>The spacious, open court itself stood
+high in the air among the masses of
+masonry, and beyond were countless
+structures. Some towered skyward;
+others were lower; and all were topped
+with bulbous towers and graceful
+minarets that made a forest of gleaming
+opal light. Opalescence everywhere!&mdash;it
+flashed in red and gold and
+delicate blues from every wall and cornice
+and roof.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quartz?&rdquo; marveled Sykes after one
+long drawn breath. &ldquo;Quartz or glass?&mdash;what
+are they made of? It is fairyland!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A jewelled city! Garish, it might
+have been, and tawdry, in the full light
+of the sun. But on these weirdly unreal
+structures the sun&rsquo;s rays never
+shone; they were illumined only by the
+soft golden glow that diffused across
+this world from the cloud masses far
+above.</p>
+<p>McGuire looked up at that uniform,
+glowing, golden mass that paled toward
+the horizon and faded to the gray
+of banked clouds. His eyes came slowly
+back to the ramp that led downward
+to the checkered black and white of
+the court. Beyond an open portion
+the pavement was solidly massed with
+people.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;People!&mdash;we might as well call
+them that,&rdquo; McGuire had told Sykes;
+&ldquo;they are people of a sort, I suppose.
+We&rsquo;ll have to give them credit for
+brains: they&rsquo;ve beaten us a hundred
+years in their inventions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was trying to see everything, understand
+everything, at once. There
+was not time to single out the new
+impressions that were crowding upon
+him. The air&mdash;it was warm to the point
+of discomfort; it explained the loose,
+light garments of the people; it came
+to the two men laden with strange
+scents and stranger sounds.</p>
+<p>McGuire&rsquo;s eyes held with hungry
+curiosity upon the dwellers in this
+other world; he stared at the gaping
+throng from which came a bedlam of
+shrill cries. Lean colorless hands gesticulated
+wildly and pointed with long
+fingers at the two men.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> din ceased abruptly at a sharp,
+whistled order from their captor.
+He stood aside with a guard that had
+followed from the ship, and he motioned
+the two before him down the
+gangway. It was the same scarlet one
+who had faced them before, the one
+whom McGuire had attacked in a
+frenzy of furious fighting, only to go
+down to blackness and defeat before
+the slim cylinder of steel and its hissing
+gas. And the slanting eyes stared
+wickedly in cold triumph as he ordered
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_314' name='page_314'></a>314</span>
+them to go before him in his
+march of victory.</p>
+<p>McGuire passed down toward the
+masses of color that were the ones who
+waited. There were many in the dull
+red of the ship&rsquo;s crew; others in sky-blue,
+in gold and pink and combinations
+of brilliance that blended their
+loose garments to kaleidoscopic hues.
+But the figures were similar in one unvarying
+respect: they were repulsive
+and ghastly, and their faces showed
+bright blotches of blood vessels and
+blue markings of veins through their
+parchment-gray skins.</p>
+<p>The crowd parted to a narrow, living
+lane, and lean fingers clutched writhingly
+to touch them as they passed between
+the solid ranks.</p>
+<p>McGuire had only a vague impression
+of a great building beyond, of
+lower stories decorated in barbaric colors,
+of towers above in strange forms
+of the crystal, colorful beauty they
+had seen. He walked toward it unseeing;
+his thoughts were only of the
+creatures round about.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What damned beasts!&rdquo; he said.
+Then, like his companion, he set his
+teeth to restrain all show of feeling as
+they made their way through the lane
+of incredible living things.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>They</span> followed their captor
+through a doorway into an empty
+room&mdash;empty save for one blue-clad
+individual who stood beside an instrument
+board let into the wall. Beyond
+was a long wall, where circular openings
+yawned huge and black.</p>
+<p>The one at the instrument panel received
+a curt order: the weird voice
+of the man in red repeated a word that
+stood out above his curious, wordless
+tone. &ldquo;Torg,&rdquo; he said, and again McGuire
+heard him repeat the syllable.</p>
+<p>The operator touched here and there
+among his instruments, and tiny lights
+flashed; he threw a switch, and from
+one of the black openings like a deep
+cave came a rushing roar of sound. It
+dropped to silence as the end of a cylindrical
+car protruded into the room.
+A door in the metal car opened, and
+their guard hustled them roughly inside.
+The one in red followed while
+behind him the door clanged shut.</p>
+<p>Inside the car was light, a diffused
+radiance from no apparent source, the
+whole air was glowing about them.
+And beneath their feet the car moved
+slowly but with a constant acceleration
+that built up to tremendous speed.
+Then that slackened, and Sykes and
+McGuire clung to each other for support
+while the car that had been shot
+like a projectile came to rest.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whew!&rdquo; breathed the lieutenant;
+&ldquo;that was quick delivery.&rdquo; Sykes made
+no reply, and McGuire, too, fell silent
+to study the tremendous room into
+which they were led. Here, seemingly,
+was the stage for their next experience.</p>
+<p>A vast open hall with a floor of glass
+that was like obsidion, empty but for
+carved benches about the walls; there
+was room here for a mighty concourse
+of people. The walls, like those they
+had seen, were decorated crudely in
+glaring colors, and embellished with
+grotesque designs that proclaimed
+loudly the inexpert touch of the
+draughtsman. Yet, above them, the
+ceiling sprang lightly into vaulted,
+sweeping curves. McGuire&rsquo;s training
+had held little of architecture, yet even
+he felt the beauty of line and airy
+gracefulness of treatment in the structure
+itself.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> contrast between the flaunting
+colors and the finished artistry
+that lay beneath must have struck a
+discordant note to the scientist. He
+leaned closer to whisper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is all wrong some way&mdash;the
+whole world! Beauty and refinement&mdash;then
+crude vulgarity, as incongruous
+as the people themselves&mdash;they do not
+belong here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Neither do we,&rdquo; was McGuire&rsquo;s
+reply; &ldquo;it looks like a tough spot that
+we&rsquo;re in.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was watching toward a high,
+arched entrance across the room. A
+platform before it was raised some six
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_315' name='page_315'></a>315</span>
+feet above the floor, and on this were
+seats&mdash;ornate chairs, done in sweeping
+scrolls of scarlet and gold. A massive
+seat in the center was like the fantastic
+throne of a child&rsquo;s fairy tale. From
+the corridor beyond that entrance
+came a stir and rustling that rivetted
+the man&rsquo;s attention.</p>
+<p>A trumpet peal, vibrant and peculiar,
+blared forth from the ceiling overhead,
+and the red figures of the guards stood
+at rigid attention with lean arms held
+stiffly before them. The one in scarlet
+took the same attitude, then dropped
+his hands to motion the two men to
+give the same salute.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You go to hell,&rdquo; said Lieutenant
+McGuire in his gentlest tones. And
+the scarlet figure&rsquo;s thin lips were snarling
+as he turned to whip his arms up
+to their position. The first of a procession
+of figures was entering through
+the arch.</p>
+<p>Sykes, the scientist, was paying
+little attention. &ldquo;It isn&rsquo;t true,&rdquo; he was
+muttering aloud; &ldquo;it can&rsquo;t be true.
+Venus! Twenty-six million miles at
+inferior conjunction!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He seemed lost in silent communion
+with his own thoughts; then: &ldquo;But I
+said there was every probability of
+life; I pointed out the similarities&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush!&rdquo; warned McGuire. The eyes
+of the scarlet man were sending
+wicked looks in their direction. Tall
+forms were advancing through the
+arch. They, too, were robed in scarlet,
+and behind them others followed.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> trumpet peal from the dome
+above held now on a long-drawn,
+single note, while the scarlet men
+strode in silence across the dais and
+parted to form two lines. An inverted
+&ldquo;V&rdquo; that faced the entrance&mdash;they
+were an assembly of rigid, blazing
+statues whose arms were extended
+like those on the floor below.</p>
+<p>The vibrant tone from on high
+changed to a crashing blare that
+shrieked discordantly to send quivering
+protest through every nerve of the
+waiting men. Those about them were
+shouting, and again the name of Torg
+was heard, as, in the high arch, another
+character appeared to play his part in
+a strange drama.</p>
+<p>Thin like his companions, yet even
+taller than them, he wore the same brilliant
+robes and, an additional mark of
+distinction, a head-dress of polished
+gold. He acknowledged the salute with
+a quick raising of his own arms, then
+came swiftly forward and took his
+place upon the massive throne.</p>
+<p>Not till he was seated did the others
+on the platform relax their rigid pose
+and seat themselves in the semicircle
+of chairs. And not till then did they
+so much as glance at the men waiting
+there before them&mdash;the two Earth-men,
+standing in silent, impassive contemplation
+of the brilliant scene and with
+their arms held quiet at their sides.
+Then every eye turned full upon the
+captives, and if McGuire had seen
+deadly malevolence in the face of their
+captor he found it a hundred-fold in
+the inhuman faces that looked down
+upon them now.</p>
+<p>The inquiring mind of Professor
+Sykes did not fail to note the character
+of their reception. &ldquo;But why,&rdquo; he
+asked in whispers of his fellow-prisoner,
+&ldquo;&mdash;why this open hatred of us?
+What possible animus can they have
+against the earth or its people?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The figure on the throne voiced a
+curt order; the one who had brought
+them stepped forward. His voice was
+raised in the same discordant, singing
+tone that leaped and wandered from
+note to note. It conveyed ideas&mdash;that
+was apparent; it was a language that
+he spoke. And the central figure above
+nodded a brief assent as he finished.</p>
+<p>Their captor took an arm of each in
+his long fingers and pushed them
+roughly forward to stand alone before
+the battery of hard eyes.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Now</span> the crowned figure addressed
+them directly. His voice quavered
+sharply in what seemed an interrogation.
+The men looked blankly at
+each other.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_316' name='page_316'></a>316</span></div>
+<p>Again the voice questioned them impatiently.
+Sykes and McGuire were
+silent. Then the young flyer took an
+involuntary step forward and looked
+squarely at the owner of the harsh
+voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We don&rsquo;t know what you are saying,&rdquo;
+he began, &ldquo;and I suppose that
+our lingo makes no sense to you&mdash;&rdquo;
+He paused in helpless wonderment as
+to what he could say. Then&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But what the devil is it all about?&rdquo;
+he demanded explosively. &ldquo;Why all
+the dirty looks? You&rsquo;ve got us here as
+prisoners&mdash;now what do you expect us
+to do? Whatever it is, you&rsquo;ll have to
+quit singing it and talk something we
+can understand.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He knew his words were useless, but
+this reception was getting on his
+nerves&mdash;and his arm still tingled
+where the scarlet one had gripped him.</p>
+<p>It seemed, though, that his meaning
+was not entirely lost. His words meant
+nothing to them, but his tone must
+have carried its own message. There
+were sharp exclamations from the
+seated circle. The one who had brought
+them sprang forward with outstretched,
+clutching hands; his face
+was a blood-red blotch. McGuire was
+waiting in crouching tenseness that
+made the red one pause.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You touch me again,&rdquo; said the waiting
+man, &ldquo;and I&rsquo;ll knock you into an
+outside loop.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The attacker&rsquo;s indecision was ended
+by a loud order from above. McGuire
+turned as if he had been spoken to by
+the leader on the throne. The thin
+figure was leaning far forward; his
+eye were boring into those of the lieutenant,
+and he held the motionless pose
+for many minutes. To the angry man,
+staring back and upward, there came a
+peculiar optical illusion.</p>
+<p>The evil face was vanishing in a
+shifting cloud that dissolved and reformed,
+as he watched, into pictures.
+He knew it was not there, the thing he
+saw; he knew he was regarding something
+as intangible as thought; but he
+got the significance of every detail.</p>
+<p>He saw himself and Professor
+Sykes; they were being crushed like
+ants beneath a tremendous heel; he
+knew that the foot that could grind
+out their lives was that of the one on
+the throne.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> cloud-stuff melted to new
+forms that grew clearer to show
+him the earth. A distorted Earth&mdash;and
+he knew the distortion came from the
+mind of the being before him who had
+never seen the earth at first hand; yet
+he knew it for his own world. It was
+turning in space; he saw oceans and
+continents; and before his mental gaze
+he saw the land swarming with these
+creatures of Venus. The one before
+him was in command; he was seated
+on an enormous throne; there were
+Earth people like Sykes and himself
+who crept humbly before him, while
+fleets of great Venusian ships hovered
+overhead.</p>
+<p>The message was plain&mdash;plain as if
+written in words of fire in the brain of
+the man. McGuire knew that these
+creatures intended that the vision
+should be true&mdash;they meant to conquer
+the earth. The slim, khaki-clad figure
+of Lieutenant McGuire quivered with
+the strength of his refusal to accept
+the truth of what he saw. He shook
+his head to clear it of these thought
+wraiths.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not&mdash;in&mdash;a&mdash;million&mdash;years!&rdquo; he
+said, and he put behind his words all
+the mental force at his command. &ldquo;Try
+that, old top, and they&rsquo;ll give you the
+fight of your life&mdash;&rdquo; He checked his
+words as he saw plainly that the thin
+cruel face that stared and stared was
+getting nothing from his reply.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now what do you think about
+that?&rdquo; he demanded of Professor
+Sykes. &ldquo;He got an idea across to me&mdash;some
+form of telepathy. I saw his
+mind, or I saw what he wanted me to
+see of it. It&rsquo;s taps, he says, for us, and
+then they think they&rsquo;re going across
+and annex the world.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He glanced upward again and
+laughed loudly for the benefit of those
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_317' name='page_317'></a>317</span>
+who were watching him so closely.
+&ldquo;Fine chance!&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;a fat chance!&rdquo;
+But in the deeper recesses of his mind
+he was shaken.</p>
+<p>For themselves there was no hope.
+Well, that was all in a lifetime. But
+the other&mdash;the conquest of the earth&mdash;he
+had to try with all his power of will
+to keep from his mind the pictures of
+destruction these beastly things could
+bring about.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> chief of this strange council
+made a gesture of contempt with
+the grotesque hands that were so translucent
+yet ashy-pale against his scarlet
+robe, and the down-drawn thin lips
+reflected the thoughts that prompted
+it. The open opposition of Lieutenant
+McGuire failed to impress him, it
+seemed. At a word the one who had
+brought them sprang forward.</p>
+<p>He addressed himself to the circle
+of men, and he harangued them mightily
+in harsh discordance. He pointed
+one lean hand at the two captives,
+then beat it upon his own chest. &ldquo;They
+are mine,&rdquo; he was saying, as the men
+knew plainly. And they realized as if
+the weird talk came like words to their
+ears that this monster was demanding
+that the captives be given him.</p>
+<p>An exchange of dismayed glances,
+and &ldquo;Not so good!&rdquo; said McGuire under
+his breath; &ldquo;Simon Legree is asking
+for his slaves. Mean, ugly devil,
+that boy!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The lean figures on the platform
+were bending forward, an expression
+of mirth&mdash;distorted, animal smiles&mdash;upon
+their flabby lips. They represented
+to the humans, so helpless before
+them, a race of thinking things in
+whom no last vestige of kindness or
+decency remained. But was there an
+exception? One of the circle was
+standing; the one beside them was sullenly
+silent as the other on the platform
+addressed their ruler.</p>
+<p>He spoke at some length, not with
+the fire and vehemence of the one who
+had claimed them, but more quietly
+and dispassionately, and his cold eyes,
+when they rested on those of McGuire
+and Sykes, seemed more crafty than
+actively ablaze with malevolent ill-will.
+Plainly it was the councilor now, addressing
+his superior. His inhuman
+voice was silenced by a reply from the
+one on the throne.</p>
+<p>He motioned&mdash;this gold-crowned
+figure of personified evil&mdash;toward the
+two men, and his hand swept on toward
+the one who had spoken. He intoned
+a command in harsh gutturals
+that ended in a sibilant shriek. And
+the two standing silent and hopeless
+exchanged looks of despair.</p>
+<p>They were being delivered to this
+other&mdash;that much was plain&mdash;but that
+it boded anything but captivity and
+torment they could not believe. That
+last phrase was too eloquent of hissing
+hate.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> creature rose, tall and ungainly,
+from his throne; amid the
+salutations of his followers he turned
+and vanished through the arch. The
+others of his council followed, all but
+the one. He motioned to the two men
+to come with him, and the sullen one
+who had demanded the men for himself
+obeyed an order from this councilor
+who was his superior.</p>
+<p>He snapped an order, and four of his
+men ranged themselves about the captives
+as a guard. Thin metal cords
+were whipped about the wrists of each;
+their hands were tied. The wire cut
+like a knife-edge if they strained
+against it.</p>
+<p>The new director of their destinies
+was vanishing through an exit at one
+side of the great hall; their guard
+hustled them after. A corridor opened
+before them to end in a gold-lit portal;
+it was daylight out beyond where a
+street was filled with hurrying figures
+in many colors. With quavering
+shrieks they scattered like frightened
+fowls as an airship descended between
+the tall buildings that reflected its
+passing in opalescent hues.</p>
+<p>It was a small craft compared with
+the one that had brought them, and it
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_318' name='page_318'></a>318</span>
+swept down to settle lightly upon the
+street with no least regard for those
+who might be crushed by its descent.
+Consideration for their fellows did not
+appear as a marked characteristic of
+this strange people, McGuire observed
+thoughtfully. They swarmed in endless
+droves, these multicolored beings
+who made of the thoroughfare an ever-changing
+kaleidoscope&mdash;and what was
+a life or two, more or less, among so
+many? He found no comfort for themselves
+in the thought.</p>
+<p>Shoulder to shoulder, the two followed
+where the scarlet figure of the
+councilor moved toward the waiting
+ship. Only the professor paid further
+heed to their surroundings; he marveled
+aloud at the numbers of the
+people.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hundreds of them,&rdquo; he said; &ldquo;thousands!
+They are swarming everywhere
+like rats. Horrible!&rdquo; His eyes passed
+on to the buildings in their glory of
+delicate hues, as he added, &ldquo;And the
+contrast they make with their surroundings!
+It is all wrong some way;
+I wish I knew&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They were in the ship when McGuire
+replied. &ldquo;I hope we live long
+enough to satisfy your curiosity,&rdquo; he
+said grimly.</p>
+<p>The ship was rising beneath them;
+the opal and quartz of the city&rsquo;s walls
+were flashing swiftly down.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER IX</h3>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>They</span> were in a cabin at the very
+nose of the ship, seated on metal
+chairs, their hands unshackled and
+free. Their scarlet guardian reclined
+at ease somewhat to one side, but despite
+his apparent disregard his cold
+eyes seldom left the faces of the two
+men.</p>
+<p>Windows closed them in; windows
+on each side, in front, above them, and
+even in the floor beneath. It was a
+room for observation whose metal-latticed
+walls served only as a framework
+for the glass. And there was
+much to be observed.</p>
+<p>The golden radiance of sunlit clouds
+was warm above. They rose toward it,
+until, high over the buildings&rsquo; tallest
+spires, there spread on every hand the
+bewildering beauty of that forest of
+minarets and sloping roofs and towers,
+whose many facets made glorious
+blendings of soft color. Aircraft at
+many levels swept in uniform directions
+throughout the sky. The ship
+they were in hung quiet for a time,
+then rose to a higher level to join the
+current of transportation that flowed
+into the south.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We will call it south,&rdquo; said Professor
+Sykes. &ldquo;The sun-glow, you will
+observe, is not directly overhead; the
+sun is sinking; it is past their noon.
+What is the length of their day? Ah,
+this interesting&mdash;interesting!&rdquo; The
+certain fate they had foreseen was forgotten;
+it is not often given to an astronomer
+to check at first hand his
+own indefinite observations.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look!&rdquo; McGuire exclaimed. &ldquo;Open
+country! The city is ending!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Ahead</span> and below them the buildings
+were smaller and scattered.
+Their new master was watching with
+closest scrutiny the excitement of the
+men; he whispered an order into a
+nearby tube, and the ship slowly
+slanted toward the ground. He was
+studying these new specimens, as McGuire
+observed, but the lieutenant paid
+little attention; his eyes were too thoroughly
+occupied in resolving into recognizable
+units the picture that flowed
+past them so quickly. He was accustomed,
+this pilot of the army air service,
+to reading clearly the map that
+spreads beneath a plane, but now he
+was looking at an unfamiliar chart.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fields,&rdquo; he said, and pointed to
+squared areas of pale reds and blues;
+&ldquo;though what it is, heaven knows. And
+the trees!&mdash;if that&rsquo;s what they are.&rdquo;
+The ship went downward where an
+area of tropical denseness made a
+tangled mass of color and shadow.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Trees!&rdquo; Lieutenant McGuire had
+exclaimed, but these forests were of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_319' name='page_319'></a>319</span>
+tree-forms in weirdest shapes and hues.
+They grew to towering heights, and
+their branches and leaves that swayed
+and dipped in the slow-moving air
+were of delicate pastel shades.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No sunlight,&rdquo; said the Professor excitedly;
+&ldquo;they have no direct rays of
+the sun. The clouds act as a screen
+and filter out actinic rays.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>McGuire did not reply. He was
+watching the countless dots of color
+that were people&mdash;people who swarmed
+here as they had in the city; people
+working at these great groves, crouching
+lower in the fields as the ship
+swept close; people everywhere in
+teeming thousands. And like the vegetation
+about them, they, too, were tall
+and thin, attenuated of form and with
+skin like blood-stained ash.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They need the sun,&rdquo; Sykes was repeating;
+&ldquo;both vegetable and animal
+life. The plants are deficient in chlorophyl&mdash;see
+the pale green of the
+leaves!&mdash;and the people need vitamins.
+Yet they evidently have electric
+power in abundance. I could tell
+them of lamps&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>His</span> comments ceased as McGuire
+lurched heavily against him.
+The flyer had taken note of the tense,
+attentive attitude of the one in scarlet;
+the man was leaning forward, his eyes
+focused directly upon the scientist&rsquo;s
+face; he seemed absorbing both words
+and emotions.</p>
+<p>How much could he comprehend?
+What power had he to vision the idea-pictures
+in the other&rsquo;s mind? McGuire
+could not know. But &ldquo;Sorry!&rdquo; he told
+Sykes; &ldquo;that was clumsy of me.&rdquo; And
+he added in a whisper, &ldquo;Keep your
+thoughts to yourself; I think this bird
+is getting them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Buildings flashed under them, not
+massed solidly as in the city, yet
+spaced close to one another as if every
+foot of ground not devoted to their
+incredible agriculture were needed to
+house the inhabitants. The ground
+about them was alive with an equally
+incredible humanity that swarmed over
+all this world in appalling profusion.</p>
+<p>Their horrid flesh! Their hideous
+features! And their number! McGuire
+had a sudden, sickening thought.
+They were larvae, these crawling
+hordes&mdash;vile worm-things that infested
+a beautiful world&mdash;that bred here in
+millions, their numbers limited only
+by the space for their bodies and the
+food for their stomachs. And he, McGuire,
+a <i>man</i>&mdash;he and this other man
+with his clear-thinking scientific brain
+were prisoners to this horde; captives,
+to be used or butchered by those vile,
+crawling things!</p>
+<p>And again it was this world of contrast
+that drove home the conviction
+with its sickening certainty. A world
+of beauty, of delicate colors, of sweeping
+oceans and gleaming shores and
+towering cities with their grace and
+beauty and elfin splendor yet a world
+that shuddered beneath this devouring
+plague of grublike men.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>They</span> swept past cities and towns
+and over many miles of open land
+before their craft swung eastward toward
+the dark horizon. The master
+gave another order into the speaking
+tube and their ship shot forward, faster
+and yet faster, with a speed that
+pressed them heavily into their seats.
+Behind them was the glory of the sunlit
+clouds; ahead the gloomy gray-black
+masses that must make a stygian
+night sky over this lonely world&mdash;a
+world cut off by that vaporous shell
+from all communion with the stars.</p>
+<p>They were over the water; before
+them a dark ocean reached out in forbidding
+emptiness to a darker horizon.
+Ahead, the only broken line in the vast
+level expanse was a mountain rising
+abruptly from the sea. It was a volcanic
+cone surmounting an island; the
+sunlight&rsquo;s glow reflected from behind
+them against the sombre mass that
+lifted toward the clouds. Their ship
+was high enough to clear it, but instead
+it swung, as McGuire watched,
+toward the south.</p>
+<p>The island drifted past, and again
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_320' name='page_320'></a>320</span>
+they were on their course. But to the
+flyer there were significant facts that
+could not pass unobserved. Their own
+ship had swung in a great circle to
+avoid this mountain. And all through
+the skies were others that did the same.
+The air above and about the grim sentinel
+peak was devoid of flying shapes.</p>
+<p>McGuire caught the eyes of the
+councilor, their keeper. &ldquo;What is
+that?&rdquo; he asked, though he knew the
+words were lost on the other. He nodded
+his head toward the distant peak,
+and his question was plainly in regard
+to the island. And for the first time
+since their coming to this wild world,
+he saw, flashing across the features of
+one of these men, a trace of emotion
+that could only be construed as fear.</p>
+<p>The slitted cat eyes lost their look
+of complacent superiority. They
+widened involuntarily, and the face
+was drained of its blotched color.
+There was fear, terror unmistakable,
+though it showed for but an instant.
+He had control of his features almost
+at once, but the flyer had read their
+story.</p>
+<p>Here was something that gave pause
+to this race of conquering vermin; a
+place in the expanse of this vast sea
+that brought panic to their hearts. And
+there came to him, as he stowed the
+remembrance away in his mind, the
+first glow of hope. These things could
+fear a mountain; it might be that they
+could be brought to fear a man.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> sky was clearing rapidly of
+traffic and the mountain of his
+speculations was lost astern, when another
+island came slanting swiftly up
+to meet them as their ship swept down
+from the heights. It was a tiny speck
+in the ocean&rsquo;s expanse, a speck that resolved
+itself into the squared fields of
+colored growth, orchards whose brilliant,
+strange fruits glowed crimson in
+the last light of day, and enormous
+trees, beyond which appeared a house.</p>
+<p>A palace, McGuire concluded, when
+he saw clearly the many-storied pile.
+Like the buildings they had seen, this
+also constructed of opalescent quartz.
+There were windows that glowed
+warmly in the dusk. A sudden wave
+of loneliness, almost unbearable, swept
+over the man.</p>
+<p>Windows and gleaming lights, the
+good sounds of Earth; home!... And
+his ears, as he stepped out into the cool
+air, were assailed with the strange
+cackle and calling of weird folk; the
+air brought him scents, from the open
+ground beyond, of fruits and vegetation
+like none he had ever known; and
+the earth, the homeland of his vain imaginings,
+was millions of empty miles
+away....</p>
+<p>The leader stopped, and McGuire
+looked dispiritedly at the unfamiliar
+landscape under dusky lowering skies.
+Trees towered high in the air&mdash;trees
+grotesque and weird by all Earth
+standards&mdash;whose limbs were pale
+green shadows in the last light of day.
+The foliage, too, seemed bleached and
+drained of color, but among the leaves
+were flashes of brilliance where night-blooming
+flowers burst open like star-shells
+to fill the air with heavy scents.</p>
+<p>Between the men and the forest
+growth was a row of denser vegetation,
+great ferns twenty feet and more in
+height, and among them at regular intervals
+stood plants of another growth&mdash;each
+a tremendous pod held in air on
+a thick stalk. Tendrils coiled themselves
+like giant springs beside each
+pod, tendrils as thick as a man&rsquo;s wrist.
+The great pods were ranged in a line
+that extended as far as McGuire could
+see in the dim light.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>His</span> shoulders drooped as the
+guard herded him and his companion
+toward the building beyond. He
+must not be cast down&mdash;he would not!
+Who knew how much of such feeling
+was read by these keen-eyed observers?
+And the only thought with
+which he could fill his mind, the one
+forlorn ghost of a hope that he could
+cling to, was that of an island, a volcanic
+peak that rose from dark waters
+to point upward toward the heights.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_321' name='page_321'></a>321</span></div>
+<p>The guard of four was clustered
+about; the figures were waiting now in
+the gathering dark&mdash;waiting, while the
+one in scarlet listened and spoke alternately
+into a jeweled instrument that
+hung by a slender chain about his neck.
+He raised one lean hand to motion the
+stirring guards to silence, listened
+again intently into the instrument,
+then pointed that hand toward the
+cloud-filled sky, while he craned his
+thin neck to look above him.</p>
+<p>The men&rsquo;s eyes followed the pointing
+hand to see only the sullen black
+of unlit clouds. The last distant aircraft
+had vanished from the skies; not
+a ship was in the air&mdash;only the enveloping
+blanket of high-flung vapor that
+blocked out all traces of the heavens.
+And then!&mdash;</p>
+<p>The cloud banks high in the skies
+flashed suddenly to dazzling, rolling
+flame. The ground under their feet
+was shaken as by a distant earthquake,
+while, above, the terrible fire spread, a
+swift, flashing conflagration that ate
+up the masses of clouds.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What in thunder&mdash;&rdquo; McGuire began;
+then stopped as he caught, in the
+light from above, the reflection of
+fierce exultation in the eyes of the
+scarlet one. The evil, gloating message
+of those eyes needed no words to
+explain its meaning. That this cataclysm
+was self-made by these beings,
+McGuire knew, and he knew that in
+some way it meant menace to him and
+his.</p>
+<p>Yet he groped in thought for some
+definite meaning. No menace could
+this be to himself personally, for he
+and Sykes stood there safe in the company
+of the councilor himself. Then
+the threat of this flaming blast must be
+directed toward the earth!</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> fire vanished, and once more,
+as Professor Sykes had seen on
+that night so long ago, the blanket of
+clouds was broken. McGuire followed
+the gaze of the scientist whose keen
+eyes were probing in these brief moments
+into the depths of star-lit space.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&mdash;there!&rdquo; Sykes exclaimed in
+awe-struck tones. His hand was pointing
+outward through the space where
+flames had cleared the sky. A star
+was shining in the heavens with a
+glory that surpassed all others. It outshone
+all neighboring stars, and it sent
+its light down through the vast empty
+reaches of space, a silent message to
+two humans, despondent and heartsick,
+who stared with aching eyes.</p>
+<p>Lieutenant McGuire did not hear his
+friend&rsquo;s whispered words. No need to
+name that distant world&mdash;it was Earth!
+Earth!... And it was calling to its
+own....</p>
+<p>There was a flying-field&mdash;so plain before
+his mental eyes; men in khaki and
+leather who moved and talked and
+spoke of familiar things ... and the
+thunder of motors ... and roaring
+planes....</p>
+<p>Some far recess within his deeper
+self responded strangely. What now
+of threats and these brute-things that
+threatened?&mdash;he was one with this picture
+he had visioned. He was himself;
+he was a man of that distant world of
+men; they would show these vile
+things how men could meet menace&mdash;or
+death.... His shoulders were
+back and unconsciously he stood erect.</p>
+<p>The scarlet figure was close beside
+them in the dusk, his voice vibrant
+with a quality which should have
+struck fear to his captives&rsquo; hearts as he
+ordered them on. But the look in his
+crafty eyes changed to one of puzzled
+wonder at sight of the men.</p>
+<p>Hands on each other&rsquo;s shoulders,
+they stood there in the gathering dark,
+where grotesque trees arched twistingly
+overhead. Their moment of depression
+had passed; Earth had called, and
+they had heard it, each after his own
+fashion. But to each the call had been
+one of clear courage. No longer cast
+off and forlorn, they were one with
+their own world.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Down,&rdquo; said Professor Sykes with
+a whimsical smile; &ldquo;down, but not
+out!&rdquo; And the lieutenant responded
+in kind.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_322' name='page_322'></a>322</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Are we down-hearted?&rdquo; he demanded
+loudly. And the two turned
+as one man to grin at the scarlet one
+as they thundered. &ldquo;N-o-o!&rdquo;</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER X</h3>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Two</span> men grinned in derision at
+the horrible, man-shaped thing
+that held their destinies in his lean,
+inhuman hands!&mdash;but they turned
+abruptly away to look again above
+them where that bright star still shone
+through an opening in the clouds.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The earth! Home!&rdquo; It seemed as
+if they could never tear their eyes
+away from the sight.</p>
+<p>Their captor whistled an order, and
+the guard of four tugged vainly at the
+two, who resisted that they might gaze
+upon their own world until the closing
+clouds should blot it from sight. A
+cry from one of the red guards roused
+them.</p>
+<p>The dark was closing in fast, and
+their surroundings were dim. Vaguely,
+McGuire felt more than saw one of the
+red figures whirled into the air. He
+sensed a movement in the jungle darkness
+where were groves of weird trees
+and the tangle of huge vegetable
+growths. What it was he could not
+say, but he felt the guard who clutched
+at him quiver in terror.</p>
+<p>Their leader snatched at the instrument
+that hung about his neck and put
+it to his lips; he whistled an order,
+sharp and shrill. Blazing light that
+seemed to flame in the air was the response;
+the air was aglow with an all-pervading
+brilliance like that in the
+car that had whirled them from the
+landing field. The light was everywhere,
+and the building before them
+was surrounded by a dazzling envelope
+of luminosity.</p>
+<p>Whatever of motion or menace there
+had been ceased abruptly. Their guard,
+three now in number instead of four,
+seized them roughly and hustled them
+toward an open door. No time, as they
+passed, for more than fleeting impressions:
+a hall of warm, glowing light&mdash;a
+passage that branched off&mdash;and, at
+the end, a room into which they were
+thrown, while a metal door clanged
+behind them.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>These</span> were no gentle hands that
+hurled the men staggering through
+the doorway, and Professor Sykes fell
+headlong upon the glassy floor. He
+sprang to his feet, his face aflame with
+anger. &ldquo;The miserable beasts!&rdquo; he
+shouted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Take it easy,&rdquo; admonished the flyer.
+&ldquo;We&rsquo;re in the hoose-gow; no use of
+getting all fussed up if they don&rsquo;t behave
+like perfect gentlemen.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s a bunk in the corner,&rdquo; he
+said, and pointed to a woven hammock
+that was covered with soft cloths; &ldquo;and
+here&rsquo;s another that I can sling. Twin
+beds! What more do you want?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He opened a door and the splash of
+falling water came to them. A fountain
+cascaded to the ceiling to fall
+splashing upon a floor of inlaid, glassy
+tile. McGuire whistled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Room and bath,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;And you
+complained of the service!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have an idea,&rdquo; he told the scientist,
+&ldquo;that our scarlet friend who owns
+this place intends to treat us decently,
+even though his helpers are a bit rough.
+My hunch is that he wants to get some
+information out of us. That old bird
+back there in the council chamber told
+me as plain as day that they think they
+are going to conquer the earth. Maybe
+that&rsquo;s why we are here&mdash;as exhibits
+A and B, for them to study and learn
+how to lick us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are talking what I would have
+termed nonsense a month ago,&rdquo; replied
+Sykes, &ldquo;but now&mdash;well, I am afraid you
+are right. And,&rdquo; he said slowly, &ldquo;I
+fear that they are equally correct.
+They have conquered space; they have
+ships propelled by some unknown
+power; they have gas weapons, as you
+and I have reason to know. And they
+have all the beastly ferocity to carry
+such a plan through to success. But
+I wonder what that sky-splitting blast
+meant.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_323' name='page_323'></a>323</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Bombardment,&rdquo; the flyer told him;
+&ldquo;bombardment of the earth as sure as
+you&rsquo;re alive.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;More nonsense,&rdquo; said Sykes; &ldquo;and
+probably correct.... Well, what are
+we to do?&mdash;sit tight and give them as
+little information as we can? or&mdash;&rdquo;
+His question ended unfinished; the
+alternative, it seemed, was not plain to
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There&rsquo;s only one answer,&rdquo; said McGuire.
+&ldquo;We must get away; escape
+somehow.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Professor Sykes&rsquo;</span> eyes showed
+his appreciation of a spirit that
+could still dare to hope, but he asked
+dejectedly: &ldquo;Escape? Good idea. But
+where to?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have an idea,&rdquo; the flyer said
+slowly. &ldquo;An idea about an island.&rdquo; He
+told the professor what he had observed&mdash;the
+fact that there was one
+spot of land on this globe from which
+the traffic of these monsters of Venus
+steered clear. This, he explained, must
+have some significance.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whatever is there, God only
+knows,&rdquo; he admitted, &ldquo;but it is something
+these devils don&rsquo;t like a little bit.
+It might be interesting to learn more.
+We&rsquo;ll make a break for it; find a boat.
+No, we probably can&rsquo;t do it, but we can
+make a try. Now what is our first
+step, I wonder.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Our first step,&rdquo; said Professor Sykes,
+measuring his words as if he might be
+working out some astronomical calculation,
+&ldquo;is into the inverted shower-bath,
+if you feel as hot as I do. And
+our next step, when all is quiet for the
+night, is through the window I see beyond.
+I can see the branches of one of
+those undernourished trees from here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Last one in is a lop-eared Venusian!&rdquo;
+said McGuire, throwing off his
+jacket. And in that strange room in
+a strange world, under the shadow of
+death and of tortures unknown, the
+two men stripped with all the care-free
+abandon of a couple of schoolboys
+racing to be first in the old swimming
+hole.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>It</span> was some time later when the door
+opened and a long red hand pushed
+a tray of food into the room. The
+tray was of unbreakable crystal&mdash;he
+rattled it heedlessly upon the floor&mdash;and
+it held crystal dishes of unknown
+foods.</p>
+<p>They were sampling them all when
+Sykes remarked plaintively, &ldquo;I would
+like to know what under heaven I am
+eating.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve wished to know that in lots of
+restaurants,&rdquo; McGuire replied. &ldquo;I
+remember a place down on&mdash;&rdquo; He
+stopped abruptly, then chewed in
+silence upon a fruit like a striped pepper
+that stung his mouth and tongue
+while he scarcely felt it. References
+to Earth things plainly were to be
+avoided: the visions they brought before
+one&rsquo;s eyes were unnerving.</p>
+<p>They made a pretence of sleeping in
+case they were being observed, and it
+was some hours later when the two
+stood quietly beside the open window.
+As Sykes had seen, there were branches
+of a pale, twisted tree-growth close
+outside. McGuire tried his weight
+upon them, then swung himself out,
+hand over hand, upon the branch that
+bent low beneath him. Sykes was close
+behind when he clambered to the
+ground to stand for some minutes,
+listening silently in the dark.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Too easy!&rdquo; the lieutenant whispered.
+&ldquo;They are too foxy to leave a
+gateway like that&mdash;but here we are.
+The shore is off in this direction.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The dark of a night unrelieved by a
+single star was about them as they
+moved noiselessly away. They followed
+open ground at first. The building
+that had been their brief prison
+was upon their right; beyond and at
+the left was where the ship landed&mdash;it
+was gone now&mdash;and beyond that the
+wall of vegetation.</p>
+<p>And again, in the dark, McGuire had
+an uncanny sense of motion. Soft
+bodies were slipping quietly one upon
+another; something that lived was
+there beyond them in the night. No
+sound or sign of life came from the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_324' name='page_324'></a>324</span>
+house; no guard had been posted; and
+McGuire stopped again, before plunging
+into the tangled growth, to whisper,
+&ldquo;Too easy, Sykes! There&rsquo;s something
+about this&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>He</span> had pushed aside the fronds
+of a giant fern; a cautious step
+beyond his hands touched a slippery,
+pliant vine. And his whisper ended as
+he felt the thing turn and twist beneath
+his hand. It was alive!&mdash;writhing!&mdash;cold
+as the body of a monster
+snake, and just as vicious and savage
+in the way that it whipped down and
+about him in the gloom of the starless
+night.</p>
+<p>The thing was alive! It threw its
+coils around his body in an embrace
+that left him breathless; a slender
+tendril was tightening about his neck;
+his hands and arms were bound.</p>
+<p>His ankle was grasped as he was
+whirled aloft&mdash;a human hand that
+gripped him this time&mdash;and Sykes, forgetting
+discretion and the need for
+silence, was shouting in the darkness
+that gave no clue to their opponent.
+&ldquo;Hang on!&rdquo; he yelled. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got you,
+Mac!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His shouts were cut short by another
+serpent shape that thrashed him and
+smashed the softer growing things to
+earth that it might wrap this man, too,
+in its deadly coils.</p>
+<p>McGuire felt his companion&rsquo;s hold
+loosen as he was lifted from the
+ground; there were other arms flailing
+about him&mdash;living, coiling things that
+seemed to fight one with another for
+this prize. Abruptly, blindingly, the
+scene was vividly etched before him:
+the strange trees, the ferns, the writhing
+and darting serpent-arms! They
+were illumined in a dazzling, white
+light!</p>
+<p>He was in the air, clutched strangely
+in constricting arms; an odor of rotted
+flesh was in his nostrils, sickening,
+suffocating! Beyond and almost beneath
+him a cauldron of green gaped
+open, and he saw within it a pool of
+thick liquid that eddied and steamed
+to give off the stench of putrescence.</p>
+<p>All this in an instant of vision&mdash;and
+in that instant he knew the death they
+courted. It was a giant pod that held
+that pool&mdash;one of the growths he had
+seen ranged out like a line of sentinels.
+But the terrible tendrils that had been
+coiled and at rest were wrapped about
+him now, drawing him to that reeking
+pool of death and the waiting thick
+lips that would close above him. Sykes,
+too! The tendrils that had clutched
+him were whisking his helpless body
+where another gaping mouth was
+open&mdash;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>And</span> then, in the blazing light that
+was more brilliant than any light
+of day in this world, the hold about
+McGuire relaxed. He saw, as he fell,
+the thick, green lips snap shut; and the
+arms that had held him pulled back
+into harmless, tight-wound coils.</p>
+<p>Their bodies crashed to earth where
+a great fern bent beneath them
+to cushion their fall. And the men lay
+silent and gasping for great choking
+breaths, while from the building beyond
+came the cackle and shrieking of
+man-things in manifest enjoyment of
+the frustrated plans.</p>
+<p>It was the laughter that determined
+McGuire.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Damn the plants!&rdquo; he said between
+hoarse breaths. &ldquo;Man-eating plants&mdash;but
+they&rsquo;re&mdash;better&mdash;than&mdash;those
+devils! And there&rsquo;s only&mdash;one line of
+them: I saw them here before. Shall
+we go on?&mdash;make a break for it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sykes rolled to the shelter of an
+arching frond and, without a word,
+went crawling away. McGuire was behind
+him, and the two, as they came to
+open ground, sprang to their feet and
+ran on through the weird orchard
+where tree trunks made dim, twisting
+lines. They ran blindly and helplessly
+toward the outer dark that promised
+temporary shelter.</p>
+<p>A hopeless attempt: both men, knew
+the futility of it, while they stumbled
+onward through the dark. Behind
+them the night was hideous with noise
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_325' name='page_325'></a>325</span>
+as the great palace gave forth an
+eruption of shrieking, inhuman forms
+that scattered with whistling and wailing
+calls in all directions.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>A mile</span> or more of groping, hopeless
+flight, till a yellow gleam
+shone among the trees to guide them.
+A building, beyond a clearing, gave a
+bright illumination to the black night.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;ve run in a circle,&rdquo; choked McGuire,
+his voice weak and uncertain
+with exhaustion. &ldquo;Like a couple of
+fools!&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He waited until the heavy breathing
+that shook his body might be controlled,
+then corrected himself. &ldquo;No&mdash;this
+is another&mdash;a new one&mdash;see the
+towers! And listen&mdash;it&rsquo;s a radio station!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The slender frameworks that towered
+high in air glowed like flame&mdash;a
+warning to the ships whose lights
+showed now and then far overhead.
+And, clear and distinct, there came to
+the listening men the steady, crackling
+hiss of an uninterrupted signal.</p>
+<p>Against the lighted building moving
+figures showed momentarily, and McGuire
+pulled his friend into the safe
+concealment of a tangle of growth,
+while the group of yelling things sped
+past.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come on,&rdquo; he told Sykes; &ldquo;we can&rsquo;t
+get away&mdash;not a chance! Let&rsquo;s have a
+look at this place, and perhaps&mdash;well,
+I have an idea!&rdquo; He slipped silently,
+cautiously on, where a forest of jungle
+ferns gave promise of safe passage.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Some</span> warning had been sounded;
+the occupants of the building
+were scattered to aid in the man-hunt.
+Only one was left in the room where
+two Earth-men peeped in at the door.</p>
+<p>The figure was seated upon an insulated
+platform, and his long hands
+manipulated keys and levers on a table
+before him. McGuire and Sykes stared
+amazedly at this broadcasting station
+whose air was filled with a pandemonium
+of crashing sound from some
+distant room, but McGuire was concerned
+mainly with the motion of a
+lean, blood-red hand that swung an object
+like a pointer in free-running
+sweeps above a dial on the table. And
+he detected a variation in the din from
+beyond as the pointer moved swiftly.</p>
+<p>Here was the control board for those
+messages he had heard; this was the
+instrument that varied the sending
+mechanism to produce the wailing
+wireless cries that made words in some
+far-distant ears. McGuire, as he
+slipped into the room and crept within
+leaping distance of the grotesque thing
+so like yet unlike a man, was as silent
+as the nameless, writhing horror that
+had seized them in the dark. He
+sprang, and the two came crashing to
+the floor.</p>
+<p>Lean arms came quickly about him
+to clutch and tear at his face, but the
+flyer had an arm free, and one blow
+ended the battle. The man of Venus
+relaxed to a huddle of purple and yellow
+cloth from which a ghastly face
+protruded. McGuire leaped to his feet
+and sprang to the place where the other
+had been.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hold them off as long as you can!&rdquo;
+he shouted to Sykes, and his hand
+closed upon the pointer.</p>
+<p>Did this station send where he was
+hoping? Was this the station that had
+communicated with the ship that had
+hovered above their flying field in that
+far-off land? He did not know, but it
+was a powerful station, and there was
+a chance&mdash;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>He</span> moved the pointer frantically
+here and there, swung it to one
+side and another; then found at last
+a point on the outside of the strange
+design beneath his hand where the
+pointer could rest while the crashing
+crackle of sound was stilled.</p>
+<p>And now he swung the pointer&mdash;upon
+the plate&mdash;anywhere!&mdash;and the
+noise from beyond told instantly of
+the current&rsquo;s passage. He held it an
+instant, then pushed it back to the
+silent spot&mdash;a dash! A quick return
+that flashed back again to bring silence&mdash;a
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_326' name='page_326'></a>326</span>
+dot! More dashes and dots ... and
+McGuire thanked a kindly heaven that
+had permitted him to learn the
+language of the air, while he cursed his
+slowness in sending.</p>
+<p>Would it reach? Would there be
+anyone to hear? No certainty; he
+could only flash the wild Morse symbols
+out into the night. He must try
+to get word to them&mdash;warn them! And
+&ldquo;Blake,&rdquo; he called, and spelled out the
+name of their field, &ldquo;warning&mdash;Venus&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hold them!&rdquo; he yelled to Sykes at
+the sound of rushing feet. &ldquo;Keep them
+off as long as you can!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;... Prepare&mdash;for invasion. Blake,
+this is McGuire....&rdquo; Over and over,
+he worked the swinging pointer into
+symbols that might in some way, by
+some fortunate chance, help that helpless
+people to resist the horror that lay
+ahead.</p>
+<p>And while heavy bodies crashed
+against the door that Sykes was holding,
+there came from some deep-hidden well
+of memory an inspiration. There was
+a man he had once met&mdash;a man who
+had confided wondrous things; and
+now, with the knowledge of these
+others who had conquered space, he
+could believe wholly what he had
+laughed and joked about before. That
+man, too, had claimed to have travelled
+far from the earth; he had invented a
+machine; his name&mdash;</p>
+<p>The pointer was swinging in frenzied
+haste to spell over and over the
+name of a man, and the name, too, of
+a forgotten place in the mountains of
+Nevada. It was repeating the message;
+then finished in one long crashing wail
+as a cloud of vapor shot about McGuire
+and his hand upon the pointer went
+suddenly limp.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER XI</h3>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Captain Blake&rsquo;s</span> game of solitaire
+had become an obsession.
+He drove himself to the utmost in the
+line of duty, and, through the day, the
+demands of the flying field filled his
+mind to forgetfulness. And for the
+rest, he forced his mind to concentrate
+upon the turn of the cards. He could
+not read&mdash;and he must not think!&mdash;so
+he sat through long evenings trying
+vainly to forget.</p>
+<p>He looked up with an expressionless
+face as Colonel Boynton entered the
+room. The colonel saw the cards and
+nodded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Does that help?&rdquo; he asked, and
+added without waiting for an answer,
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t like cards, but I find my
+mathematics works well.... My old
+problems&mdash;I can concentrate on them,
+and stop this eternal, damnable thinking,
+thinking&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was something of the same
+look forming about the eyes of both&mdash;that
+look that told of men who
+struggled gamely under the sentence
+of death, refusing to think or to fear,
+and waiting, waiting, impotently.
+Blake looked at the colonel with a
+carefully emotionless gaze. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s hell
+in the big towns, I hear.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Colonel nodded. &ldquo;Can&rsquo;t blame
+them much, if that&rsquo;s what appeals to
+them. A year and a half!&mdash;and they&rsquo;ve
+got to forget it. Why not crowd all
+the recklessness and excesses they can
+into the time that is left?&mdash;poor devils!
+But for the most part the world is wagging
+along, and people are going
+through the familiar motions.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said Blake, &ldquo;I used to wonder
+at times how a man might feel if
+he were facing execution. Now we all
+know. Just going dumbly along, feeling
+as little as we can, thinking of anything,
+everything&mdash;except the one
+thing. They&rsquo;ve turned to using dope,
+a lot of them, I hear. Maybe it helps;
+nobody cares much. Only a year and
+a half.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>He</span> raised his face from which all
+expression was consciously
+erased. &ldquo;Any possible hope?&rdquo; he asked.
+&ldquo;Or do we take it when it comes and
+fight with what we&rsquo;ve got as long as
+we can? There was some talk in the
+papers of an invention&mdash;Bureau of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_327' name='page_327'></a>327</span>
+Standards cooperating with the big
+General Committee to investigate.
+Anything come of it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A thousand of them,&rdquo; said the
+colonel, &ldquo;all futile. No, we can&rsquo;t expect
+much from those things. Though
+there&rsquo;s a whisper that came to me from
+Washington. General Clinton&mdash;you
+may remember him; he was here when
+the thing first broke&mdash;says that some
+scientist, a real one, not another of
+these half-baked geniuses, has worked
+out a transformation of some kind. It
+was too deep for me, but it is based
+upon changing hydrogen into helium,
+I think. Liberates some perfectly tremendous
+amount of power. The general
+had it all down pat&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He stopped speaking at the change
+in Captain Blake&rsquo;s face. The careful
+repression of all emotions was gone;
+the face was suddenly alive&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know,&rdquo; he said sharply; &ldquo;I remember
+something of the theory.
+There is a difference in the atoms or
+their protons&mdash;the liberation of an
+electron from each atom&mdash;matter actually
+transformed into energy; theoretical,
+what I have read. But&mdash;but&mdash;Oh
+my God, Boynton, do you mean that
+they&rsquo;ve got it?&mdash;that it will drive us
+through space?&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> colonel drove one fist into the
+palm of his other hand. &ldquo;Fool!
+Idiot!&rdquo; he exclaimed, and it was evident
+that the epithets were intended
+for himself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I had forgotten that you had been
+trained along that line. The general
+wants a man to work with them, somewhat
+as a liason officer to link the
+army requirements closely with their
+developments; we are hoping to work
+out a space ship, of course. You are
+just the man; I will radio him this
+minute. Be ready to leave&mdash;&rdquo; The
+slamming of the door marked a hurried
+exit toward the radio room.</p>
+<p>And abruptly, stifflingly, Captain
+Blake dared to hope. &ldquo;Scientists will
+come through with something, some
+new method of propulsion. All the
+world is looking to them!&rdquo; His
+thoughts were leaping from one possibility
+to another. &ldquo;Some miracle of
+power that will drive a fleet through
+space as they have done, to battle with
+the enemy on his own ground&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Could he help? Was there one little
+thing that he could do to apply their
+knowledge to practical ends? The
+thought thrilled him with overpowering
+emotion an hour later as he felt
+the lift of the plane beneath him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Report to General Clinton,&rdquo; the
+colonel&rsquo;s reply had said. &ldquo;Captain
+Blake will be assigned to special duty.&rdquo;
+He opened the throttle to his ship&rsquo;s
+best cruising speed, but his spirit was
+soaring ahead to urge on the swift
+scout ship whose wings drove steadily
+into the gathering dusk.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>And</span> then, after long hours, Washington!
+Brief words with many
+men&mdash;and discouragement! The seat of
+government of the United States was
+a city of despondent men, weary, hopeless,
+but fighting. There was a look of
+strain on every face; the eyes told a
+story of sleepless nights and futile
+thinking and planning. Blake&rsquo;s elation
+was short lived.</p>
+<p>He was sent to New York and on
+into the state, where the laboratories
+of a great electrical company had
+turned their equipment from commercial
+purposes to those of war. Here,
+surely, one might find fuel to feed the
+dying embers of hope; the new development
+must give greater promise than
+General Clinton had intimated.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nothing you can do as yet,&rdquo; he was
+told, when he had stated his mission.
+&ldquo;It is still experimental, but we have
+worked out the transformation on a
+small scale, and harnessed the power.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Captain Blake was in no mood for
+temporizing; he was tired with being
+put off. He stared belligerently at the
+chief of this department.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Power&mdash;hell!&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ve got
+power now. How will you apply it?
+How will we use it for travelling
+through space?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_328' name='page_328'></a>328</span></div>
+<p>The great man of science was unmoved
+by the outburst. &ldquo;That is poppycock,&rdquo;
+he replied; &ldquo;the unscientific
+twaddle of the sensational press. We
+are practical men here; we are working
+to give you men who do the fighting
+better ships and better arms. But
+you will use them right here on Earth.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The calm assurance of this man who
+spoke with a voice of such confidence
+and authority left the flyer speechless.
+His brain sent a chaos of profane and
+violent expletives to the lips that dared
+not frame them. There was no adequate
+reply.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Blake</span> jammed his hat upon his
+head and walked blindly from the
+room. Heedless of the protests of
+those he jostled on the street he went
+raging on, but some subconscious urge
+directed his steps. He found himself
+at the railway. There was a station,
+and a grilled window where he was
+asking for a ticket back to Washington.
+And on the following day&mdash;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is nothing I can do,&rdquo; he told
+General Clinton. &ldquo;It is hopeless. I
+ask to be relieved.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why?&rdquo; The general snapped the
+question at him. What kind of man
+was this that Boynton had sent him?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are fools,&rdquo; said Blake bluntly,
+&ldquo;pompous, well-meaning fools!
+They are planning better motors, more
+power&rdquo;&mdash;he laughed harshly&mdash;&ldquo;and
+they think that with them we can attack
+ships that are independent of the
+air.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Still,&rdquo; asked General Clinton coldly,
+&ldquo;for what purpose do you wish to
+be relieved? What do you intend to
+do?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Return to the field,&rdquo; said Captain
+Blake, &ldquo;to work, and put my planes and
+personnel in the best possible condition;
+then, when the time comes, go up
+and fight like hell.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>An unusual phrasing of a request
+when one is addressing one&rsquo;s commander;
+but the older man threw back
+his shoulders, that were bending under
+responsibilities too great for one
+man to bear, and took a long breath
+that relaxed his face and seemed to
+bring relief.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve got the right idea,&rdquo;&mdash;he
+spoke slowly and thoughtfully&mdash;&ldquo;the
+right philosophy. It is all we have left&mdash;to
+fight like hell when the time
+comes. Give my regards to Colonel
+Boynton; he sent me a good man after
+all.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Another</span> long flight, westward
+this time, and, despite the failure
+of his hopes and of his errand, Blake
+was flying with a mind at peace. &ldquo;It is
+all we have left,&rdquo; the general had said.
+Well, it was good to face facts, to admit
+them&mdash;and that was that! There
+was no use of thinking or worrying....
+He lifted the ship to a higher level
+and glanced at his compass. There
+were clouds up ahead, and he drove
+still higher into the night, until he was
+above them.</p>
+<p>And again his peace of mind was not
+to last.</p>
+<p>It was night when he swung the ship
+over his home port and signalled for
+a landing. A flood of light swept out
+across the field to guide him down. He
+went directly to the colonel&rsquo;s quarters
+but found him gone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In the radio room, I think,&rdquo; an orderly
+told him.</p>
+<p>Colonel Boynton was listening intently
+in the silent room; he scowled
+with annoyance at the disturbance of
+Blake&rsquo;s coming; then, seeing who it
+was, he motioned quickly for the captain
+to listen in.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good Lord, Blake,&rdquo; he told the captain
+in an excited whisper; &ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad
+you&rsquo;re here. Another ship had been
+sighted; she&rsquo;s been all over the earth;
+just scouting and mapping, probably.
+And there have been signals the same
+as before&mdash;the same until just now.
+Listen!&mdash;it&rsquo;s talking Morse!&mdash;it&rsquo;s been
+calling for you!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He thrust a head set into Blake&rsquo;s
+hands, then reached for some papers.
+&ldquo;Poor reception, but there&rsquo;s what we&rsquo;ve
+got,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_329' name='page_329'></a>329</span></div>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> paper held the merest fragments
+of messages that the
+operator had deciphered. Blake examined
+them curiously while he listened
+at the silent receiver.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Maricopa&rdquo;&mdash;the message, whatever
+it was, was meant for them, but there
+were only parts of words and disjointed
+phrases that the man had written
+down&mdash;&ldquo;Venus attacking Earth ...
+Captain Blake ... Sykes and....&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At the name of Sykes, Blake dropped
+the paper.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What does this mean?&rdquo; he demanded.
+&ldquo;Sykes!&mdash;why Sykes was the
+astronomer who was captured with
+McGuire!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Listen! Listen!&rdquo; The colonel&rsquo;s voice
+was almost shrill with excitement.</p>
+<p>The night was whispering faintly
+the merest echo of a signal from a station
+far away, but it resolved itself
+into broken fragments of sound that
+were long and short in duration, and
+the fragments joined to form letters
+in the Morse code.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;See Winslow,&rdquo; it told them, and repeated
+the message: &ldquo;See Winslow at
+Sierra....&rdquo; Some distant storm crashed
+and rattled for breathless minutes.
+&ldquo;Blake see Winslow. This is McGuire,
+Blake. Winslow can help&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The message ended abruptly. One
+long, wailing note; then again the
+night was voiceless ... and in the radio
+room at Maricopa Flying Field two
+men stood speechless, unbreathing, to
+stare at each other with incredulous
+eyes, as might men who had seen a
+phantom&mdash;a ghost that spoke to them
+and called them by name.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;McGuire&mdash;is&mdash;alive!&rdquo; stammered
+Blake. &ldquo;They&rsquo;ve taken him&mdash;there!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Colonel Boynton</span> was considering,
+weighing all the possibilities,
+and his voice, when he answered,
+had the ring of conviction.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That was no hoax,&rdquo; he agreed;
+&ldquo;that quavering tone could never be
+faked. That message was sent from the
+same station we heard before. Yes,
+McGuire is alive&mdash;or was up to the
+end of that sending.... But, who the
+devil is Winslow?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Blake shook his head despairingly.
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;And it seems
+as if I should&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was hours later, far into the night,
+when he sprang from out of a half-conscious
+doze to find himself in the
+middle of the floor with the voice of
+McGuire ringing clearly in his ears. A
+buried memory had returned to the
+level of his conscious mind. He
+rushed over to the colonel&rsquo;s quarters.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve got it,&rdquo; he shouted to that officer
+whose head was projecting from
+an upper window. &ldquo;I remember! McGuire
+told me about this Winslow&mdash;some
+hermit that he ran across. He
+has some invention&mdash;some machine&mdash;said
+he had been to the moon. I always
+thought Mac half believed him. We&rsquo;ll
+go over Mac&rsquo;s things and find the address.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think&mdash;do you suppose&mdash;?&rdquo;
+began Colonel Boynton doubtfully.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t dare to think,&rdquo; Blake responded.
+&ldquo;God only knows if we dare
+hope; but Mac&mdash;Mac&rsquo;s got a level
+head; he wouldn&rsquo;t send us unless he
+knew! Good Lord, man!&rdquo; he exclaimed,
+&ldquo;Mac radioed us from Venus;
+is there anything impossible after
+that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wait there,&rdquo; said Colonel Boynton;
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be right down&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER XII</h3>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Lieutenant McGuire</span> awoke,
+as he had on other occasions, to
+the smell of sickly-sweet fumes and
+the stifling pressure of a mask held
+over his nose and mouth. He struggled
+to free himself, and the mask was
+removed. Another of the man-creatures
+whom McGuire had not seen
+before helped him to sit up.</p>
+<p>A group of the attenuated figures,
+with their blood-and-ashes faces, regarded
+him curiously. The one who
+had helped him arise forced the others
+to stand back, and he gave McGuire a
+drink of yellow fluid from a crystal
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_330' name='page_330'></a>330</span>
+goblet. The dazed man gulped it down
+to feel a following surge of warmth
+and life that pulsed through his paralyzed
+body. The figures before him
+came sharply from the haze that had
+enveloped them. A window high above
+admitted a golden light that meant another
+day, but it brought no cheer or
+encouragement to the flyer. McGuire
+felt crushed and hopeless in the knowledge
+that his life must still go on.</p>
+<p>If only that sleep could have continued&mdash;carried
+him out to the deeper
+sleep of death! What hope for them
+here? Not a chance! And then he remembered
+Sykes; he mustn&rsquo;t desert
+Sykes. He looked about him to see the
+same prison room from which he and
+Sykes had escaped. The body of the
+scientist was motionless on the hammock-bed
+across the room; an occasional
+deep-drawn breath showed that
+the man still lived.</p>
+<p>No, he must not leave Sykes, even if
+he had the means of death. They
+would fight it through together, and
+perhaps&mdash;perhaps&mdash;they might yet be
+of service, might find some way to
+avert the catastrophe that threatened
+their world. Hopeless? Beyond doubt.
+But he must hope&mdash;and fight!</p>
+<p>The leader had watched the light of
+understanding as it returned to the
+flyer&rsquo;s eyes. He motioned now to the
+others, and McGuire was picked up
+bodily by four of them and carried
+from the room.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>McGuire&rsquo;s</span> mind was alert once
+more; he was eager to learn
+what he could of this place that was
+to be their prison, but he saw little. A
+glory of blending colors beyond, where
+the golden light from without shone
+through opal walls&mdash;then he found
+himself upon a narrow table where
+straps of metal were thrown quickly
+about to bind him fast. He was tied
+hand and foot to the table that moved
+forward on smooth rollers to a waiting
+lift.</p>
+<p>What next? he questioned. Not
+death, for they had been too careful to
+keep him alive, these repulsive things
+that stared at him with such cold
+malevolence. Then what? And McGuire
+found himself with unpleasant
+recollections of others he had seen
+strapped in similar fashion to an operating
+table.</p>
+<p>The lift that he had thought would
+rise fell smoothly, instead, to stop at
+some point far below ground where
+the table with its helpless burden was
+rolled into a great room.</p>
+<p>He could move his head, and McGuire
+turned and twisted to look at the
+maze of instruments that filled the
+room&mdash;a super-laboratory for experiments
+of which he dared not think.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Whoever says I&rsquo;m not scared to
+death is a liar,&rdquo; he whispered to himself,
+but he continued to look and wonder
+as he was wheeled before a gleaming
+machine of many coils and shining,
+metal parts. A smooth sheet of
+metal stood vertically beyond him;
+painted a grayish-white, he saw; but he
+could not imagine its use. A throng
+of people, seated in the room, turned
+blood-red faces toward the bound man
+and the metal sheet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Looks as if we were about to put
+on a show of some kind,&rdquo; he told himself,
+&ldquo;and I am cast for a leading role.&rdquo;
+He watched as best he could from his
+bound position while a tall figure in
+robes of lustreless black appeared to
+stand beside him.</p>
+<p>The newcomer regarded him with a
+face that was devoid of all emotion.
+McGuire felt the lack of the customary
+expression of hatred; there was not
+even that; and he knew he was nothing
+more than a strange animal, bound, and
+helpless, ready for this weird creature&rsquo;s
+experiments. The one in black
+held a pencil whose tip was a tiny, brilliant
+light.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Abruptly</span> the room plunged to
+darkness, where the only visible
+thing was this one point of light.
+Ceaselessly it waved back and forth
+before his eyes; he followed it in a
+pattern of strange design; it approached
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_331' name='page_331'></a>331</span>
+and receded. Again and
+again the motion was repeated, until
+McGuire felt himself sinking&mdash;sinking&mdash;into
+a passive state of lethargy. His
+muscles relaxed; his mind was at rest;
+there seemed nothing in the entire universe
+of being but the single point of
+light that drew him on and on ... till
+something whispered from the far
+reaches of black space....</p>
+<p>It came to him, an insistent call. It
+was asking about the earth&mdash;his own
+world. <i>What of Earth&rsquo;s armies and
+their means of defense?</i> Vaguely he
+sensed the demand, and without conscious
+volition he responded. He pictured
+the world he had known; how
+plainly he saw the wide field at Maricopa,
+and the sweeping flight of a
+squadron of planes! <i>Yes&mdash;yes! How
+high could they ascend?</i> From one of
+the planes he saw the world below; the
+ships were near their ceiling; this
+was the limit of their climb. <i>And did
+they fight with gas? What of their
+deadliness?</i> And again he was seated
+in a plane, and he was firing tiny bullets
+from a tiny gun. No. They did
+not use gas. <i>But on the ground below&mdash;what
+fortifications? What means of
+defense?</i></p>
+<p>McGuire&rsquo;s mind was no longer his
+own; he could only respond to that invisible
+questioner, that insistent demand
+from out of the depths where he
+was floating. And yet there was something
+within him that protested, that
+clamored at his mind and brain.</p>
+<p>Fortifications! They must know
+about fortifications&mdash;anti-aircraft guns&mdash;means
+for combatting aerial attack.
+Yes, he knew, and he must explain&mdash;and
+the thing within him pounded in
+the back of his brain to draw him back
+to himself.</p>
+<p>He saw a battery of anti-aircraft
+guns in operation; the guns were firing;
+shells were bursting in little
+plumes of smoke high in the air. And
+that self within him was shouting now,
+hammering at him; &ldquo;You are seeing it,&rdquo;
+it told him; &ldquo;it is there before you on
+the screen. Stop! Stop!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>And</span> for an instant McGuire had
+the strange experience of witnessing
+his own thoughts. Memories,
+mental records of past experience,
+were flashing through his mind; mock
+battles, and the batteries were firing!
+And, before him, on the metal screen,
+there glowed a vivid picture of the
+same thing. Men were serving the
+guns with sure swiftness; the bursts
+were high in the air&mdash;in a flash of
+understanding Lieutenant McGuire knew
+that he was giving his country&rsquo;s secrets
+to the enemy. And in that same instant
+he felt himself swept upward
+from the depths of that darkness
+where he had drifted. He was himself
+again, bound and helpless before
+an infernal contrivance of these devil-creatures.
+They had read his thoughts;
+the machine beside him had projected
+them upon the screen for all to see; a
+steady clicking might mean their
+reproduction in motion pictures for
+later study! He, Lieutenant McGuire,
+was a traitor against his will!</p>
+<p>The screen was blank, and the lights
+of the room came on to show the thin
+lips that smiled complacently in a cruel
+and evil face.</p>
+<p>McGuire glared back into that face,
+and he tried with all the mental force
+that he could concentrate to get across
+to the exultant one the fact that they
+had not wholly conquered him. This
+much they had got&mdash;but no more!</p>
+<p>The thin-lipped one had an instrument
+in his hand, and McGuire felt
+the prick of a needle plunged into his
+arm. He tried to move his head and
+found himself powerless. And now, in
+the darkness of the room where all
+lights were again extinguished, the
+helpless man was fighting the most
+horrible of battles, and the battleground
+was within his own mind. He
+was two selves, and he fought and
+struggled with all his consciousness to
+keep those memories from flooding
+him.</p>
+<p>With one part of himself he knew
+what it meant: a sure knowledge given
+these invaders of what they must prepare
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_332' name='page_332'></a>332</span>
+to meet; he was betraying his
+country; the whole of humanity! And
+that raging, raving self was powerless
+to check the flow of memory pictures
+that went endlessly through his mind
+and out upon the screen beyond....</p>
+<p>He had no sense of time; he was
+limp and exhausted with his fruitless
+struggle when he felt himself released
+from the bondage of the metal straps
+and placed again in the hammock in
+his room. And he could only look
+wanly and hopelessly after the figure
+of Professor Sykes, carried by barbarous
+figures to the same ordeal.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Sleep</span>, through the long night, restored
+both McGuire and his companion
+to normal strength. The flyer
+was seated with his head bowed low in
+his cupped hands. His words seemed
+wrung from an agony of spirit. &ldquo;So
+that&rsquo;s what they brought us here for,&rdquo;
+he said harshly; &ldquo;that&rsquo;s why they&rsquo;re
+keeping us alive!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Professor Sykes walked back and
+forth in their bare room while he shook
+his impotent fists in the air.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I told them everything,&rdquo; he exploded;
+&ldquo;everything!&rdquo; Their astronomical
+knowledge must be limited; under
+this blanket of clouds they can see
+nothing, and from their ships they
+could make approximations only.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I have told them&mdash;the earth,
+and its days and seasons&mdash;its orbital
+velocity and motion&mdash;its relation to
+the orbit of this accursed planet.
+They had documents from the observatory
+and I explained them; I corrected
+their time of firing their big gun on its
+equatorial position. Oh, there is little
+I left untold&mdash;damn them!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish to heaven,&rdquo; said the flyer
+savagely, &ldquo;that we had known; we
+would have jumped out of their beastly
+ship somehow ten thousand feet up,
+and we would have taken our information
+with us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sykes nodded agreement. &ldquo;Well,&rdquo;
+he asked, &ldquo;how about to-morrow, and
+the next day, and the next? They will
+want more facts; they will pump the
+last drop of information from us. Are
+we going to allow it?&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>McGuire&rsquo;s</span> tone was dry. &ldquo;You
+know the answer to that as well
+as I do. We have just two alternatives;
+either we get out of here&mdash;find
+some place to hide in, then find some
+way to put a crimp in their plans; or
+we get out of here for good. It&rsquo;s
+twenty feet, not twenty thousand, from
+that window to the ground, but I
+think a head-first dive would do it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Sykes did not reply at once; he
+seemed to be weighing some problem
+in his mind.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I would prefer the water,&rdquo; he said
+at last. &ldquo;If we <i>can</i> get away and reach
+the shore, and if there is not a possibility
+of escape&mdash;which I must admit I
+consider highly improbable&mdash;well, we
+can always swim out as far as we can
+go, and the result will be certain.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This other is so messy.&rdquo; The man
+had stopped his ceaseless pacing, and
+he even managed a cheerful smile at
+the lieutenant. &ldquo;And, remember, it
+might only cripple us and leave us
+helpless in their hands.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sounds all right to me,&rdquo; McGuire
+agreed, and there was a tone of finality
+in his voice as he added: &ldquo;They&rsquo;ve
+made us do that traitor act for the
+last time, anyway.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Daylight</span> comes slowly through
+cloud-filled skies; the window of
+the room where the fountain sprayed
+ceaselessly was showing the first hint
+of gold in the eastern sky. Above was
+the utter darkness of the cloud-wrapped
+night as the two men swung
+noiselessly out into the grotesque
+branches of a tree to make their way
+into the gloom below. There, under
+the cover of great leaves, they
+crouched in silence, while the darkness
+about them faded and a sound of
+subdued whistling noises came to them
+from the night.</p>
+<p>A wheel creaked, and in the dim
+light two figures appeared tugging at
+a cart upon which was a cage of woven
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_333' name='page_333'></a>333</span>
+wire. Beyond them, against the
+darker background of denser growth,
+tentacles coiled and twisted above the
+row of guardian plants that surrounded
+the house.</p>
+<p>One of the ghostly forms reached
+within the cage and brought forth a
+struggling object that whimpered in
+fear. The low whine came distinctly
+to the hidden men. They saw a vague
+black thing tossed through the air and
+toward the deadly plants; they heard
+the swishing of pliant tentacles and
+the yelping cry of a frightened animal.
+And the cry rose to a shriek that ended
+with the gulping splash of thick liquid.</p>
+<p>The giant pod next in line was open&mdash;they
+could see it dimly&mdash;and its tentacles
+were writhing convulsively,
+hungrily, across the ground. Another
+animal was taken from the cage and
+thrown to the waiting, serpent forms
+that closed about and whirled it high
+in air. Another&mdash;and another! The
+yelps of terror grew faint in the distance
+as the monsters passed on in
+their gruesome work. And the two
+men, palpitant with memories of their
+own experience, were limp and sick
+with horror.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>In</span> the growing light they saw more
+plainly the fleshy, pliant arms that
+whipped through the air or felt searchingly
+along the ground. No hope there
+for bird or beast that passed by in the
+night; nor for men, as they knew too
+well. But now, as the golden light
+increased, the arms drew back to form
+again the tight-wound coils that flattened
+themselves beside the monstrous
+pods whose lips were closing. Locked
+within them were the pools of liquid
+that could dissolve a living body into
+food for these vampires of the vegetable
+world.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Damnable!&rdquo; breathed Sykes in a
+savage whisper. &ldquo;Utterly damnable!
+And this world is peopled with such
+monsters!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The last deadly arm was tightly
+coiled when the men stole off through
+the lush growth that reached even
+above their heads. McGuire remembered
+the outlines he had seen from
+the air and led the way where, if no
+better concealment could be found, the
+ocean waited with promise of rest and
+release from their inhuman captors.</p>
+<p>They counted on an hour&rsquo;s start&mdash;it
+would be that long before their jailer
+would come with their morning meal
+and give the alarm&mdash;and now they
+went swiftly and silently through the
+stillness of a strange world. The air
+that flicked misty-wet across their
+faces was heavy and heady with the
+perfume of night-blooming plants.
+Crimson blossoms flung wide their
+odorous petals, and the first golden
+light was filtered through tremendous
+tree-growths of pale lavenders and
+grays to show as unreal colors in the
+vegetation close about them.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>They</span> found no guards; the isolation
+of this island made the land
+itself their prison, and the men ran at
+full speed through every open space,
+knowing as they ran that there was no
+refuge for them&mdash;only the ocean waiting
+at the last. But their flight was
+not unobserved.</p>
+<p>A great bird rose screaming from a
+tangle of vines; its heavy, flapping
+wings flashed red against the pale
+trees. A pandemonium of shrieking
+cries echoed its alarm as other birds
+took flight; the forest about them was
+in an uproar of harsh cries. And faintly,
+from far in the rear, came a babel
+of shrill calls&mdash;weird, inhuman!&mdash;the
+voices of the men-things of Venus.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s all off,&rdquo; said McGuire sharply;
+&ldquo;they&rsquo;ll be on our trail now!&rdquo; He
+plunged through where the trees were
+more open, and Sykes was beside him
+as they ran with a burst of speed toward
+a hilltop beyond.</p>
+<p>They paused, panting, upon the
+crest. A wide expanse of foliage in
+delicate shadings swept out before
+them to wave gently in a sea of color
+under the morning breeze, and beyond
+was another sea that beckoned with
+white breakers on a rocky shore.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_334' name='page_334'></a>334</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;The ocean!&rdquo; gasped Sykes, and
+pointed a trembling hand toward their
+goal. &ldquo;But&mdash;I had no idea&mdash;that suicide&mdash;was&mdash;such
+hard work!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The tall figure of Lieutenant McGuire
+turned to the shorter, breathless
+man, and he gripped hard at one of his
+hands.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sykes,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll never get another
+chance to say it&mdash;but you&rsquo;re one
+good scout!... Come on!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>McGuire</span> fought to force his way
+through jungle growth, while
+screaming birds marked where they
+went. The sounds of their pursuers
+were close behind them when the two
+tore their way through the last snarled
+tangle of pale vine to stand on a sheer
+bluff, where, below, deep waters
+crashed against a rocky wall. They
+staggered with weariness and gulped
+sobbingly of the morning air. McGuire
+could have sworn he was exhausted
+beyond any further effort, yet
+from somewhere he summoned energy
+to spring savagely upon a tall, blood-red
+figure whose purpling face rose
+suddenly to confront them.</p>
+<p>One hand closed upon the metal tube
+that the other hand raised, and, with
+his final reserve of strength, the flyer
+wrapped an arm about the tall body and
+rushed it stumblingly toward the cliff.
+To be balked now!&mdash;to be brought back
+to that intolerable prison and the unthinkable
+role of traitor! The khaki-clad
+figure wrenched furiously at the
+deadly tube as they struggled and
+swayed on the edge of the cliff.</p>
+<p>He freed his arm quickly, and, regardless
+of the clawing thing that tore
+at his face and eyes, he launched one
+long swing for the horrible face above
+him. He saw the awkward fall of a
+lean body, and he swayed helplessly
+out to follow when the grip of Sykes&rsquo;
+hand pulled him back and up to momentary
+safety.</p>
+<p>McGuire&rsquo;s mind held only the desire
+to kill, and he would have begun
+a staggering rush toward the shrieking
+mob that broke from the cover behind
+them, had not Sykes held him fast. At
+sight of the weapon, their own gas projector,
+still clutched in the flyer&rsquo;s hand,
+the pursuers halted. Their long arms
+pointed and their shrill calls joined in
+a chorus that quavered and fell uncertainly.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>One</span>, braver than the rest, dashed
+forward and discharged his
+weapon. The spurting gas failed to
+reach its intended victims; it blew
+gently back toward the others who fled
+quickly to either side. Above the
+trees a giant ship nosed swiftly down,
+and McGuire pointed to it grimly and
+in silence. The men before them were
+massed now for a rush.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This is the end,&rdquo; said the flyer
+softly. &ldquo;I wonder how this devilish
+thing works; there&rsquo;s a trigger here. I
+will give them a shot with the wind
+helping, then we&rsquo;ll jump for it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The ship was above them as the slim
+figure of Lieutenant McGuire threw
+itself a score of paces toward the
+waiting group. From the metal tube
+there shot a stream of pale vapor that
+swept downward upon the others who
+ran in panic from its touch.</p>
+<p>Then back&mdash;and a grip of a hand!&mdash;and
+two Earth-men who threw themselves
+out and downward from a sheer
+rock wall to the cool embrace of deep
+water.</p>
+<p>They came to the top, battered from
+their fall, but able to dive under a wave
+and emerge again near one another.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Swim!&rdquo; urged Sykes. &ldquo;Swim out!
+They may get us here&mdash;recover our
+bodies&mdash;resuscitate us. And that
+wouldn&rsquo;t do!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Another wave, and the two men were
+swimming beyond it; swimming feebly
+but steadily out from shore, while
+above them a great cylinder of shining
+metal swept past in a circling flight.
+They kept on while their eyes, from
+the wave tops, saw it turn and come
+slowly back in a long smooth descent.</p>
+<p>It was a hundred feet above the water
+a short way out at sea, and the
+two men made feeble motions with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_335' name='page_335'></a>335</span>
+arms and legs, while their eyes exchanged
+glances of dismay.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>A door</span> had opened in the round
+under-surface, and a figure, whose
+gas-suit made it a bloated caricature of
+a man, was lowered from beneath in a
+sling. From the stern of the ship
+gaseous vapor belched downward to
+spread upon the surface of the water.
+The wind was bringing the misty cloud
+toward them. &ldquo;The gas!&rdquo; said McGuire
+despairingly. &ldquo;It will knock us out,
+and then that devil will get us!
+They&rsquo;ll take us back! Our last chance&mdash;gone!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;God help us!&rdquo; said Sykes weakly.
+&ldquo;We can&rsquo;t&mdash;even&mdash;die&mdash;&rdquo; His feeble
+strokes stopped, and he sank beneath
+the water. McGuire&rsquo;s last picture as
+he too sank and the waters closed over
+his head, was the shining ship hovering
+beyond.</p>
+<p>He wondered only vaguely at the
+sudden whirling of water around him.
+A solid something was rising beneath
+his dragging feet; a firm, solid support
+that raised him again to the surface.
+He realized dimly the air about him,
+the sodden form of Professor Sykes
+some few feet distant. His numbed
+brain was trying to comprehend what
+else the eyes beheld.</p>
+<p>A metal surface beneath them rose
+higher, shining wet, above the water;
+a metal tube raised suddenly from its
+shield, to swing in quick aim upon the
+enemy ship approaching from above.</p>
+<p>His eyes moved to the ship, and to
+the man-thing below in the sling.
+Its clothes were a mass of flame, and
+the figure itself was falling headlong
+through the air. Above the blazing
+body was the metal of the ship itself,
+and it sagged and melted to a liquid
+fire that poured, splashing and hissing,
+to the waters beneath. In the wild
+panic the great shape threw itself into
+the air; it swept out and up in curving
+flight to plunge headlong into the
+depths....</p>
+<p>The gas was drifting close, as McGuire
+saw an opening in the structure
+beside him. The voice of a man, human,
+kindly, befriending, said something
+of &ldquo;hurry&rdquo; and &ldquo;gas,&rdquo; and &ldquo;lift
+them carefully but make haste.&rdquo; The
+white faces of men were blurred and
+indistinct as McGuire felt himself lowered
+into a cool room and laid, with
+the unconscious form of Sykes, upon a
+floor.</p>
+<p>He tried to remember. He had gone
+down in the water&mdash;Sykes had
+drowned, and he himself&mdash;he was tired&mdash;tired.
+&ldquo;And this,&rdquo;&mdash;the thought
+seemed a certainty in his mind&mdash;&ldquo;this
+is death. How&mdash;very&mdash;peculiar&mdash;&rdquo; He
+was trying to twist his lips to a weak
+laugh as the lighted ports in the wall
+beside him changed from gold to green,
+then black&mdash;and a rushing of torn
+waters was in his ears....</p>
+<p class='center'>(<i>To be continued</i>)</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='adbox'><span class="larger">ASTOUNDING STORIES<br /></span>
+<i>Appears on Newsstands</i><br />
+THE FIRST THURSDAY IN EACH MONTH</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_336' name='page_336'></a>336</span>
+<a name='THE_SEA_TERROR_BY_CAPTAIN_S_P_MEEK' id='THE_SEA_TERROR_BY_CAPTAIN_S_P_MEEK'></a>
+<h2>The Sea Terror</h2>
+<p><i>By Captain S. P. Meek</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_5' id='linki_5'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/336.jpg' alt='' title='' width='478' height='500' /><br />
+<p class='caption'>
+&ldquo;<i>The mass hung over the ship.</i>&rdquo;<br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<p class='dropcapq'><small>&ldquo;</small><span class='drop'>I</span><span class='dcap'> beg</span> your pardon, sir. I&rsquo;m looking
+for Dr. Bird.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The famous Bureau of Standards
+scientist appraised the
+speaker rapidly. Keen blue eyes stared
+questioningly at him from a mahogany
+brown face, criss-crossed with a thousand
+tiny wrinkles.
+The tattooed
+anchor on his
+hand and the ill-fitting
+blue serge
+suit smacked of the sea while the
+squareness of his shoulders and the direct
+gaze of his eye spoke eloquently
+of authority.</p>
+<p class='sidebarright'>The trail of mystery gold leads Carnes
+and Dr. Bird to a tremendous monster of
+the deep.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m Dr. Bird, Captain. What can I
+do for you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank you, Doctor, but I&rsquo;m not a
+captain. My name
+is Mitchell and I
+am, or was, the
+first mate of the
+<i>Arethusa</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_337' name='page_337'></a>337</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;The <i>Arethusa</i>!&rdquo; Operative Carnes
+of the United States Secret Service
+sprang to his feet. &ldquo;You said the <i>Arethusa</i>?
+There <i>were</i> no survivors!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I believe that I am the only one.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where have you been hiding and
+why haven&rsquo;t you reported the fact of
+your rescue to the proper authorities?
+Tell the truth; I&rsquo;m a federal officer!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Carnes flashed the gold badge of the
+Secret Service and an expression of
+anger crossed Mitchell&rsquo;s face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If I had wished to talk to an officer
+I could have found plenty in New
+York,&rdquo; he said shortly. &ldquo;I came to
+Washington in order to tell my story to
+Dr. Bird.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The seaman and the detective glared
+at one another for a moment and then
+Dr. Bird intervened.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pipe down, Carnes,&rdquo; he said softly.
+&ldquo;Mr. Mitchell undoubtedly has reasons,
+excellent reasons, for his actions. Sit
+down, Mr. Mitchell, and have a cigar.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Mitchell</span> accepted the cigar
+which the doctor proferred and
+took a chair. He lighted the weed and
+after another glance of hostility toward
+the detective he pointedly ignored him
+and addressed his remarks to Dr. Bird.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have no objection to telling you
+why I haven&rsquo;t spoken earlier, Doctor,&rdquo;
+he said. &ldquo;When the <i>Arethusa</i> sank, I
+must have hit my head on something,
+for the next thing I knew, I was in the
+Marine Hospital in New York. I had
+been picked up unconscious by a fishing
+boat and brought in, and I lay there
+a week before I knew anything. When
+I knew what I was doing I heard about
+the loss of my ship and was told that
+there were no survivors, and I didn&rsquo;t
+know what to do. The story I had to
+tell was so weird and improbable that
+I hesitated to speak to anyone about it.
+I was not sure at first that it was not a
+trick of a disordered brain, but since
+my head has cleared I am convinced of
+the truth of it ... and yet I know that
+it <i>can&rsquo;t</i> be so. I have read about you
+and some of the things you have done,
+and so as soon as I was able to travel I
+came here to tell you about it. You
+will be better able to judge than I,
+whether what I tell you really happened
+or was only a vision.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dr. Bird leaned back in his chair and
+put the tips of his fingers together.
+Long, tapering fingers they were, sensitive
+and well shaped, though sadly
+marred by acid stains. It was in his
+hands alone that Dr. Bird showed the
+genius in his make-up, the artistry
+which inspired him to produce those
+miracles of experimentation which had
+made his name a household word in the
+realm of science. Aside from those
+hands he more resembled a pugilist
+than a scientist. A heavy shock of unruly
+black hair surmounted a face with
+beetling black brows and a prognathous
+jaw. His enormous head, with a
+breadth and height of forehead which
+were amazing, rose from a pillar-like
+neck which sprang from a pair of massive
+shoulders and the arching chest
+of the trained athlete. Dr. Bird stood
+six feet two inches in his socks, and
+weighed over two hundred stripped. As
+he leaned back a curious glitter, which
+Carnes had learned to associate with
+keen interest, showed for an instant in
+his eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I will be glad to hear your story,
+Mr. Mitchell,&rdquo; he said softly. &ldquo;Tell it
+in your own way and try not to omit
+any detail, no matter how trivial it may
+be.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> seaman nodded and sat silent
+for a moment as though marshaling
+his thoughts.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The story really starts the afternoon
+of May 12th,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;although I
+didn&rsquo;t realize the importance of the
+first incident at the time. We were
+steaming along at good speed, hoping
+to make New York before too late for
+quarantine, when a hail came from the
+forward lookout. I was on watch and I
+went forward to see what was the matter.
+The lookout was Louis Green, an
+able bodied seaman and a good one, but
+a confirmed drunkard. I asked him
+what the trouble was and he turned toward
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_338' name='page_338'></a>338</span>
+me a face that was haggard with
+terror.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;I&rsquo;ve seen a sea serpent, Mr. Mitchell,&rsquo;
+he said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Nonsense!&rsquo; I replied sharply.
+&lsquo;You&rsquo;ve been drinking again.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He swore that he hadn&rsquo;t and I asked
+him to describe what he had seen. His
+teeth were chattering so that he could
+hardly speak, but he gasped out a story
+about seeing a monstrous head, a half
+mile across, he said, with a long snake
+body stretching out over the sea until
+the end of it was lost on the horizon. I
+turned my glass in the direction he
+pointed and of course there was nothing
+to be seen. The man&rsquo;s condition
+was such as to make him worse than
+useless as a lookout, so I relieved him
+and ordered him below. I took it for a
+touch of delirium tremens.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We were bucking a head wind, although
+not a very stiff one, and we
+didn&rsquo;t make port until after dark, so we
+anchored at quarantine, just off Staten
+Island, in forty fathoms of water, and
+Captain Murphy radioed for a Coast
+Guard boat to come out and lay by us
+for the night. As you have probably
+heard, we were carrying four millions
+in bar gold consigned to the Federal
+Reserve Bank of New York from the
+Bank of England.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Dr. Bird</span> and Carnes nodded. The
+inexplicable loss of the <i>Arethusa</i>
+had occupied much space in the papers
+ten days earlier.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The cutter came out, signalled, and
+dropped anchor about three hundred
+yards away. So far, everything was
+exactly as it should be. I walked to the
+stern of the boat and looked out across
+the Atlantic and then I realized that
+Green wasn&rsquo;t the only one who could
+see things. The wind had fallen and
+it was getting pretty dark, but not too
+dark to see things a pretty good distance
+away. As I looked I saw, or
+thought I saw, a huge black leathery
+mass come to the surface a mile or so
+away. There were two things on it that
+looked like eyes, and I had a feeling as
+though some malignant thing was staring
+at me. I rubbed my eyes and
+looked again, but the vision persisted,
+and I went forward to get a glass.
+When I came back the thing, whatever
+it was, had disappeared, but the water
+where it had been was boiling as
+though there were a great spring or
+something of the sort under the surface.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I trained my glass on the disturbed
+area, and I will take my oath that I saw
+a huge body like a snake emerge from
+the water. It lay in long undulations
+on the waves, and moved with them as
+though it were floating. It was quite a
+bit nearer than the first thing had been
+and I could see it plainly with the
+glass. I would judge it to be fifteen or
+twenty feet thick, and it actually
+seemed to disappear in the distance as
+Green had described it. The sight of
+the thing sent shivers up and down my
+spine, and I gave a hoarse shout. The
+lookout hurried to my side and asked
+me what the trouble was. I pointed and
+handed him the glass. He looked
+through it and handed it back to me
+with a curious expression.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;I can&rsquo;t see nothing, sir,&rsquo; he said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I took the glass from him and tried
+to level it but my hands were trembling
+so that I was forced to rest it on the
+rail. The lookout was right. There
+was absolutely nothing to be seen and
+the peculiar appearance of the sea had
+subsided to normal. The lookout was
+staring at me rather curiously and I
+knew that he was thinking the same
+thing about me as I had thought about
+Green in the afternoon. I made some
+kind of an excuse and went below to
+pull myself together. I caught a
+glimpse of myself in the glass. I was
+as white as a sheet, and the sweat was
+running off my face in drops.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcapq'><small>&ldquo;</small><span class='drop'>I</span><span class='dcap'> shook</span> myself together after a
+fashion and managed to persuade
+myself that the whole thing was just a
+trick of my mind, inspired by Green&rsquo;s
+vivid description of his delirious vision
+of the afternoon. Eight bells struck,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_339' name='page_339'></a>339</span>
+and when Mr. Fulton, the junior officer,
+relieved me, I laid down and tried to
+quiet myself. I didn&rsquo;t have much luck.
+Just before I took the deck again at
+midnight I slipped down to the forecastle
+to see how Green was coming
+along. He was lying in his bunk, wide
+awake, with staring eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;How are you feeling now, Green?&rsquo;
+I asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He looked up at me with an expression
+of a man who has looked death in
+the face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Ain&rsquo;t there no chance of dockin&rsquo;
+to-night, Mr. Mitchell?&rsquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Of course not,&rsquo; I said rather sharply.
+&lsquo;What&rsquo;s the matter with you? Are
+you afraid your sea serpent will get
+us?&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;He&rsquo;ll get us if we stay out here to-night,
+sir,&rsquo; he replied with an air of
+conviction. &lsquo;I saw the horrible mouth
+on him, large enough to bite this ship
+in half; and it had a beak like a bird,
+like a bloody parrot, sir. I saw its
+horrible body, too, with great black
+ulcers on the under side of it where the
+sharks had been after it. For all the
+shark takes a man now and then, he&rsquo;s
+the seaman&rsquo;s friend, sir, because he
+kills off the sea serpents who would
+take ship and all.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Nonsense, Green!&rsquo; I said sharply.
+&lsquo;Don&rsquo;t talk any more such foolishness
+or I&rsquo;ll have you ironed. You&rsquo;ve been
+drinking so much that you are seeing
+things, and I won&rsquo;t have the crew disturbed
+by your crazy talk.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;You won&rsquo;t think it&rsquo;s talk when
+those big eyes stare into yours to-night,
+Mr. Mitchell, and that body twists
+around you and squeezes the life out of
+you. I don&rsquo;t care whether you iron me
+or not; I know that I&rsquo;m doomed and so
+is everyone else; but I won&rsquo;t talk about
+it, sir. The crew might as well rest
+easy while they can, for there&rsquo;s no
+escape if we have to stay out here
+to-night.&rsquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;&lsquo;Well, be sure you keep a tight
+mouth then,&rsquo; I said, and left rather hurriedly.
+I was in a cold sweat, for his
+air of conviction, together with what I
+had seen, had shaken me pretty badly.
+I heard the watch changing up above,
+and knew there would be men in the
+forecastle in a minute. I didn&rsquo;t want
+to face them right then.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcapq'><small>&ldquo;</small><span class='drop'>M</span><span class='dcap'>r. Fulton</span> reported everything
+quiet when I went on
+deck to relieve him, and although I surveyed
+the water through a night glass
+for as far as I could see, there was
+nothing out of the way. The Coast
+Guard&rsquo;s lights were shining less than a
+quarter of a mile away, and things
+looked peaceful enough. The wind had
+gone down with the sun; the sea was
+almost glassy, and there was a bright
+moon.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;After going around the ship, I relieved
+all of the watch except two men
+for lookouts, and sent them below to
+get a good night&rsquo;s sleep. If I hadn&rsquo;t
+done that, some of them might be alive
+now.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I paced the deck for an hour trying
+to quiet my nerves, but really getting
+more nervous every minute. Three bells
+struck and I walked forward and leaned
+on the rail to watch the water. I saw
+a peculiar swirl as though some large
+body were coming to the surface from
+below, and then I saw&mdash;it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dr. Bird, I take a drink once in a
+while when I am on shore, but never at
+sea and never in excess, and I know it
+wasn&rsquo;t a vision of drink delirium. I
+felt perfectly normal aside from my
+nervousness, and I don&rsquo;t think it was
+fever. Either I saw it or I am insane,
+for it is as vivid to me as though I were
+standing on the <i>Arethusa&rsquo;s</i> deck and
+that monstrous horror was rising once
+more before my eyes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The seaman&rsquo;s face had become drawn
+and white as he talked, and drops of
+sweat were trickling from his chin.
+Carnes sat forward absorbed in his narrative
+while Dr. Bird sat back with a
+glitter in his black eyes and an expression
+of great attention on his face.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go on, Mr. Mitchell,&rdquo; the doctor
+said soothingly. &ldquo;Tell me just what
+you saw.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_340' name='page_340'></a>340</span></div>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Mitchell</span> shuddered and glanced
+quickly around the laboratory
+as though to assure himself that he
+was safe within four walls.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;From the surface of the sea,&rdquo; he
+went on, &ldquo;rose a massive body, black,
+and of the appearance of wet leather.
+It must have been a couple of hundred
+yards across, although the size of objects
+is often magnified by moonlight
+and my terror may have added to its
+size. In the midst of it were two great
+discs, thirty feet across, which glowed
+red with the reflected moonlight. It
+stared for a moment and then rose
+higher until it towered above the ship;
+and then I saw, or thought I saw, a
+huge gaping beak like a parrot&rsquo;s. It
+was as Green had described it, large
+enough to bite the <i>Arethusa</i> in half,
+and she was a ship of three thousand
+tons.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I was frozen with horror and
+couldn&rsquo;t move or cry out. As I watched,
+I saw the long snake-like body emerge
+from the water, and the estimate I had
+made of the size in the afternoon
+seemed pitifully inadequate. Presently
+a second and a third snake arose
+from the water, and then more, until
+the whole sea and the air above it
+seemed a writhing mass of huge
+snakes. I remember wondering why
+the watch of the Coast Guard cutter
+didn&rsquo;t sound an alarm, and then I
+realized that the thing had arisen on
+our port side and the cutter was on the
+starboard.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The mass of snakes writhed backward
+and forward, and then two of
+them rose in the air and hung over the
+ship. I could see the under side and
+I saw what Green had called the scars
+where the sharks had attacked. They
+were great cup-shaped depressions
+with vile white edges, and they did
+resemble huge sores or ulcers. They
+wavered over the ship for an instant,
+and then both of them dropped down
+on the deck.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I found my voice and I think that
+I gave a yell, but even as I opened my
+mouth, I realized the futility of it.
+The <i>Arethusa</i> was sucked down into
+the sea as though it had been a tiny
+chip. I saw the water rising to the
+rail, and I think I cried out again.
+The ship tilted and I felt myself falling.
+The next thing I knew was when
+I was in the hospital and was told that
+I had been raving for a week. I was
+afraid to tell my story for fear I would
+be put in an asylum, so I kept a tight
+tongue in my head until I was discharged.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Dr. Bird</span> mused for a moment as
+the seaman&rsquo;s voice stopped.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You cried out all right, Mr. Mitchell,&rdquo;
+he said. &ldquo;You gave two distinct
+shouts, both of which were heard by
+the watch on the <i>Wren</i>, the Coast
+Guard cutter. They reported that at
+1:30, the <i>Arethusa</i> sank without warning.
+As soon as he heard your shouts,
+the watch gave the alarm and the crew
+piled on deck. The <i>Arethusa</i> was gone
+completely and the <i>Wren</i> was tossing
+about like &lsquo;a chip in a whirlpool&rsquo; as
+they graphically described it. The
+<i>Wren</i> had steam up and they fought
+the waves and steamed over your anchoring
+ground looking for survivors,
+but they found none. The sea gradually
+subsided and they did the only
+thing they could do&mdash;dropped a buoy,
+to guide the salvage people, and
+radioed for assistance. The <i>Robin</i>
+came out and joined them, and both
+cutters stood by until daylight, but
+nothing unusual was seen. The insurance
+people are trying to salvage the
+wreck now, but so far they have made
+little headway.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That brings me to the rest of the
+story, the part that made me decide to
+come to you, Doctor,&rdquo; said the seaman.
+&ldquo;Did you see what happened to the
+divers yesterday?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dr. Bird nodded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I saw a brief account of it,&rdquo; he said.
+&ldquo;It seems that two of them were lost
+through their lines getting fouled and
+their air connections severed in some
+way. I don&rsquo;t believe the bodies have
+been recovered yet.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_341' name='page_341'></a>341</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;They never will be recovered, Doctor.
+I was discharged from the hospital
+yesterday and the papers were
+just out with an account of it. I went
+down to the dock where the <i>John
+MacLean</i>, the salvage ship, ties up,
+and I talked to Captain Starley who
+commands it. I have known him casually
+for some years, although not intimately,
+and he gave me a few more
+details than the press got. He didn&rsquo;t
+connect me up at first with the Mitchell
+who was reported lost on the <i>Arethusa</i>.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The first man to go down from the
+<i>MacLean</i> was Charley Melrose, an expert
+diver. He went down in a pressure
+outfit to the bottom and started to
+work. Everything was going along
+fine until the telephone suddenly rang
+and the man who answered it heard
+him say, &lsquo;Raise me, for God&rsquo;s sake!
+Hurry!&rsquo; The signal for raising was
+given, but they hadn&rsquo;t got him more
+than thirty feet from the bottom before
+there came a tug on the line and
+he was gone! The air line, the lifting
+cable and the telephone cord floated
+free and were reeled in. Melrose had
+been plucked off the end of that line
+as you or I would pluck off a grape.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Dr. Bird</span> leaned forward with the
+curious glitter again in his eye.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Go on,&rdquo; he said tersely.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Blake, the other diver, donned a
+suit and insisted on being lowered at
+once. Starley tried to dissuade him
+but he insisted on going down. They
+lowered him over the side with a
+twelve-foot steel-shod pike in his hand.
+He never got to the bottom. He had
+not been lowered more than a hundred
+feet when a scream came over the
+telephone, and again there was a jerk
+on the lines which threatened to wreck
+the reel&mdash;and the line came aboard
+with no diver on the end of it. At the
+same time, Starley told me, the sea
+boiled and churned as though the
+whole bottom were coming up, and his
+ship was tossed about as though it
+were in a violent storm, although it
+was calm enough for forty fathom salvage
+work and that is pretty quiet, you
+know. Half the time his screws were
+out of water and he had a hard time to
+keep from being capsized. He fought
+his way out of the disturbed area, and
+as soon as he did, it started to quiet
+down, and in ten minutes it was calm
+again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Starley was pretty badly shaken
+and besides he had lost both of his
+divers, so he came in and I saw him at
+the dock. When I heard his yarn, I
+took him into my confidence and told
+him what I had seen and that I proposed
+coming to you and asking your
+advice. I was afraid until I heard his
+story that it was merely a vision that
+I had had, but it certainly was no
+vision that plucked those two divers
+off their lines.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Has Captain Starley told that
+story to anyone else yet?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, Doctor, he hasn&rsquo;t. He promised
+not to talk until after I had seen you.
+I&rsquo;ll vouch for him; he&rsquo;ll keep his word
+through anything; and he is keeping
+his whole crew on board until he hears
+from me.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Dr. Bird</span> sprang to his feet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Mr. Mitchell,&rdquo; he said energetically,
+&ldquo;you have shown excellent
+judgment. Wire Captain Starley that
+you have seen me and that he is to
+hold his crew on board and to talk to
+no one until I get there. Carnes, telephone
+the Chief of Naval Operations
+and ask him to receive me in conference
+at once. Have him get the Secretary
+of the Navy in, too, if he is available.
+When you have finished that,
+telephone Bolton that you will be
+away from Washington indefinitely.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll telephone Admiral Buck for
+you, Doctor, but I don&rsquo;t dare telephone
+any such message to Bolton; he&rsquo;d take
+my head off. He has been running the
+whole service ragged lately, and this
+is my first afternoon off duty in a
+fortnight.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the trouble, a flood of new
+counterfeits?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_342' name='page_342'></a>342</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;No, the counterfeit division is getting
+along all right. In point of fact,
+they have lent us a dozen men. The
+trouble is a sudden big increase in
+Communist activity throughout the
+country, with the Young Labor party
+behind it. Bolton has been pretty
+jumpy since that Stokowski affair last
+August and he is afraid of another
+attempt of some sort on the President.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Young Labor party? I thought
+that gang was bankrupt and out of
+business, since the Coast Guard broke
+up their alien smuggling scheme.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They were down and out for a
+while, but they are in funds again&mdash;and
+how! They must have three or
+four millions at least.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where did they get it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what we have been trying to
+find out. The leaders have presented
+bars of gold to a dozen banks throughout
+the country and demanded specie.
+The banks shipped the gold to the
+mint and it was good gold, nine hundred
+and twenty-five fine. What we
+are trying to find out is how that gold
+got into the United States.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A shipment of that size should be
+easy to trace.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It would seem so, but it hasn&rsquo;t
+been. We have accounted for every
+pound of every shipment that has
+come in through a port of entry, and
+we have checked almost that close on
+the output of every mine in the United
+States. If the gold came from Russia,
+it would have had to cross Europe, and
+we can&rsquo;t get any trace of it from
+abroad. It looks as though they were
+<i>making</i> it.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Dr. Bird</span> rubbed his head thoughtfully.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Possible, but hardly probable,&rdquo; he
+said. &ldquo;How much did you say they
+had?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Over three millions in thirty-pound
+bars. Each bar shows signs of having
+a mint mark chiselled off, but that
+don&rsquo;t help much for they have done
+too good a job. It has us pretty well
+bluffed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Again Dr. Bird rubbed his head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Telephone Admiral Buck, and then
+phone Bolton and tell him exactly
+what I told you to: that you will
+be away indefinitely. When he gets
+through exploding, tell him that you
+are going with me and that possibly,
+just barely possibly, we might be on
+the trail of that gold shipment.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On the trail of the gold!&rdquo; gasped
+Carnes. &ldquo;Surely, Doctor, you don&rsquo;t
+think&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Once in a while, old dear,&rdquo; replied
+the Doctor with a chuckle, &ldquo;which is
+more than anyone in the Secret Service
+does. You might tell Bolton that
+I said that, but hang up quickly if you
+do. I don&rsquo;t want the wires of my telephone
+melted off. No, Carnesy, I have
+no miraculous inspiration as to where
+that gold is coming from; I just have
+a plain old-fashioned hunch, and that
+hunch is that we are going to have lots
+of fun and more than our share of
+danger before we see Washington
+again. After you get through bearding
+Bolton in his den, you might call
+the Chief of the Air Corps and ask
+him to have a bomber held at Langley
+Field subject to my orders. If he
+squawks any, I&rsquo;ll talk to him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He turned to a telephone which
+stood on his desk and lifted the receiver.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Get Mr. Lambertson on the wire,&rdquo;
+he said. &ldquo;He is the chief technician
+of the Pyrex Glass Works at Corning,
+New Jersey.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> <i>U.S.S. Minneconsin</i> steamed
+out of New York harbor and
+headed down toward the lower bay.
+On her forward deck rested a huge
+globe. The bottom quarter of the
+sphere was made of some dark opaque
+substance but the upper portion was
+transparent as crystal. Through the
+walls could be seen a quantity of apparatus
+resting on the opaque bottom
+portion. Two mechanics from the Bureau
+of Standards were making final
+adjustments of one of the pieces of
+apparatus, which resembled a tank
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_343' name='page_343'></a>343</span>
+fitted with a piston geared to an electric
+motor. From the tank, tubes ran
+to four hollow pipes, an inch and a
+half in diameter, which ran through
+the skin and extended thirty inches
+from the outer skin of the twenty-foot
+sphere. Dr. Bird stood near talking
+with the executive officer of the ship
+and from time to time giving a brief
+word of direction to the mechanics.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s safer than you might think,
+Commander,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;In the first
+place, that globe is not made of ordinary
+glass; it is made of vitrilene, a
+new semi-malleable glass which was
+developed at the Bureau and which is
+being made on an experimental scale
+for us by the Pyrex people. It is much
+stronger than ordinary glass, and is
+not sensitive to shock. It is also perfectly
+transparent to ultra-violet light,
+being superior even to rock crystal or
+fused quartz in that respect. The
+walls, as you have noticed, are four
+inches thick, and I have calculated that
+the ball will stand a uniform external
+pressure of thirty-five hundred atmospheres,
+the pressure which would be
+encountered at a depth of about twenty
+miles. I believe that it will stand a
+squeeze of six thousand tons without
+buckling, and it is impossible to fracture
+it by shock. It could be dropped
+from the top of the Woolworth Building,
+and it would just bounce.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It seems incredible that it could
+stand such a pressure as you have
+named.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My figures are conservative ones.
+Lambertson calculated them even higher,
+but we allowed for the fact that
+this is the first large mass of the material
+to be cast, and lowered them.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcapq'><small>&ldquo;</small><span class='drop'>B</span><span class='dcap'>ut</span> suppose your lifting cable
+should break?&rdquo; objected the
+naval officer. &ldquo;The outfit weighs a
+good many tons.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You notice that the lower quarter is
+made of lead. The specific gravity of
+the entire globe when sealed up tight
+with two men in it is only a little more
+than unity. In the water its weight
+is so little that a three-inch manilla
+hawser would raise it, let alone a steel
+cable. I have another safety device.
+Granted that the cable should snap, I
+can detach the lead from it and it
+would shoot to the surface like a
+rocket.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How long can you remain under
+water in it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A week, if necessary. I have an
+oxygen tank and a carbon dioxide removing
+apparatus which will keep the
+air in good condition. The globe is
+electrically lighted, and can be heated
+if necessary. Should my telephone
+line become fouled and broken, I have
+a radio set which will enable me to
+communicate with you. I can&rsquo;t see
+that it is especially dangerous; not
+nearly as much so as a submarine.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is your object in going down,
+if I may ask?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To take pictures and to explore the
+wreck if we can. The globe is equipped
+with huge floodlights and excellent
+cameras. The salvage people are having
+a little trouble and we are trying
+to help them out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You mentioned exploring. Can you
+leave the globe while it is under
+water?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. There is a locking device for
+doing so. A man in a diving suit can
+enter the lock and fill it with water.
+Once the external pressure is released
+he can open the outer door and step
+out. Coming back, he seals the outer
+door and the man inside blows out the
+lock and compressed air and then the
+inner door can be opened. It is the
+same principle as a torpedo tube.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>A jangle</span> of bells interrupted
+them and the <i>Minneconsin</i>
+slowed down. Commander Lawrence
+stepped to the rail and gave a sharp
+order to the navigating officer on the
+bridge. The bells jangled again and
+the ship&rsquo;s engines stopped.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We are almost over the buoy, Doctor,&rdquo;
+he said.</p>
+<p>Dr. Bird nodded and spoke to the
+two mechanics. With a few final
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_344' name='page_344'></a>344</span>
+touches to the apparatus they emerged
+from the globe and Dr. Bird entered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come on, Carnes,&rdquo; he called. &ldquo;No
+backing out at the last minute.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Carnes stepped forward with a sickly
+smile and joined the Doctor in the
+huge sphere.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right, boys; close her up.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The mechanics swung the outer door
+into place with a crane. Both the edge
+of the door and the surface against
+which it fitted had been ground flat
+and were in addition faced with soft
+rubber. Bolts were fastened in the
+door which passed through holes in the
+main sphere, and Dr. Bird spun nuts
+onto them and tightened them with a
+heavy wrench. He and Carnes lifted
+the smaller inner door into place and
+bolted it tight. Dr. Bird stepped to
+the telephone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lower away,&rdquo; he directed.</p>
+<p>From a boom attached to the <i>Minneconsin&rsquo;s</i>
+forward fighting top, a huge
+steel cable swung down, and the latch
+at the end of the cable was closed over
+a vitrilene ring which was fastened to
+the top of the sphere. The cable tightened
+and the globe with the two men
+in it was lifted over the side of the
+battleship and lowered gently into the
+water. Carnes involuntarily ducked
+and threw up his hand as the waters
+closed over them. Dr. Bird laughed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look up, Carnes,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>Carnes gasped as he looked up and
+saw the surface of the water above
+him. Dr. Bird laughed again and
+turned to the telephone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lower away,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Everything
+is tight.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> globe descended into the
+depths of the sea. Darker and
+darker it grew until only a faint twilight
+glow filled the sphere. A dark
+bulk loomed before them. Dr. Bird
+snapped on one of his huge floodlights
+and pointed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The <i>Arethusa</i>,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>The ill-fated vessel lay on her side
+with a huge jagged hole torn in her
+fabric amidships.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s where her boilers burst,&rdquo;
+explained the Doctor. &ldquo;Luckily we
+have a hard bottom to deal with. Let&rsquo;s
+see if we can locate any of Mitchell&rsquo;s
+sea serpents.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He turned on other flood lights and
+swept the bottom of the sea with them.
+The huge beams bored out into the
+water for a quarter of a mile, but nothing
+unusual was to be seen. Dr. Bird
+turned his attention again to the wreck.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Things look normal from this side,&rdquo;
+he said after a prolonged scrutiny.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll have the <i>Minneconsin</i> steam
+around it while we look it over.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In response to his telephone orders
+the ship above them swung around the
+wreck in a circle, and Carnes and the
+Doctor viewed each side in turn. But
+nothing of a suspicious nature made
+its appearance. The sphere stopped
+opposite the hole in the side and
+Dr. Bird turned to Carnes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to put on a diving suit
+and explore that wreck,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;If
+there ever was any danger, it isn&rsquo;t apparent
+now; and I can&rsquo;t find out anything
+until I get inside.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t do it, Doctor!&rdquo; cried Carnes.
+&ldquo;Remember what happened to the
+other divers!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcapq'><small>&ldquo;</small><span class='drop'>W</span><span class='dcap'>e</span> don&rsquo;t know what happened
+to them, Carnes. No matter
+what it was, there is no danger apparent
+right now, and I&rsquo;ve got to get into
+that ship before I can get any real information.
+We could have lowered an
+under-sea camera and learned as much
+as we have so far.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let me go instead of you, Doctor.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m sorry to refuse you, old dear,
+but frankly, I wouldn&rsquo;t trust your
+judgment as to what you had seen if
+you went alone; and we can&rsquo;t both go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If we both went, who would work
+the air to let us back in? No, this is
+a one-man job and I&rsquo;m the one to do it.
+While I am gone, keep a sharp lookout,
+and if you see anything unusual call
+me at once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How can I call you?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_345' name='page_345'></a>345</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;On this small radio phone. A pair
+of receivers tuned to the right wave-length
+are in my diving helmet, and I
+will be able to hear you although I
+can&rsquo;t reply. I won&rsquo;t be gone long:
+I have only a small air tank, large
+enough to keep me going for thirty
+minutes. Now help me into my suit
+and keep a sharp watch. A timely
+warning may save my life if anything
+happens.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With Carnes&rsquo; assistance, Dr. Bird
+donned a deep-sea diving outfit and
+screwed down the helmet. He crawled
+through the inner door into the lock
+and lifted the inner door into place.
+Carnes fastened the door with nuts
+and the Doctor opened a pair of
+valves in the outer door and filled the
+lock with water. He removed the
+outer door; and, taking in one hand
+a steel-shod twelve-foot pike with a
+hook on the end, and in the other a
+waterproof flashlight, he sallied forth.
+As he left the shell he paused for a
+moment, and then returned and picked
+up the heavy wrench with which he
+had removed the nuts holding the outer
+door into place. He fastened the tool
+to the belt of his suit. Then, with a
+wave of his hand toward the detective,
+he approached the hulk.</p>
+<p>The hole in the side was too high
+for him to reach, but he hooked the
+end of his pike in one of the joints of
+the <i>Arethusa&rsquo;s</i> plates and climbed
+slowly and painfully up the side of the
+vessel. As he disappeared into the
+hull, Carnes realized with a sudden
+start that he had been watching his
+friend and neglecting the duty imposed
+on him of keeping a sharp
+watch. He turned quickly to the floodlights
+and searched the sea bottom.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Nothing</span> appeared, and the minutes
+moved as slowly as hours
+should. Carnes felt that he had been
+submerged alone for weeks, and his
+nerves grew so tense that he felt that
+he would scream in another instant.
+A sudden thought sobered him like a
+dash of cold water. If he screamed,
+Dr. Bird would take it for an alarm
+signal and possibly be afraid to emerge
+from the vessel. His watch showed
+him that the Doctor had been gone for
+twenty-five minutes and he moved
+slowly to the radio transmitter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dr. Bird,&rdquo; he said slowly and distinctly,
+&ldquo;you have been gone nearly
+thirty minutes. Nothing alarming has
+appeared but I will feel better when I
+see you coming back.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He glued his eyes on the opening in
+the ship&rsquo;s side and waited. Five minutes
+passed, and then ten, with no
+signs of the Doctor. Carnes moved
+again to the receiver.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It has been over half an hour. Doctor,&rdquo;
+he cried in a pleading voice. &ldquo;If
+you are all right, for God&rsquo;s sake show
+yourself. I am frantic with worry.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Another five minutes passed, and the
+sweat dripped in a steady stream from
+the detective&rsquo;s chin. Suddenly he gave
+a sob of relief and sank back against
+the side of the globe. A bulky figure
+showed at the edge of the hole, and
+Dr. Bird climbed slowly and heavily
+out of the hold and dropped to the
+sea bottom. He lay prone for a moment
+before he rose and made his way
+with evident effort toward the sphere.
+He entered the compartment and with
+a heroic effort lifted the outer door
+into place, and feebly and with fumbling
+fingers placed nuts on the bolts.
+His hands wandered uncertainly toward
+the valves and closed the upper
+one. He waved his hand toward Carnes
+and sank in a heap on the floor of the
+lock.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>With</span> trembling hands Carnes
+connected the air and opened
+the valve. Air flowed into the lock
+and the water was gradually forced
+out. When the lock was empty, he
+waited for Dr. Bird to close the outer
+valve but the Doctor did not move.
+Carnes tore at the bolts which held
+the inner door and threw his weight
+against it. It held against his assault,
+and he thought frantically. An inspiration
+came to him, and he disconnected
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_346' name='page_346'></a>346</span>
+the air valve. With a whistling
+rush, the air from the lock rushed into
+the sphere and he forced open the
+inner door. A stream of sea water
+drove against his feet through the open
+valve, and he reached for the valve to
+close it. The force of the water held
+it open for a moment, but he threw
+every ounce of his strength into the
+effort. The valve slowly closed.</p>
+<p>It was beyond his strength to haul
+the heavy Doctor with his pressure
+diving suit through the restricted confines
+of the inner door, so Carnes
+wormed his way into the lock and with
+trembling fingers unscrewed the helmet
+of the Doctor&rsquo;s diving suit. The
+helmet clanged to the floor and Carnes
+scooped up his hands full of water and
+dashed it into the Doctor&rsquo;s face. There
+was no response and he was at his
+wit&rsquo;s end. He sprang for the radio to
+order the sphere hauled up when his
+glance fell on the oxygen tank. It
+took him only a moment to connect a
+rubber hose to the tank, and in a few
+seconds a blast of the life-giving gas
+was blowing into the scientist&rsquo;s face.
+Dr. Bird gave a convulsive gasp or
+two and opened his eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Shut off the juice, Carnes,&rdquo; he said
+faintly. &ldquo;Too much of that&rsquo;s bad.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Carnes shut off the oxygen and Dr.
+Bird struggled to a sitting position
+and inhaled deep breaths.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That was a narrow squeak, old
+dear,&rdquo; he said faintly. &ldquo;Give me a hand
+and I&rsquo;ll climb in.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>With</span> the detective&rsquo;s aid he
+climbed into the sphere and
+Carnes fastened the inner door. Slowly
+the Doctor rid himself of the diving
+suit and lay prone on the floor, his
+breath still coming in gasps.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thanks for your warning about the
+time, Carnes,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;I knew that
+my air supply was running short but
+I was caught down there and couldn&rsquo;t
+readily free myself. I thought for a
+while that my time had come, but it
+wasn&rsquo;t so written. By the looks of
+things, I freed myself just in time.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Did you find out anything?&rdquo; asked
+the detective eagerly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I did,&rdquo; replied Dr. Bird grimly.
+&ldquo;For one thing, the gold is no longer
+in the hold of the <i>Arethusa</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s gone?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Clean as a whistle, every bar of it.
+A hole has been cut in the vault around
+the combination, and the bars slid back
+and the door opened. The gold has
+been stolen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Might it not have been stolen before
+the vessel sank?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The idea occurred to me of course,
+and I examined things pretty carefully.
+I know that the theft occurred
+after the vessel sank.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How could you tell?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;For one thing, the hole was cut
+with an under-water cutting torch.
+For the second, look here.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> Doctor rolled up his trousers
+and showed the detective his leg.
+Carnes cried out as he saw huge purple
+welts on it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What caused that?&rdquo; he cried.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As I entered the vault, I stepped
+full into a steel bear trap which was
+set there for the purpose of catching
+and holding anyone who entered. Someone
+has visited the <i>Arethusa</i>, since she
+sank, and looted her, and also arranged
+so that any diver who got as far as the
+vault would never return to the surface
+to tell of it. Luckily for myself, I carried
+a heavy wrench and was able to
+free myself. Most divers don&rsquo;t carry
+such a thing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But who could have done it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what we have got to find out,
+and we aren&rsquo;t going to do it down
+here. Give the word to have us hauled
+up; and, Carnes, don&rsquo;t mention anything
+about the looting of the vessel.
+Allow it to be understood that I
+couldn&rsquo;t get into the hold. We&rsquo;ll head
+back for New York at once. I want to
+have a few small changes made in this
+sphere before we use it again. While
+I am doing that, I want you to get hold
+of the Coast Guard or the Immigration
+Service or whoever it is that has the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_347' name='page_347'></a>347</span>
+complete records in that case of alien
+smuggling, by the Young Labor party.
+When you get the information, report
+to me and we&rsquo;ll go over it. You might
+also drop a hint to Captain Starley
+that will stop all further attempts at
+salvage operations for a few days.
+Tell him that I&rsquo;ll arrange to have a
+Coast Guard cutter guard the locality
+of the wreck.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Won&rsquo;t that be rather risky for the
+cutter?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think not. The gold is gone and
+there is no reason to apprehend any
+further danger in that locality, at least
+for the present.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>At</span> nine o&rsquo;clock next morning Carnes
+and Dr. Bird sat in the office
+of Lieutenant Commander Minden of
+the United States Coast Guard, listening
+intently to the history of the alien
+smuggling case. Commander Minden
+was saying:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Their boats would load up and
+clear ostensibly for Rio de Janeiro or
+some other South American port, but
+once they were in the Atlantic, they
+would alter their course and head from
+the Massachusetts coast. Of course,
+we had no right to interfere with them
+on the high seas, and they never came
+closer than fifty miles of our coast line.
+When they got that close, they would
+cruise slowly back and forth for a few
+days and then steam away south to the
+port they had cleared for. When they
+got there, of course there were no passengers
+on board.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We patrolled the coast carefully
+while they were around but we never
+got any indication of any landing of
+aliens and yet we knew they were being
+landed in some way. We drew
+lines so close that a cork couldn&rsquo;t get
+by without being seen and we even had
+the air patrolled, but with no results.
+Eventually the air patrol was the thing
+that gave them away.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They had been operating so successfully
+that they evidently got careless
+and started a load off late in the
+night so they didn&rsquo;t reach the coast by
+dawn. A Navy plane was flying along
+the coast-line about twelve miles off
+when they spotted a submarine running
+parallel with the coast, headed
+north. It didn&rsquo;t look like an American
+craft and they went on and radioed
+Washington and found that we had no
+under-sea craft in that neighborhood.
+They returned to their patrol and followed
+the sub for a matter of thirty
+or forty miles up the coast, and then
+it turned in right toward the shore.
+The shore line there is rocky, and, at
+the point where the sub was heading,
+it falls sheer about two hundred
+fathoms. The sub ran right at the
+cliff and disappeared from view.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Lieutenant Commander
+Minden</span> paused impressively.
+Carnes and Dr. Bird set forward in
+their chairs, for it was evident that the
+crux of the story was at hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When the plane reported what they
+had seen, we knew how those aliens
+were being landed. The point where
+the sub went in gave us a good idea of
+the location of their base and we threw
+a cordon of men around and searched.
+A Navy sub was sent to the scene and
+they reported that there was a tunnel
+opening into the rock, about a hundred
+fathoms under water, running for they
+had no idea how far under the land.
+They stayed to guard the hole while
+we combed the land. It took us a week
+to locate the place, but we traced some
+truck loads of food and finally found
+it. This tunnel ran under the land for
+a mile and then ended in a large cave
+underground. The Young Labor party
+had established a regular receiving
+depot there, and took the aliens from
+the sub and kept them for a day or
+two until they had a chance to load
+them into trucks and run them into
+Boston or some other town in the
+night.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Once we had the place spotted, we
+sent a gang in and captured the whole
+works without any trouble. The underground
+cavern had no natural opening
+to the surface, but one had been made
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_348' name='page_348'></a>348</span>
+by blasting. We captured the whole
+lot and then sealed the end of the hole
+with rock and concrete. That was the
+end of the affair.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Thank you, Commander; you have
+given us a very graphic description of
+it. I suppose you could find the entrance
+which was sealed up?&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcapq'><small>&ldquo;</small><span class='drop'>E</span><span class='dcap'>asily</span>. I led the raiding party.
+I forgot to mention one blunder
+we made. Evidently some word of
+our plans leaked out, for the sub which
+was guarding the outer end of the tunnel
+was called away by a radio message
+supposed to be from the Navy Department.
+It had gone only a short distance,
+however, when the commander
+smelled a rat and made his way back.
+He was too late. He was just in time
+to see the sub emerge from the hole
+and head into the open sea. He gave
+chase, but the other sub was faster
+than the Navy boat and it got clear
+away. The leader of the gang must
+have been on it, for we didn&rsquo;t get him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who was the leader?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;From some records we captured, his
+name was Ivan Saranoff. I never saw
+him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Saranoff?&rdquo; said Dr. Bird thoughtfully.
+&ldquo;The name seems familiar.
+Where have I&mdash;Thunder! I know
+now. He was at one time a member of
+the faculty of St. Petersburg. He was
+one of the leading biologists of his
+time. Carnes, we&rsquo;ve found our man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you are thinking of Saranoff, I
+am afraid you are mistaken, Doctor,&rdquo;
+said Commander Minden. &ldquo;Neither he
+nor his submarine have ever been heard
+of since and it has been generally conceded
+that they were lost at sea. We
+had some pretty rough weather just
+after that affair.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rough weather doesn&rsquo;t mean much
+to a sub, Commander. I expect that
+he&rsquo;s our man. At any rate, the place
+we want to go is the end of that
+tunnel.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m at your service, Doctor.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Carnes, get the location of that tunnel
+entrance from Commander Minden
+and order the <i>Minneconsin</i> to proceed
+north along the coast to that vicinity
+and stand by for radio orders. I am
+going to telephone Mitchell Field and
+get a plane. We have no time to lose.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> plane from Mitchell Field
+roared down to a landing, and
+Carnes, Dr. Bird and Commander Minden
+dismounted from the rear cockpit
+and looked around. They had landed
+in a smooth field at the base of a rise
+almost rugged enough to be called a
+mountain. A group of three men were
+standing near them as they got out of
+the plane. One of the men approached.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Dr. Bird?&rdquo; asked the newcomer.
+&ldquo;I am Tom Harron, United States
+Marshal. These two men are deputies.
+I understand that I am to report to
+you for orders.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m glad to know you, Mr. Harron.
+This is Operative Carnes of the Secret
+Service and Commander Minden of the
+Coast Guard. We are going to explore
+an underground cavern that is located
+in this vicinity.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you mean the one where they
+used to smuggle aliens? That is closed
+up. I was in charge of that work and
+we closed it tight as a drum two years
+ago.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Can you find the entrance?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sure. It isn&rsquo;t over a mile from
+here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lead the way, then. We want to
+take a look at it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The marshal led the way toward the
+eminence and took a path which led
+up a gully in its side. He paused for
+a moment to take his bearings and then
+turned sharply to his left and climbed
+part way up the side of the ravine.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here it is,&rdquo; he announced. An expression
+of astonishment crossed his
+face and he examined the ground
+closely. &ldquo;By Golly, Doc,&rdquo; he went on
+as he straightened up, &ldquo;this place has
+been opened since I left it!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Dr. Bird</span> hurried forward and
+joined him. The heavy stone and
+concrete with which the entrance to
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_349' name='page_349'></a>349</span>
+the cavern had been sealed were undisturbed,
+but in the side of the hill was
+set a steel door beside the concrete.
+There was no sign of a keyhole or
+other means of entering it.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Was this steel door part of your
+work?&rdquo; asked Carnes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, sir, it wasn&rsquo;t. We sealed it
+solid. That door has been put there
+since.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Dr. Bird closely examined the structure.
+He tapped it and went around
+the edges and then straightened up
+and took a small pocket compass from
+his pocket and opened the case. The
+needle swung crazily for a moment and
+then pointed straight toward the door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A magnetic lock,&rdquo; he exclaimed.
+&ldquo;If we could find the power line it
+would be easy to force, but finding that
+line might take us a week. At any
+rate, we have found out what we were
+after. This is their base from which
+they are operating. Mr. Harron, I
+want you to station a guard armed
+with rifles at this door day and night
+until I personally relieve you. Remember,
+until I relieve you, in person.
+Verbal or written orders don&rsquo;t go.
+Capture or kill anyone who tries to
+enter or leave the cavern through this
+entrance. Just now we&rsquo;ll find that cavern
+more vulnerable from the sea end,
+and that is where I mean to attack.
+We&rsquo;ll force that door and explore from
+this end later. Commander Minden,
+you may stay here with Mr. Harron,
+if you like, or you may come with
+Carnes and me. We are going on board
+the <i>Minneconsin</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> Mitchell Field plane roared
+to a take-off and bore south along
+the coast. Half an hour of flying
+brought them in view of the battleship
+steaming at full speed up the coast.
+Dr. Bird radioed instructions to the
+ship, and an hour later a launch picked
+them up from the beach and took them
+out. As soon as they were on board
+they resumed their progress, and in
+two hours the peak that Dr. Bird had
+marked as a landmark was opposite.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Steam in as close to the shore as
+you can safely,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and then
+lower us. Once we are down, you will
+be guided by our telephoned instructions.
+Come on, Carnes, let&rsquo;s go.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The detective followed him into the
+sphere as the <i>Minneconsin</i> edged up
+toward the shore. The huge ball was
+lifted from the deck and lowered gently
+into two hundred fathoms of water.
+It was pitch dark at that depth, and
+Dr. Bird switched on one floodlight
+and studied the cliff which rose a hundred
+yards from them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We have missed the place, Carnes,&rdquo;
+he said. &ldquo;We&rsquo;ll have them pull us up
+a few hundred feet and then steam
+along the coast.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He turned to the telephone and the
+sphere rose while the battleship
+steamed slowly ahead, the vitrilene
+ball following in her wake. For a
+quarter of a mile they continued on
+their way, and then Dr. Bird halted
+the ship.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What depth are we?&rdquo; he asked.
+&ldquo;Eighty fathoms? All right, lower us,
+please.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> ball sank until it rested on the
+sea bottom, and Dr. Bird turned on
+two additional floodlights and studied
+the surroundings. The bed of the
+ocean was literally covered with lobster
+and crab shell, with the bones of fish
+scattered here and there among them.
+A few bones of land animals were
+mixed with the debris and Carnes gave
+a gasp as Dr. Bird pointed out to him a
+diving helmet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We are on the right track,&rdquo; said the
+scientist grimly. He stepped to the
+telephone and ordered the sphere
+raised to one hundred fathoms. The
+ship moved forward along the coast
+until Dr. Bird again stepped to the
+telephone and halted it. Before them
+yawned the entrance to the underground
+tunnel. It was about two hundred
+feet high and three hundred
+across, and their most powerful beams
+would not penetrate to the end of it.
+A pile of debris could be seen on the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_350' name='page_350'></a>350</span>
+floor of the tunnel and Carnes fancied
+that he could see another diving helmet
+among the litter. Dr. Bird pointed
+toward the side of the cavern.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;See those floodlights fastened to
+the cliff so that their beams will sweep
+across the mouth of the tunnel when
+they are lighted?&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;Apparently
+the cave is used as a prison and
+the light beams are the bars. The
+creature is not at home just now or
+the bars would be up. My God! Look
+at that, Carnes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Carnes stared and echoed the Doctor&rsquo;s
+cry of surprise. Clinging to a
+shelf of rock which extended out from
+the wall of the cavern and half hidden
+among the seaweed was a huge marine
+creature. It looked like a huge black
+slug with rudimentary eyes and mouth.
+The thing was fifty feet in length and
+fully fifteen feet in diameter. It hung
+there, moving sluggishly as though
+breathing, and rudimentary tentacles
+projecting from one end moved in the
+water.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is it, Doctor?&rdquo; asked Carnes
+in a voice of awe.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is a typical trochosphere of the
+giant octopus, the devil fish of Indian
+Ocean legend, multiplied a thousand
+times,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;When the octopus
+lays its eggs, they hatch out into the
+larval form. The free swimming larva
+is known as a trochosphere, and I am
+positive that that is what we see; but
+look at the size of the thing! Man
+alive, if that ever developed, I can&rsquo;t
+conceive of its dimensions!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcapq'><small>&ldquo;</small><span class='drop'>I</span><span class='dcap'> have</span> seen pictures of a huge
+octopus pulling down a ship,&rdquo;
+said Carnes, &ldquo;but I always fancied they
+were imaginary.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are. This monstrosity before
+us is no product of nature. A dozen
+of them would depopulate the seas in
+a year. It is a hideous parody of
+nature conceived in the brain of a madman
+and produced by some glandular
+disturbance. Saranoff spent years in
+glandular experimentation, and no
+doubt he has managed to stimulate the
+thyroid of a normal octopus and produce
+a giant. I fancy that the immediate
+parent of the thing before us
+was of normal size, and so, probably,
+are its brothers and sisters. The
+phenomenon of giantism of this nature
+occurs in alternate generations and
+then only in rare instances. Its grandparent
+may not be far away, however.
+I wish it was safe to use a submarine
+to explore that cavern.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why isn&rsquo;t it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Any creature powerful enough to
+pull the <i>Arethusa</i> under water would
+crush a frail submarine without effort.
+Anyway, a Navy sub isn&rsquo;t built for
+under-water exploration like this ball
+is. The window space is quite limited
+and they aren&rsquo;t equipped with powerful
+floodlights. I would like to be able
+to reach that thing and destroy it, but
+it can wait until later. The best thing
+we can do is to put out our lights and
+wait.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>His hand sought the light switch,
+and the globe became dark. Only a
+tiny glimmer of light came down to
+them from the surface, a hundred
+fathoms above. In the darkness they
+stared into the depths of the sea.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>For</span> an hour they waited and then
+Dr. Bird grasped Carnes by the
+shoulder and pointed. Far in the distance
+could be seen a tiny point of
+light. It wavered and winked and at
+times disappeared, but it was gradually
+approaching them. Dr. Bird stepped
+to the telephone and the <i>Minneconsin</i>
+moved a hundred yards further from
+the shore. The light disappeared again
+as though hidden by some opaque body.
+Their eyes had become accustomed to
+the dim light and they could dimly see
+a long snake-like body approach the
+globe and then suddenly withdraw.</p>
+<p>The light appeared again only a few
+hundred yards away. The water
+swirled and the sphere swayed drunkenly
+as some gigantic body moved past
+it with express train speed and entered
+the mouth of the cavern. The light
+turned toward them and they could see
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_351' name='page_351'></a>351</span>
+the dim outlines of a small submarine
+on which it was mounted. Another
+rush of water came as the object which
+had entered the cave started to leave it,
+and the light swung around. It bore
+on a huge black body, and was reflected
+with a red glow from huge eyes, and
+the creature backed again into the cave.
+Back and forth across the mouth of the
+cavern the light played, and the watchers
+caught a glimpse of a huge parrot
+beak which could have engulfed a
+freight car. From the cavern projected
+twisting tentacles of gargantuan dimensions,
+and red eyes, thirty feet in
+diameter, glared balefully at them. For
+several minutes the light of the submarine
+played across the mouth of the
+cave, and then the floodlights on the
+cliff sprang into full glow and bathed
+the ball and the mouth of the tunnel in
+a flood of light.</p>
+<p>Before their horrified gaze was an
+octopus of a size to make them disbelieve
+their eyes. The submarine had
+moved up to within a few feet of them,
+and the light from it played full on the
+ball. The submarine maneuvered in
+the vicinity, keeping the ball full in
+the beam of its light, and then drew
+back. As it did so, the floodlights on
+the cliff died out and the beam of the
+submarine&rsquo;s light was directed away
+from them. Dr. Bird jumped to the
+telephone.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Head straight out to sea and full
+speed ahead!&rdquo; he shouted. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t try
+to pull us in; tow us!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> ball swayed as the <i>Minneconsin&rsquo;s</i>
+mighty engines responded to
+his orders and the cliff wall disappeared.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;As long as they know we&rsquo;re here, we
+might as well announce our presence
+in good style,&rdquo; said the doctor grimly
+as he closed a switch and threw all of
+the sphere&rsquo;s huge lights into action.
+He had turned on the lights just in
+time, for even as he did so a mighty
+tentacle shot out of the darkness and
+wrapped itself around the ball. For a
+moment it clung there and then was
+withdrawn.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The thing can&rsquo;t stand light,&rdquo; remarked
+the doctor as he threw off the
+switch. &ldquo;That sub was herding it like
+a cow by the use of a light beam. As
+long as we are lighted up we are safe
+from attack.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then for God&rsquo;s sake turn on the
+lights!&rdquo; cried Carnes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I want it to attack us,&rdquo; replied the
+doctor calmly. &ldquo;We have no offensive
+weapons and only by meeting an attack
+can we harm the thing.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As he spoke there came a soft whisper
+of sound from the vitrilene walls
+and they were thrown from their feet
+by a sudden jerk. Dr. Bird stumbled
+to the switch and closed it, and the ball
+was flooded with light. Two arms were
+now on them but they were slowly
+withdrawn as the lights glared forth.
+The huge outlines of the beast could be
+seen as it followed them toward the
+surface. Its great eyes glared at them
+hungrily. The submarine was visible
+only as a speck of light in the distance.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> <i>Minneconsin&rsquo;s</i> speed was picking
+up under the urge of her huge
+steam turbines, and the ball was nearing
+the surface. The sea was light
+enough now that they could see for
+quite a distance. The telephone bell
+jangled and Dr. Bird picked the receiver
+from its hook.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hello,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;What&rsquo;s that? You
+can? By all means, fire. Yes, indeed,
+we&rsquo;re well out of danger; we must be
+thirty or forty feet down. Watch the
+fun now,&rdquo; he went on to Carnes as
+he replaced the receiver. &ldquo;The beast is
+showing above the surface and they&rsquo;re
+going to shell it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They watched the surface and suddenly
+there came a flash of light followed
+by a dull boom of sound. The
+huge octopus suddenly sank below
+them, thrashing its arms about wildly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A hit!&rdquo; shouted Dr. Bird into the
+telephone. &ldquo;Get it again if it shows
+up. I want it to get good and mad.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He turned off the lights in the ball
+and the octopus attacked again. The
+shell had taught it caution and it kept
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_352' name='page_352'></a>352</span>
+well down, but three huge arms came
+up from the depths of the sea and
+wrapped themselves about the ball. The
+forward motion stopped for a moment,
+and then came a jerk that threw them
+down. The ball started to sink.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Our cable has parted!&rdquo; cried the
+doctor. &ldquo;Turn on the lights!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Carnes</span> closed the switch. The
+ball was so covered with the huge
+tentacles that they could see nothing,
+but the light had its usual effect and
+they were released. The ball sank toward
+the bottom and they could see the
+huge cephalopod lying below watching
+them. Blood was flowing from a wound
+near one of its eyes where the <i>Minneconsin&rsquo;s</i>
+shell had found its mark.</p>
+<p>Toward the huge monster they sank
+until they lay on the bottom of the
+ocean and a few yards from it. In an
+instant the sea became opaque and they
+could see nothing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He has shot his ink!&rdquo; cried the doctor.
+&ldquo;Here comes the real attack. Strap
+yourself to the wall where you can
+reach one of the motor switches.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Through the darkness huge arms
+came out and wrapped themselves
+around the ball. The heavy vitrilene
+groaned under the enormous pressure
+which was applied, but it held. The
+ink was clearing slightly and they
+could see that the sphere was covered
+by the arms. The mass moved and the
+huge maw opened before them. The
+pipes projecting from the sides of the
+ball were buried in the creature&rsquo;s flesh.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good Lord, he&rsquo;s going to swallow
+us!&rdquo; gasped the doctor. &ldquo;Quick, Carnes,
+the motor switch.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He closed one of them as he spoke,
+and the powerful little electric motors
+began to hum, forcing forward the piston
+attached to the tank connected to
+the hollow rods. Steadily the little
+motors hummed, and the tank emptied
+through the rods into the body of the
+giant cephalopod.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I hope the stuff works fast,&rdquo;
+groaned the doctor as they approached
+closer to the giant maw. &ldquo;I never tried
+giving an octopus a hypodermic injection
+of prussic acid before, but it ought
+to do the business. There&rsquo;s enough
+acid there to kill half New York City.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Carnes</span> blanched as the ball approached
+the mouth. One by one
+the arms unwound until only one was
+holding them and the jaws opened
+wider. They were almost in them when
+the motion stopped. They could feel a
+shudder run through the arm which
+held them. For a moment the arm
+alternately expanded and contracted,
+almost releasing them only to clutch
+them again. Another arm came from
+the depths and whipped about the ball,
+and again the vitrilene groaned at the
+pressure which was applied. The arms
+were suddenly withdrawn and the ball
+started to sink.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Drop the lead, Carnes!&rdquo; cried the
+doctor. With the aid of the detective
+he operated the electric catches which
+held the huge mass of lead to the bottom,
+and the sphere shot up through
+the water like a rocket. It leaped clear
+of the water and fell back with a
+splash. A half mile away the <i>Minneconsin</i>
+was swinging in a wide circle
+to head back toward them. They turned
+their gaze toward the shore.</p>
+<p>As they looked a giant arm shot a
+hundred yards up into the air, twisting
+and writhing frantically. It disappeared,
+and another, and then half a
+dozen flashed into the air. The arms
+dipped below the surface. A huge
+black body reared its bulk free from
+the water for a moment, and the sea
+boiled as though in a violent storm.
+The body sank and again the arms were
+thrown up, twisting and turning like a
+half dozen huge snakes. The whole
+creature sank below the waves and the
+ball tossed back and forth, often buried
+under tons of water and once tossed
+thirty feet into the air by the huge
+waves.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>A momentary</span> lull came in the
+waves. Carnes gave a cry of
+astonishment and pointed toward the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_353' name='page_353'></a>353</span>
+shore. With an effort, Dr. Bird twisted
+himself in his lashing and looked in
+that direction. The huge body had
+again come to the surface, and three of
+the arms were towering into the air.
+Grasped in them was a long, black,
+cigar-shaped object. As they watched
+the object was torn into two parts and
+the fragments crushed by the enormous
+power of the octopus. Again the arms
+writhed in torment, and then they stiffened
+out. For a moment they towered
+in the air and then slowly sank below
+the surface of the sea.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The cyanide has worked,&rdquo; cried the
+doctor, &ldquo;and in its last agonies the creature
+has turned on its creator and destroyed
+him. It is a shame, for Saranoff
+was a brilliant although perverted
+genius, and besides, I would have liked
+to have learned his method. However,
+I may find something when we open the
+land end and raid the cave; and really,
+he was too brilliant a man to hang for
+murder. Once we open the cave and I
+get any data that is there, my connection
+with the case will end. Trailing
+down the gold and recovering it is a
+routine matter for Bolton, and one in
+which he won&rsquo;t need my help.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What about that creature we saw in
+the cave, Doctor? Won&rsquo;t it hatch into
+another terror of the sea like the thing
+that destroyed the ship?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The trochosphere? No, I&rsquo;m not worried
+there. It won&rsquo;t try to leave the
+cave for some days yet, and by that
+time we&rsquo;ll have the land end opened
+and the floodlights turned on. They
+will keep it there and it will starve to
+death. We could send down a sub to
+feed it a torpedo, but there&rsquo;s no need.
+Nature will dispose of it. Meanwhile,
+I hope the <i>Minneconsin</i> rigs up a jury
+tackle pretty soon and takes us on
+board. I&rsquo;m getting seasick.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<div class="adbox">
+<p class='ad1'><i>IN THE NEXT ISSUE</i></p>
+<p>THE FIFTH-DIMENSION CATAPULT</p>
+<p><i>A Novelette of an Extraordinary Interdimensional Rescue</i><br />
+<i>By</i> Murray Leinster</p>
+<hr class='mini' />
+<p>THE GATE TO XORAN</p>
+<p><i>A Thrilling Story of a Metal Man&rsquo;s Visit to Earth</i><br />
+<i>By</i> Hal K. Wells</p>
+<hr class='mini' />
+<p>THE EYE OF ALLAH</p>
+<p><i>A Story of the Tracking Down of a Mysterious Scientific Killer</i><br />
+<i>By</i> C. D. Willard</p>
+<hr class='mini' />
+<p>THE PIRATE PLANET</p>
+<p><i>Part Three of the Outstanding Current Novel</i><br />
+<i>By</i> Charles W. Diffin</p>
+<hr class='mini' />
+<p>&mdash;&mdash;<i>AND OTHERS</i>!</p>
+</div>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_354' name='page_354'></a>354</span>
+<a name='GRAY_DENIM_BY_HARL_VINCENT' id='GRAY_DENIM_BY_HARL_VINCENT'></a>
+<h2>Gray Denim</h2>
+<p><i>By Harl Vincent</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_6' id='linki_6'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/354.jpg' alt='' title='' width='479' height='500' /><br />
+<p class='caption'>
+<i>There came a stabbing pencil of light from over Karl&rsquo;s shoulder.</i><br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Beneath</span> the huge central arch
+in Cooper Square a meeting
+was in progress&mdash;a gathering
+of the gray-clad workers of the
+lower levels of New York. Less than
+two hundred of their number were in
+evidence, and these huddled in dejected
+groups
+around the pedestal
+from which a
+fiery-tongued orator
+was addressing
+them. Lounging negligently at the
+edge of the small crowd were a dozen
+of the red police.</p>
+<p class='sidebarright'>The blood of the Van Dorn&rsquo;s ran in Karl&rsquo;s
+veins. He rode the skies like an avenging
+god.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I tell you, comrades,&rdquo; the speaker
+was shouting, &ldquo;the time has come when
+we must revolt. We must battle to the
+death with the wearers of the purple.
+Why work out
+our lives down
+here so they can
+live in the lap of
+luxury over our
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_355' name='page_355'></a>355</span>
+heads? Why labor day after day at
+the oxygen generators to give them the
+fresh air they breathe?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The speaker paused uncertainly as a
+chorus of raucous laughter came to his
+ears. He glared belligerently at a
+group of newcomers who stood aloof
+from his own gathering. Seven or
+eight of them there were, and they
+wore the gray with obvious discomfort.
+Slummers! Well, they&rsquo;d hear something
+they could carry back with them
+when they returned to their homes!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; he continued in rising tones,
+&ldquo;do we sit at the controls of the pneumatic
+tubes which carry thousands of
+our fellows to tasks equally irksome,
+while they of the purple ride their air
+yachts to the pleasure cities of the sky
+lanes? Never in the history of mankind
+have the poor been poorer and the
+rich richer!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yah!&rdquo; shouted a disrespectful voice
+from among the newcomers. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re
+full o&rsquo; bunk! Nothing but bunk!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>An ominous murmur swelled from
+the crowd and the red police roused
+from their lethargy. The mounting
+scream of a siren echoed in the vaulted
+recesses above and re-echoed from the
+surrounding columns&mdash;the call for
+reserves.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>All</span> was confusion in the Square.
+The little group of newcomers
+immediately became the center of a
+mêlée of dangerous proportions. Some
+of the more timid of the wearers of the
+gray struggled to get out of the crowd
+and away. Others, not in sympathy
+with the speaker, rushed to the support
+of the besieged visitors. The police
+were, for the moment, overwhelmed.</p>
+<p>The orator, mad with resentment and
+injured pride, hurled himself into the
+group. A knife flashed in his hand;
+rose and fell. A scream of agony
+shrilled piercingly above the din of
+the fighting.</p>
+<p>Then came the reserves, and the
+wielder of the knife turned to escape.
+He broke away from the milling combatants
+and made speedily for the
+shadows that lay beyond the great pillars
+of the Square. But he never
+reached them, for one of the red guards
+raised his riot pistol and fired. There
+was a dull <i>plop</i>, and a rubbery something
+struck the fleeing man and
+wrapped powerful tentacles around his
+body, binding him hand and foot in
+their swift embrace. He fell crashing
+to the pavement.</p>
+<p>A lieutenant of the red police was
+shouting his orders and the din in the
+Square was deafening. With their
+numbers greatly augmented, the guards
+were now in control of the situation
+and their maces struck left and right.
+Groans and curses came from the gray-clad
+workers, who now fought desperately
+to escape.</p>
+<p>Then, with startling suddenness, the
+artificial sunlight of the cavernous
+Square was gone, leaving the battle to
+continue in utter darkness.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Cooper Square</span>, in the year
+2108, was the one gathering place
+in New York City where the wearers
+of the gray denim were permitted to
+assemble and discuss their grievances
+publicly. Deep in the maze of lower-level
+ways seldom visited by wearers
+of the purple, the grottolike enclosure
+bore the name of a philanthropist of
+the late nineteenth century and still
+carried a musty air of certain of the
+traditions of that period.</p>
+<p>In Astor Way, on the lowest level of
+all, there was a tiny book shop.
+Nestled between two of the great columns
+that provided foundation support
+for the eighty levels above, it was
+safely hidden from the gaze of curious
+passersby in the Square. Slumming
+parties from afar, their purple temporarily
+discarded for the gray, occasionally
+passed within a stone&rsquo;s throw of
+the little shop, never suspecting the
+existence of such a retreat amidst the
+dark shadows of the pillars. But to
+the initiated few amongst the wearers
+of the gray, and to certain of the red
+police, it was well known.</p>
+<p>Rudolph Krassin, proprietor of the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_356' name='page_356'></a>356</span>
+establishment, was a bent and withered
+ancient. His jacket of gray denim
+hung loosely from his spare frame and
+his hollow cough bespoke a deep-seated
+ailment. Looking out from behind
+thick lenses set in his square-rimmed
+spectacles, the watery eyes seemed vacant;
+uncomprehending. But old Rudolph
+was a scholar&mdash;keen-witted&mdash;and
+a gentleman besides. To his many
+friends of the gray-clad multitude he
+was an anomaly; they could not understand
+his devotion to his well-thumbed
+volumes. But they listened
+to his words of wisdom and, more frequently
+than they could afford, parted
+with precious labor tickets in exchange
+for reading matter that was usually of
+the lighter variety.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>When</span> the fighting started in the
+Square, Rudolph was watching
+and listening from a point of vantage
+in the shadows near his shop. This
+fellow Leontardo, who was the speaker,
+was an agitator of the worst sort. His
+arguments always were calculated to
+arouse the passions of his hearers; to
+inflame them against the wearers of the
+purple. He had nothing constructive
+to offer. Always he spoke of destruction;
+war; bloodshed. Rudolph marveled
+at the patience of the red police.
+To-day, these newcomers, obviously a
+slumming party of youngsters bent on
+whatever mischief they could find, were
+interfering with the speaker. The old
+man chuckled at the first interruption.
+But at signs of real trouble he scurried
+into the shadows and vanished in the
+blackness of first-level passages known
+only to himself. He knew where to
+find the automatic sub-station of the
+Power Syndicate.</p>
+<p>Returning to the darkness he had
+created in the Square, he was relieved
+to find that the sounds of the fighting
+had subsided. Apparently most of the
+wearers of the gray had escaped. He
+skirted the avenue of pillars along Astor
+Way, feeling his way from one to
+another as he progressed toward his
+little shop. Peering into the blackness
+of the square he saw the feeble beams
+of several flash-lamps in the hands of
+the police. They were searching for
+survivors of the fracas, maces and riot
+pistols held ready for use. A sobbing
+gasp from close by set his pulses throbbing.
+He crept stealthily in the direction
+from which the sound had come.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Steady now,&rdquo; came a whispered
+voice. &ldquo;My uncle&rsquo;s shop is close by.
+He&rsquo;ll take you in. Here&mdash;let me lift
+you.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>There</span> was a shuffling on the opposite
+side of the pillar at which
+Rudolph had halted; another grunt of
+pain.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Karl!&rdquo; hissed the old man. It was
+his nephew.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Uncle Rudolph?&rdquo; came the guarded
+response.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. Can I help you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quick&mdash;yes&mdash;he&rsquo;s fainted.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The old man was around the huge
+base of the column in an instant. He
+groped in the darkness and his hands
+encountered human bodies.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Who is it?&rdquo; he breathed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;One of the hecklers, Uncle. A
+young lad; and of the purple I think.
+He&rsquo;s been knifed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Together they dragged the inert
+form into the shelter of the long line
+of pillars. There was a trampling of
+many men in the square. That would
+be a second detachment of reserves. A
+ray of light filtered through and dancing
+shadows of the giant columns made
+grotesque outlines against the walls of
+the Way. A portable searchlight had
+been brought to the scene. They must
+hurry.</p>
+<p>Impeded by the dead weight of their
+burden, they made sorry progress and
+several times found it necessary to halt
+in the shadow of a pillar while the red
+police passed by in their search of the
+Square. It was with a sigh of relief
+that Rudolph opened the door of his
+shop and with still greater satisfaction
+closed and bolted it securely. His
+nephew shouldered the limp form of
+the unconscious youth and carried it
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_357' name='page_357'></a>357</span>
+to his own bed in one of the rear rooms.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ugh!&rdquo; exclaimed old Rudolph as he
+ripped open the young man&rsquo;s shirt, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s
+a nasty cut. Warm water, Karl.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The gaping wound was washed and
+bound tightly. Rudolph&rsquo;s experienced
+fingers told him the knife had not
+reached a vital spot. The youth would
+recover.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But Karl,&rdquo; he objected, &ldquo;he wears
+the purple. Under the gray. See! It&rsquo;ll
+get us in trouble if we keep him.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He was stripping the young man of
+his clothing to prepare him for bed.
+Suddenly there was revealed on the
+white skin a triangular mark. Bright
+scarlet it was and just over the right
+hip. He made a hasty attempt to hide
+it from the watching eyes of Karl.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Uncle!&rdquo; snapped his nephew, &ldquo;&mdash;the
+mark you call cursed! He has it, too!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> tall young man in gray was on
+his knees, tearing the hands of the
+old man away. He saw the mark clearly
+now. There was no further use of
+attempting to conceal it. Rudolph rose
+and faced his angered nephew, his
+watery eyes inscrutable.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You told me, Rudolph, that it was
+a brand that cursed me. I have seen
+it on him, too. You have lied to me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The old man&rsquo;s eyes wavered. He
+trembled violently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why did you lie?&rdquo; demanded Karl.
+&ldquo;Am I not your nephew? Am I not
+really cursed as you&rsquo;ve maintained?
+Tell me&mdash;tell me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He had the old man by the shoulders,
+shaking him cruelly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Karl&mdash;Karl,&rdquo; begged the helpless
+ancient, &ldquo;it was for your good. I swear
+it. You were born to the purple. That&rsquo;s
+what that mark means&mdash;not that you&rsquo;re
+degraded to the gray, as I said. But
+there&rsquo;s a reason. Let me explain.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Bah! A reason! You&rsquo;ve kept me
+in this misery and squalor for a reason!
+Who&rsquo;s my father?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He flung Rudolph to the floor, where
+the old man crouched in apprehensive
+misery.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Please Karl&mdash;don&rsquo;t! I can explain.
+Just give me time. It&rsquo;s a long story.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Time! Time! For twenty-odd
+years you&rsquo;ve lied to me; cheated me.
+My birthright&mdash;where is it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He menaced his supposed uncle; was
+about to strike him. Then suddenly
+he was ashamed. He turned on his
+heel.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m leaving,&rdquo; he said shortly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Karl&mdash;my boy,&rdquo; begged Rudolph
+Krassin, struggling to his feet. &ldquo;You
+can&rsquo;t! That lad in there&mdash;he&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But Karl was too angry to reason.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To hell with him!&rdquo; he raged, &ldquo;and
+to hell with you! I&rsquo;m through!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He stamped from the room and out
+into the eery shadows of the Way.
+Karl was done with his old life. He&rsquo;d
+go to the upper levels and claim his
+rights. Some day, too, he&rsquo;d punish the
+man who&rsquo;d stolen them away. God!
+Born to the purple! To think he&rsquo;d
+missed it all! Probably was kidnaped
+by the old rascal he&rsquo;d been calling uncle.
+But he&rsquo;d find out. Rudolph didn&rsquo;t
+have to explain. Fingerprint records
+would clear his name; establish his
+rightful station in life. He dived into
+a passage that would lead him to one
+of the express lifts. He&rsquo;d soon be
+overhead.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>A sergeant</span> of the red police
+looked up startled from his desk
+as a tall youth in the gray denim of
+forty levels below appeared before him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well?&rdquo; he growled. The stalwart
+young worker had stared belligerently
+and insolently, he thought.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I want to check my fingerprint record,
+Sergeant.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hm. Pretty cocky, aren&rsquo;t you?
+The records for such as you are down
+below, where you belong.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Not mine, I think.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So? And who the devil are you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what I&rsquo;m here to find out.
+I&rsquo;ve got a triangle branded on my right
+hip.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A what?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Triangle. Here&mdash;look!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The amazing youngster had raised
+his jacket and was pulling at his shirt.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_358' name='page_358'></a>358</span>
+The sergeant stared at what was revealed,
+his eyes bulging as he looked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lord!&rdquo; he gasped, &ldquo;a Van Dorn&mdash;in
+the gray!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Quickly he turned to the radiovision
+and made rapid connection with several
+persons in turn&mdash;important ones,
+by the appearance of the features of
+each in the brilliant disc of the instrument.</p>
+<p>Karl was confused by the sudden
+turn of things. The sergeant talked
+so rapidly he could not catch the sense
+of his words. And that name, Van
+Dorn, eluded him. He knew he had
+heard it before, in the little shop down
+there in Astor Way. But he could not
+place it. He wished fervently that he
+had paid more attention to the desires
+of old Rudolph; had studied more and
+read the books the old man had begged
+him to read. His new surroundings
+confused him, too, and he knew that
+he was the center of some great new
+excitement.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Then</span> they were in the room; two
+individuals, one in the red uniform
+of a captain of police, the other a
+pompous, whiskered man in purple.
+Others followed and it seemed to Karl
+that the room was filled with them,
+strangers all, and they stared at him
+and chattered incessantly. He experienced
+an overwhelming impulse to run,
+but mastered it and faced them boldly.</p>
+<p>A square of plate glass was placed
+under his outstretched fingers. It was
+smeared with something sticky and he
+watched the whiskered man as he held
+it up to the light and studied the impressions.
+Then there was more confusion.
+Everyone talked at once and the
+pompous one in purple made use of
+the radiovision, holding the square of
+glass near its disc for observation by
+the person he had called. The identification
+number was repeated aloud, a
+string of figures and letters that were
+a meaningless jumble to Karl. The
+room became quiet while the police
+captain thumbed the pages of a huge
+book he had taken from among many
+similar ones that filled a rack behind
+the desk.</p>
+<p>Karl&rsquo;s blood froze in his veins at the
+rumbling swish of a car speeding
+through the pneumatic tube beneath
+their feet. His nerves were on edge.
+Then the captain of police looked up
+from the book and there was a peculiar
+glint in his eyes as he spoke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Peter Van Dorn. Missing since
+2085. Wanted by Continental Government.
+Ha!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The words came to Karl&rsquo;s ears
+through a growing sensation of unreality.
+It seemed that the speaker was
+miles away and that his voice and features
+were those of a radiovision likeness.
+Wanted by the great power
+across the Atlantic! It was unthinkable.
+Why, he had been but an infant
+in 2085! What possible crime could he
+have committed? But the red police
+captain was speaking again, this time
+in a chill voice. And the room of the
+police, thick with the smoke of a dozen
+cigars, became suddenly stifling.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where have you been these twenty-three
+years, Peter Van Dorn?&rdquo; asked
+the captain. &ldquo;Who have you lived
+with, I mean?&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Something</span> warned him to protect
+old Rudolph. And somehow
+he wished he had not treated the old
+fellow as he did when he left. His
+self-possession returned. A wave of
+hot resentment swept over him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s my affair,&rdquo; he said defiantly.</p>
+<p>The captain shrugged his shoulders.
+&ldquo;Oh, well,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;you needn&rsquo;t answer&mdash;now.
+We&rsquo;ll find out when it&rsquo;s
+necessary. In the meanwhile we&rsquo;ll
+have to turn you over to the Continental
+Ambassador.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Two of the red police advanced toward
+him and the rest drew back.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You mean I&rsquo;m under arrest?&rdquo; asked
+Karl incredulously.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Certainly. Of course you&rsquo;re not to
+be harmed.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>One of the guards had him by the
+arm and he saw the glint of handcuffs.
+They couldn&rsquo;t do this! If it had been
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_359' name='page_359'></a>359</span>
+for rioting in the Square it would be
+different. But this! It meant he was
+a prisoner of a foreign government,
+for what reason he could not guess.
+He lost his head completely.</p>
+<p>The captain cried out in amazement
+as one of his huskiest guards went
+sprawling under a well-planted punch.
+This youngster must be as crazy as
+was his father before him. But he was
+a whirlwind. Before he could be
+stopped he had tackled the other guard
+and with a mighty heave flung him
+halfway across the room where he fell
+with a thud that left him dazed and
+gasping. The pompous little man in
+the purple crawled under the desk as
+the sergeant leveled a slender tube at
+the young giant in gray.</p>
+<p>Karl ducked instinctively at sight of
+the weapon, but the spiteful crackle of
+its mechanism was too quick for him.
+A faintly luminous ray struck him full
+in the breast and stopped him in his
+tracks. A thrill of intense cold chased
+up his spine and a thunderbolt crashed
+in his brain. The captain caught his
+stiffened body as he fell.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Karl</span>&mdash;refusing to think of himself
+as Peter Van Dorn&mdash;came to
+his senses as from a troubled sleep.
+His head ached miserably and he
+turned it slowly to view his surroundings.
+Then, in a flash, he remembered.
+The paralyzing ray of the red police!
+They never used it in the lower levels;
+but overhead&mdash;why, the swine! He sat
+suddenly erect and glared into a pair
+of green eyes that regarded him
+curiously.</p>
+<p>A quick glance showed him that he
+was in a small padded compartment
+like that of the pneumatic tube cars.
+At one end there was an amazing array
+of machinery with glittering levers
+and handwheels&mdash;a control board on
+which numberless tiny lights blinked
+and flickered in rapid succession. At
+these controls squatted the twisted figure
+of a dwarf. A second of the creatures
+sat at his side and stared with
+those horrible green eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lord!&rdquo; he muttered. &ldquo;Am I still
+asleep?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; smiled the dwarf, &ldquo;you&rsquo;re
+awake, Peter Van Dorn.&rdquo; The misshapen
+creature did not seem unfriendly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then where am I, and who are
+you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;re in one of the Zar&rsquo;s rocket
+cars, speeding toward Dorn. We are
+but two of the Zar&rsquo;s servants&mdash;Moon
+men.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Rocket car? Moon men?&rdquo; Karl was
+aghast. He wanted to pinch himself.
+But a hollow roar to the rear told him
+he was in a rapidly moving vessel of
+some sort. Certainly, too, these dwarfs
+were not figments of his imagination.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve been kept completely ignorant?&rdquo;
+asked the dwarf.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&mdash;it seems so.&rdquo; Karl was bewildered.
+&ldquo;You mean we are out in the
+open&mdash;traveling in space&mdash;to the Moon
+perhaps?&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> dwarf laughed. &ldquo;No, I wish
+we were,&rdquo; he replied. &ldquo;But we are
+about halfway to the capital of the
+Continental Empire, greatest of world
+powers. We&rsquo;ll be there in an hour.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I don&rsquo;t understand.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stupid. Didn&rsquo;t you ever hear of the
+rocket ships that cross the ocean like
+a projectile, mounting a thousand miles
+from the surface and making the trip
+in two hours?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; Karl was aghast. &ldquo;Are we
+really in such a contraption?&rdquo; he faltered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Say! Are you kidding me?&rdquo; The
+dwarf was incredulous. &ldquo;Do you mean
+to tell me you know so little of your
+world as that? Have you never read
+anything? The news broadcasts, the
+thought exchangers&mdash;don&rsquo;t you follow
+them at all?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Karl shook his head in growing wonder.
+Truly Rudolph had kept him in
+ignorance. Or was it his own fault?
+He had refused to dig into the volumes
+old Krassin had begged him to read.
+The broadcasts and the thought machines&mdash;well,
+only those of the purple
+had access to those.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_360' name='page_360'></a>360</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Hey, Laro!&rdquo; called the dwarf to his
+companion, &ldquo;this mole is as dumb as
+can be. Doesn&rsquo;t know he&rsquo;s alive hardly.
+And a Van Dorn!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The two laughed uproariously and
+Karl raged inwardly. Mole! So that&rsquo;s
+what they called wearers of the gray!
+He clenched his fists and rose unsteadily
+to his feet.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sorry,&rdquo; apologized his tormentor.
+&ldquo;Mustn&rsquo;t get sore now. It seems so
+funny to us though. And listen, kid,
+you&rsquo;ll never have another chance to
+hear it all. So, if you&rsquo;ll sit down and
+calm yourself a bit I&rsquo;ll give you an
+earful.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Mollified</span>, Karl listened. A
+marvelous tale it was, of a disgruntled
+scientist of the Eastern Hemisphere
+who had conquered that portion
+of the world with the aid of the inhabitants
+he had found on the outer
+side of the Moon; of the scientist who
+still ruled the East&mdash;Zar of the Continental
+Empire. A horrible war&mdash;in
+2085, the year of his own birth&mdash;depopulated
+the countries of Asia, Europe
+and Africa and reduced them to
+subjection. There was no combatting
+the destructive rays and chemical warfare
+of the Moon men. The United
+Americas, still weakened from a civil
+war of their own, remained aloof and,
+for some strange reason, the Zar left
+them in peace, contenting himself with
+his conquest of practically all of the
+rest of the world. Now, it seemed, the
+two major powers were as separate as
+if on different planets, there being no
+traffic between them save by governmental
+sanction; and that was rarely
+given.</p>
+<p>It grew uncomfortably warm in the
+compartment as the rocket car entered
+the lower atmosphere but Karl listened
+spellbound to the astounding revelations
+of the Moon man. There came
+a pause in the discourse of the dwarf
+as a number of relays clicked furiously
+on the control board and the vessel
+slackened its speed perceptibly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; said Karl, thinking aloud
+rather than meaning to interrupt,
+&ldquo;what has all this to do with me? Why
+does the government of this Zar want
+me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The dwarf bent close and eyed him
+cautiously. &ldquo;Poor kid!&rdquo; he whispered,
+&ldquo;it doesn&rsquo;t seem right that you should
+suffer for something that happened
+when you were born; something you
+know nothing about. But the Zar
+knows best. You&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There came a stabbing pencil of
+light from over Karl&rsquo;s shoulder and
+the green eyes of the dwarf went wide
+with horrified surprise. He clutched
+at his breast where the flame had contacted,
+then slowly collapsed in a pitiful,
+distorted heap. Karl recoiled from
+the odor of putrefaction that immediately
+filled the compartment. He
+whirled to face the new danger but saw
+nothing but the padded walls.</p>
+<p>Then they were in darkness save for
+the blinking lights of the control board.
+He was thrown forward violently and
+the piercing screech of compressed air
+rushing past the vessel told him they
+had entered the receiving tube at their
+destination and were being retarded
+in speed for the landing. This much
+he had gathered from the explanations
+of the now silenced dwarf.</p>
+<p>Laro, the other Moon man, remained
+mute at the controls. His companion
+evidently had talked too much.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> vessel had stopped and a section
+of the padded rear wall of the
+compartment moved back to reveal a
+second chamber. There were three
+other occupants of the ship and Karl
+knew now at whose hands the talkative
+Moon man had met his death. One of
+the three&mdash;all wearers of the purple&mdash;still
+held the generator of the dazzling
+ray in his hands. He decided wisely
+that resistance was useless and followed
+meekly when he was led from
+the ship.</p>
+<p>Endlessly they rode upward in a
+high-speed lift, dismounting finally at
+a pneumatic tube entrance. A special
+car whisked them roaring into the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_361' name='page_361'></a>361</span>
+blackness. Then they were shot forth
+into the open and Karl saw the light of
+the sun for the first time in many years.
+They were on the upper surface of a
+great city, Dorn, the capital of the Continental
+Empire.</p>
+<p>The air was filled with darting ships
+of all sorts and sizes, most of them being
+pleasure craft of the wearers of the
+purple. To Karl it was the sudden
+realization of his dreams. He was one
+of them. He, too, should be wearing
+the purple. Then his heart sank as
+one of his guards prodded him into
+action. His dream already was shattered
+for they stood at the entrance to
+a great crystal pyramid that rose from
+the flat expanse of the roofs of Dorn.
+It was the palace of the Zar.</p>
+<p>It seemed then that fairyland had
+opened its gates to the young man in
+gray denim. He immediately fell under
+its influence when they traversed
+a long lane between rows of brightly
+colored growing things which filled
+the air with sweet odors. Feathered
+creatures fluttered about and twittered
+and caroled in the sheer joy of being
+alive. It was sweeter music than he
+had ever believed possible or even
+imagined as existing. Again he forgot
+the menace of the imperial edict which
+had brought him from the other side
+of the world.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Then</span> rudely, he was brought back
+to earth. He was in the presence of
+the mighty Zar and his three escorts
+were bowing themselves from the huge
+room in which the wizened monarch
+sat enthroned. They had finished their
+duties.</p>
+<p>A shriveled face; beady eyes; trembling
+hands with abnormally large
+knuckles; a cruel and determined
+mouth&mdash;these were the features that
+most impressed Karl as he stared wordlessly
+at this Zar of the Eastern Hemisphere.
+The magnificence of the royal
+robe was lost on the young wearer of
+the gray.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, well, so this is Peter Van
+Dorn, my beloved nephew.&rdquo; The Zar
+was speaking and the chilly sarcasm
+in which the words were uttered belied
+the friendliness they otherwise might
+have implied.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That&rsquo;s what I&rsquo;m told,&rdquo; replied Karl,
+&ldquo;though I didn&rsquo;t know I&rsquo;m supposed
+to be the nephew of so great a figure
+as yourself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Not bad that, for an humble wearer
+of the gray.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, yes, yes, indeed. Why else
+should I have sent for you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have wondered why&mdash;and still
+wonder.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, you wonder, eh?&rdquo; The Zar inspected
+him carefully and then broke
+into a cackle of horrible laughter. &ldquo;A
+Van Dorn in gray denim!&rdquo; he chortled.
+&ldquo;A mole of the Americas! And to
+think that even the Zar has been unable
+to find him in all these years!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stop!&rdquo; bellowed Karl. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll not
+have your ridicule. Come to the point
+now and have it over with. Kill me
+if you will, but tell me the story!&rdquo; He
+had seen the slender tube in the Zar&rsquo;s
+hand.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>An</span> expression of surprise, almost of
+admiration, flickered in the beady
+eyes of the Zar and was gone. He
+spoke coldly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well, I shall explain. You,
+Peter, are actually my nephew. Your
+father, Derek Van Dorn, was my brother;
+he a king of Belravia and I a poor
+but experienced scientist. He scorned
+me and he paid, for I learned of the
+ancient race of the other side of the
+Moon, the side we can not see from
+the earth. I went to them and enlisted
+their aid in warring upon my brother.
+When we returned to carry on this
+war I learned that I had a son. So, too,
+did Derek. But my son was born in
+obscurity and Derek&rsquo;s son&mdash;you, Peter&mdash;in
+the lap of luxury. The war was
+short and, to me, sweet. Belravia was
+first to fall, and I had your father removed
+from this life by the vibrating
+death.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You monster!&rdquo; cried Karl. But the
+slender rod menaced him.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_362' name='page_362'></a>362</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;A moment, my hot-headed nephew.
+I vowed I&rsquo;d have your life, Peter, but
+your father had a few friends and one
+of these spirited you away. So temporarily
+you escaped. But now I have
+you where I can keep that vow. You,
+too, shall die. By the vibration. But
+first&mdash;ha! ha!&mdash;I&rsquo;ll give you a taste of
+the purple. Just so the going will be
+harder.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Karl kept his temper as best he could.
+He thought, conscience-stricken, of old
+Rudolph, that good friend of his father.
+Then he thought of that youth he had
+taken from the Square.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your son?&rdquo; he asked gently. &ldquo;Has
+he the triangular brand?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Zar was taken aback. &ldquo;He has,
+yes. Why?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have seen him in the Americas.
+He now lies wounded and in peril of
+his life. What do you think of that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Karl was triumphant as the Zar
+paled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You lie, Peter Van Dorn!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>But</span> the beady eyes saw that the
+young man was truthful. Sudden
+fury assailed the monarch of the East.
+A bell pealed its mellow summons and
+three Moon men entered the Presence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quick, Taru&mdash;the radiovision! Our
+ambassador in the Americas!&rdquo; The
+Zar was on his feet, his hard features
+terrible in fear and anger. &ldquo;By God!&rdquo;
+he vowed, &ldquo;I&rsquo;ll lay waste the Americas
+if harm has come to my son. And
+you&rdquo;&mdash;turning to Karl&mdash;&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll reserve
+for you an even more terrible fate than
+the vibrating death!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The radiovision was wheeled in and
+in operation. A frightened face appeared
+in its disc: the Zar&rsquo;s ambassador
+across the sea.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Moreau&mdash;my son!&rdquo; snapped the Zar.
+&ldquo;Where is he?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Majesty! Have mercy!&rdquo; gasped
+Moreau. &ldquo;Paul has eluded us. He was
+skylarking&mdash;in the lower levels of New
+York. But our secret agents are combing
+the passages. We&rsquo;ll have him in
+twenty-four hours. I promise!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The rage of the Zar was terrible to
+see. Karl expected momentarily that
+the white flame would lay him low, for
+the anger of the mad ruler was directed
+first at Moreau, then at himself. But a
+quick, evil calm succeeded the storm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You, Peter,&rdquo; he stated, in tones suddenly
+silky, &ldquo;shall have that twenty-four
+hours&mdash;no more. If Moreau has
+not produced my son in that time you
+shall be dismembered slowly. A finger;
+an ear; your tongue; a hand&mdash;until you
+reveal the whereabouts of the heir to
+my throne!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Never! You scum!&rdquo; Karl was on
+the dais in a single bound. He had the
+Zar by the throat, his fingers twisting
+in the flabby flesh. Might as well have
+it over at once. &ldquo;Fratricide&mdash;murderer
+of my father, I&rsquo;ll take you with me!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>But</span> it was not to be. The throne
+room was filled with retainers of
+the mad emperor. Strong hands tore
+him away and he was borne, struggling
+and fighting, to the floor. A sharp pain
+in his forearm. A deadening of the
+muscles. He was powerless, save for
+the painful ability to crawl to his
+knees, swaying drunkenly. A delicious
+languor overcame him. Nothing mattered
+now. He saw that a tall man in
+the purple had withdrawn the needle
+of the hypodermic and was replacing
+the instrument in its case. Ever so
+slowly, it seemed.</p>
+<p>The Zar was laughing. That horrible
+cackle. But Karl didn&rsquo;t care.
+They&rsquo;d have their sport with him. Let
+&rsquo;em! Then it&rsquo;d be over. Lord! If
+only he had been a little quicker. He&rsquo;d
+have torn the old Zar&rsquo;s windpipe from
+its place!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My word,&rdquo; laughed the Zar. &ldquo;The
+sacred word of a Van Dorn. I gave
+it. He&rsquo;ll wear the purple for a day.
+Take him from my sight!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Karl was walking, quite willingly
+now. The effects of the drug were
+altering. His muscular strength returned
+but his mental state underwent
+a complete change. Always he&rsquo;d wanted
+a taste of the purple. For years he&rsquo;d
+listened to the orators of the Square,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_363' name='page_363'></a>363</span>
+to the conflicting statements of old
+Krassin. But now he&rsquo;d see. He&rsquo;d know
+the joys of the upper levels; the pleasure
+cities, perhaps. For one day. But
+what did it matter? He found himself
+laughing and joking with his companion,
+a heavy-set wearer of the purple.
+They were in a luxurious apartment.
+Servants! Moon men all of
+them, but so efficient. They stripped
+him of his gray denim; discarded it
+contemptuously. Karl kicked the heap
+into a corner and laughed delightedly.
+His bath was waiting.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Much</span> can happen in a day.
+Clothed in the purple, Karl&mdash;Peter
+Van Dorn, he was, now&mdash;expanded.
+Turgid emotions surged through
+his new being. He was a new man. In
+his rightful place. He was delighted
+with the companionship of his new
+friend of the purple, Leon Lemaire.
+An euphonious name! A fine fellow!
+Fool that the Zar must be, to leave
+him in the care of so amiable a man.
+Why, Leon couldn&rsquo;t hold him! None
+of them could. He&rsquo;d escape them all&mdash;if
+he wished. Twenty-four hours,
+indeed!</p>
+<p>They were in the midst of a gay
+company. Wine flowed freely, and
+Leon had attached to their party a pair
+of beautiful damsels, young, and easy
+to know. There was music and dancing.
+Lights of marvelous color played
+over the assemblage in the huge hall,
+swaying their senses at the will of some
+expert manipulator. Peter was a different
+person now. He was exhilarated
+to the point of intoxication, but not by
+the wine. Somehow he couldn&rsquo;t bear
+the taste of the amber fluid the others
+were imbibing with such gusto. The
+effects of the drug had left a coppery
+taste in his mouth. But no matter!
+Rhoda, his lovely companion at the table
+leaned close. Her breath was hot
+at his throat. He swept her into his
+arms. Leon and the other girl laughed
+approvingly.</p>
+<p>There were many such places in the
+upper levels of Dorn and they traveled
+from one to another. Now their
+party was larger, it having been augmented
+by the appearance of other of
+Leon&rsquo;s friends. Fine companions, these
+men of the purple, and the women
+were incomparable. Especially Rhoda.
+They understood one another perfectly
+now. It was all as he had pictured it.</p>
+<p>Someone proposed that they visit the
+intermediate levels. It would be such
+a lark to watch the mechanicals. They
+made the drop in a lift. A laughing,
+riotous party. And Peter was one of
+them! He felt that he had known them
+for years. Rhoda clung to his arm, and
+the languorous glances from under her
+long lashes set the blood racing madly
+in his veins.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>In</span> the levels of the mechanicals they
+romped boisterously. To them the
+strange robots&mdash;creatures of steel and
+glass and copper&mdash;were objects of ridicule.
+Poor, senseless mechanisms that
+performed the tasks that made the
+wearers of the purple independent of
+labor. Here they saw the preparation
+of their synthetic food, untouched by
+human hands. In one chamber a group
+of mechanicals, soulless and brainless,
+engaged in the delicate chemical compounding
+of raw materials that went
+into the making of their clothing.
+Here was a nursery, where tiny tots
+born to the purple were reared to
+adolescence by unfeeling but efficient
+mechanical nurses. The mothers of
+the purple could not be bothered with
+their offspring until they had reached
+the age of reason. The whirring machinery
+of a huge power plant provided
+much amusement for the feminine
+members of the party. It was all so
+massive; throbbing with energy. But
+dirty! Ugh! Lucky the attendants
+could be mechanicals.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We have visited the lower levels,&rdquo;
+whispered Rhoda in his ear, &ldquo;but not
+often. It isn&rsquo;t pleasant. Ignorant
+fools in the gray denim&mdash;too many of
+them. I don&rsquo;t know why we permit
+their existence. Fools who will not
+learn. Education made us as we are,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_364' name='page_364'></a>364</span>
+and they won&rsquo;t take it. Sullen looks
+and evil leers are all that they have
+for us. Hope nobody suggests going
+down there now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Me, too,&rdquo; said Peter. He had forgotten
+that once he was Karl Krassin,
+a wearer of the despised gray.</p>
+<p>Someone in the party was becoming
+restless. They must move on.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where to?&rdquo; asked Peter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sans Dolor, sweet boy. A pleasure
+city within a hundred kilometers of
+Dorn. You&rsquo;ll love it, Peter.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A pleasure city! Fondest dream of
+the wearers of the gray! In the dim
+past, when he was Karl, he had dreamed
+it often. Now he was to visit one!</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>They</span> were atop the city now and
+the crystal palace of the Zar shimmered
+in the sunlight off there across
+the flat upper surface of Dorn. But it
+seemed so far away that Peter did not
+give it a second thought. He was living
+in the present.</p>
+<p>A swift aero took them into the skies
+and they roared out above the wilderness
+that was everywhere between the
+great cities of earth. Funny nobody
+thought of leaving the cities and exploring
+the jungles of the outside.
+But, of course, it wasn&rsquo;t necessary.
+They had everything they needed within
+the cities. All of their wants were
+supplied by the mechanicals and by the
+few toilers in the gray who still persisted
+in ignorance and in some perverse
+ideas that they must work in
+order to live. Besides, the jungle was
+dangerous.</p>
+<p>Sans Dolor loomed into view, a great
+island floating in the air a thousand
+meters above the tossing waters of the
+ocean. Peter gave not a thought to the
+forces that kept it suspended. Dimly
+he recalled certain words of old Rudolph,
+words regarding the artificial
+emanations that had been discovered as
+capable of counteracting the force of
+gravity. But his mind was intent on
+the pleasures to come.</p>
+<p>They were over the city. Carefully
+tended foliage lined its streets and a
+smooth lagoon glistened in its center.
+Its towers and spires were decorated
+with gay colors. The streets were filled
+with wearers of the purple and the
+nude bodies of bathers in the lagoon
+gleamed white in the strong sunlight.</p>
+<p>He sensed anew the nearness of
+Rhoda. Her soft warm hand nestled
+in his and she responded instantly to
+his sudden embrace.</p>
+<p>There came a shock and the party
+was stilled in dismay. The aero careened
+violently and the pilot struggled
+with controls that were dead.
+Sans Dolor dropped rapidly away beneath
+them. They were shooting skyward,
+drawn by some inexplicable and
+invisible energy from above.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Rhoda</span> screamed and held him
+close, trembling violently. All of
+the women screamed and the men
+cursed. Leon arose to his feet and
+stared at Peter. The friendliness was
+gone from his features and he spat
+forth an accusation. A glistening mechanism
+appeared in his hand as if by
+magic. A ray generator! He had been
+appointed by the Zar to guard this upstart
+and, whatever happened, he&rsquo;d not
+let him escape with his life. The girl
+shuddered at sight of the weapon and
+extricated herself from his arms. Her
+affection too had been a pose.</p>
+<p>Peter&rsquo;s mind was clearing from the
+effects of the drug. He had not the
+slightest idea of what might have
+caused the quick change in the situation
+but he resolved he would die fighting,
+if die he must. Leon fumbled
+with the catch of the generator. It refused
+to operate. The force that was
+drawing them upward had paralyzed
+all mechanisms aboard the little aero.
+Flinging it from him in disgust he
+sprang for Peter.</p>
+<p>Their minds befuddled, the rest of
+the men watched dully. The women
+huddled together in a corner, whimpering.
+They were a sorry lot after all,
+thought Karl. He was no longer Peter
+Van Dorn, and he thrilled to the joy of
+battle.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_365' name='page_365'></a>365</span></div>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Leon Lemaire</span> was no mean antagonist.
+His flailing arms were
+everywhere and a huge fist caught Karl
+on the side of his head and sent him
+reeling. But this only served to clear
+his mind further and to fill him with a
+cold rage. He bored in unmercifully
+and Lemaire soon was on the defensive.
+A blow to his midsection had him
+puffing and Karl hammered in rights
+and lefts to the now sinister face that
+rocked his opponent to his heels. But
+the minion of the Zar was crafty. He
+slid to the floor as if groggy, then with
+catlike agility, dove for Karl&rsquo;s knees,
+bringing him down with a crash.</p>
+<p>The air whistled by them as the ship
+was drawn upward with ever-increasing
+speed. The other passengers
+cowered in fright as the two men rolled
+over and over on the floor, banging at
+each other indiscriminately. Both
+were hurt. Karl&rsquo;s lip was split, and
+bleeding profusely. One eye was closing.
+But now he was on top and he
+pummeled his opponent to a pulp.
+Long after he ceased resisting them,
+the blows continued until the features
+of Leon Lemaire were unrecognizable.
+The infuriated Karl did not see that
+one of the members of the party was
+creeping up on him from behind.
+Neither was he aware that the upward
+motion of the aero had ceased and that
+they now hung motionless in space. A
+terrific blow at the base of his skull
+sent him sprawling. Must have been
+struck by a rocket, one of those funny
+ships that crossed the ocean so quickly.
+A million lights danced before his aching
+eyeballs.</p>
+<p>Lying prone across the inert body
+of his foe, dimly conscious and fingers
+clutching weakly, he knew that the
+cabin was filled with people. Alien
+voices bellowed commands. There was
+the screaming of women; the sound of
+blows; curses ... then all was silence
+and darkness.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>It</span> was a far cry to the little book
+shop off Cooper Square, but Karl
+was calling for Rudolph when he next
+awoke to the realization that he was
+still in the land of the living. His
+head was bandaged and his tongue
+furry. A terrible hangover. Then he
+heard voices and they were discussing
+Peter Van Dorn. He opened one eye
+as an experiment. The other refused
+to open. But it might have been worse.
+At least he was alive; he could see well
+enough with the one good optic.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Sh-h!&rdquo; whispered one of the voices.
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s recovering!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He looked solemnly into the eyes of
+an old man; a pair of wise and gentle
+eyes that reminded him somehow of
+Rudolph&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quiet now, Peter,&rdquo; said the old man.
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;ll be all right in a few minutes.
+Banged up a bit, you are, but nothing
+serious.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t call me Peter,&rdquo; objected Karl.
+He loathed the sound of the name;
+loathed himself for his recent thoughts
+and actions. &ldquo;I am Karl Krassin,&rdquo; he
+continued, &ldquo;and as such will remain
+until I die.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There were others in the room and
+he saw glances of satisfaction pass between
+them. This was a strange situation.
+These men were not of the purple.
+Neither were they of the gray.
+Their garments shone with the whiteness
+of pure silver. And that&rsquo;s what
+they were; of finely woven metallic
+cloth. Was he in another world?</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well, Karl.&rdquo; The kind old
+man was speaking once more. &ldquo;I
+merely want you to know that you are
+among friends&mdash;your father&rsquo;s friends.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Surprised</span> into complete wakefulness,
+Karl struggled to a seated
+position and surveyed the group that
+faced him. They were a fine looking
+lot, mostly older men, but there was a
+refreshing wholesomeness about them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My father?&rdquo; he faltered. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s not
+alive.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, my poor boy. Derek Van Dorn
+left this life at the hands of your uncle,
+Zar Boris. But we, his friends, are
+here to avenge him and to restore to
+you his throne.&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_366' name='page_366'></a>366</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;But&mdash;but&mdash;I still do not understand.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course not, because we&rsquo;ve kept
+ourselves hidden from the world for
+more than twenty-two years, waiting
+for this very moment. There are forty-one
+of us, including Rudolph, my
+brother. We have lived in the jungle
+since Boris conquered the Eastern
+Hemisphere. But amongst our numbers
+were several scientists, two greater
+than was Boris, even in his heyday.
+They have done wonderful things and
+we are now prepared to take back what
+was taken from Derek&mdash;and more. His
+life we can not restore&mdash;Heaven rest
+him&mdash;but his kingdom we can. And to
+his son it shall be returned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You were given into Rudolph&rsquo;s care
+when little more than a babe in arms
+and he has cared for you well. We&rsquo;ve
+watched, you know, in the detectoscopes&mdash;long
+range radiovision mechanisms
+that can penetrate solid walls,
+the earth itself, to bring to us the images
+and voices of persons who may be
+on the other side of the world. We&rsquo;ve
+followed your every move, my boy, and
+the first time we feared for you was
+yesterday when the drug of the Zar&rsquo;s
+physician stole away your sense of
+right and wrong. But we were in time
+to save you, and now we are ready to
+kneel at your feet and proclaim you
+our king. First there is the Zar to be
+dealt with and then we shall set up the
+new regime. Are you with us?&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Karl</span> gazed at the speaker in wonder.
+He a king? Always to live
+amongst the wearers of the purple? To
+be responsible for the welfare of half
+the world? It was unthinkable! But
+Zar Boris, the murderer of his own
+father&mdash;he must be punished, and at
+the hands of the son!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll do it,&rdquo; he said simply. &ldquo;That
+is, I&rsquo;ll do whatever you have planned
+in the way of exterminating the Zar.
+Then we&rsquo;ll talk of the new empire. But
+how is the Zar to be overcome? I
+thought he was invincible, with his
+Moon men and terrible weapons.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah! That, my boy, is where our
+scientists have triumphed. True, his
+rays were terrible. They could not be
+combatted when he first returned. The
+strange chemicals and gases of the
+Moon men defied analysis or duplication.
+His citadel atop the city of Dorn
+is proof against them all; proof against
+explosives and rays of all kinds known
+to him. The disintegration and decomposition
+rays have no effect on the
+crystal of its walls. It is hermetically
+sealed from the outer air so can not be
+gassed. The vibration impulses have
+no effect upon its reinforced structure.
+But there is a ray, a powerful destructive
+agent, against which it is not
+proof. And our scientists have developed
+this agency. You shall have
+the privilege of pressing the release of
+the energy that destroys the arch-fiend
+in his lair. His dominance over, the
+empire will fall. We shall take it&mdash;for
+you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A strange exaltation shone from the
+faces of those in the room, and Karl
+found that it was contagious. His
+bosom swelled and he itched to handle
+the controls of this wonderful ray.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This ray,&rdquo; continued the brother of
+old Rudolph, &ldquo;carries the longest vibrations
+ever measured, the vibrations of
+infra-red, the heat-ray. We have succeeded
+in concentrating a terrific
+amount of power in its production, and
+with it are able to produce temperatures
+in excess of that of the interior
+of the earth, where all substances are
+molten or gaseous. The Zar&rsquo;s crystal
+palace cannot withstand it for a second.
+He cannot escape!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How&rsquo;ll you know he&rsquo;s there at the
+time?&rdquo; Karl was greatly excited, but
+he was curious too.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come with me, my boy. I&rsquo;ll show
+you.&rdquo; The old man led him from the
+room and the others followed respectfully.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>They</span> stopped at a circular port
+and Karl saw that they were
+high above the earth in a vessel that
+hovered motionless, quivering with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_367' name='page_367'></a>367</span>
+what seemed like human eagerness to
+be off.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This vessel?&rdquo; he asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It&rsquo;s a huge sphere; the base of our
+operations. To it we drew the aero on
+which you were fighting. A magnetic
+force discovered by our scientists and
+differing only slightly from that used
+in counteracting gravity. We let the
+rest of them go; foolishly I think. But
+it&rsquo;s done now and we have no fear.
+From this larger vessel we shall send
+forth smaller ones, armed with the
+heat-ray. The flagship of the fleet is
+to be yours and you&rsquo;ll lead the attack
+on Dorn. Here&mdash;I&rsquo;ll show you the
+Zar.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They had reached the room of the
+detectoscopes&mdash;a mass of mechanisms
+that reminded Karl of nothing so much
+as the vitals of the intermediate levels
+which he had visited with Leon&mdash;and
+Rhoda. He knew that he flushed when
+he thought of her. What a fool he had
+been!</p>
+<p>A disc glowed as one of the silver-robed
+strangers manipulated the controls.
+The upper surface of Dorn
+swung into view. Rapidly the image
+drew nearer and they were looking at
+the crystal pyramid that was the Zar&rsquo;s
+palace. Down, down to its very tip
+they passed. Karl recoiled from the
+image as it seemed they were falling to
+its glistening sides. The sensation
+passed. They were through, penetrating
+solid crystal, masonry, steel and
+duralumin girders. Room after room
+was opened to their view. It was magic&mdash;the
+magic of the upper levels.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Now</span> they were in the throne room.
+A group of purple-clad men and
+women stood before the dais. Leon,
+Rhoda&mdash;all of his wild companions
+were there, facing the dais. The Zar
+was raging and the words of his speech
+came raucously to their ears through
+the sound-producing mechanism.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&rsquo;ve failed miserably, all of you,&rdquo;
+he screamed. &ldquo;He&rsquo;s gotten away and
+you know the penalty. Taru&mdash;the
+vibrating ray!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Moon man already was fussing
+with a gleaming machine, a machine
+with bristling appendages having metallic
+spheres on their ends, a machine
+in which dozens of vacuum tubes
+glowed suddenly.</p>
+<p>Rhoda screamed. It was a familiar
+sound to Karl. He noted with satisfaction
+that Leon could hardly stand
+on his feet and that his face was covered
+with plasters. Then, startled, he
+saw that Leon was shivering as with
+the ague. His outline on the screen
+grew dim and indistinct as the rate of
+vibration increased. Then the body
+bloated and became misty. He could
+see through it. The vibrating death!
+His father had gone the same way!</p>
+<p>Karl groaned at the thought. The
+whine of the distant machine rose in
+pitch until it passed the limit of audibility.
+Tiny pin-points of incandescence
+glowed here and there from the
+Zar&rsquo;s victims as periods of vibration
+were reached that coincided with the
+natural periods of certain of the molecules
+of their structure. They were no
+longer recognizable as human beings.
+Shimmering auras surrounded them.
+Suddenly they were torches of cold
+fire, weaving, oscillating with inconceivable
+rapidity. Then they were
+gone; vanished utterly.</p>
+<p>The Zar laughed&mdash;that horrible
+cackle again.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Great God!&rdquo; exclaimed Karl, &ldquo;let&rsquo;s
+go! The fiend must not live a moment
+longer than necessary. Are you
+ready?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Rudolph&rsquo;s brother smiled. &ldquo;We&rsquo;re
+ready Karl,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> great vessel hummed with activity.
+The five torpedo-shaped
+aeros of the battle fleet were ready to
+take off from the cavities in the hull.
+In the flagship Karl was stationed at
+the control of the heat-ray. His instructions
+in its operation had been
+simple. A telescopic sight with crosshairs
+for the centering of the object to
+be attacked; a small lever. That was
+all. He burned with impatience.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_368' name='page_368'></a>368</span></div>
+<p>Then they were dropping; falling
+clear of the mother ship. The pilot
+pressed a button and the electronic motors
+started. A burst of roaring energy
+streamed from the tapered stern of
+their vessel and the earth lurched violently
+to meet them. Down, down they
+dived until the rocking surface of
+Dorn was just beneath them. Then they
+flattened out and circled the vast upper
+surface. From the corner of his eye
+Karl saw that the other four vessels of
+his fleet were just behind. There was
+a flurry among the wasplike clouds of
+pleasure craft over the city. They
+scurried for cover. Something was
+amiss!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hurry!&rdquo; shouted Karl. &ldquo;The warning
+is out! There is no time to lose!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He pressed his face to the eye-piece
+of his sight, his finger on the release
+lever of the ray. The crystal pyramid
+crossed his view and was gone. Again
+it crossed, more slowly this time. And
+now his sight was dead on it, the
+gleaming wall rushing toward him.
+Pressure on the tiny button. They&rsquo;d
+crash into the palace in another second!
+But no, a brilliant flash obscured
+his vision, a blinding light that made
+the sun seem dark by comparison.
+They roared on and upward. He took
+his eye from the telescope and stared
+ahead, down. The city was dropping
+away, and, where the crystal palace had
+stood, there was a spreading blob of
+molten material from which searing
+vapors were drifting. The roofs of the
+city were sagging all around and great
+streams of the sparkling, sputtering
+liquid dripped into the openings that
+suddenly appeared. Derek Van Dorn
+was avenged.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Destroy! Destroy!&rdquo; yelled Karl
+madly. A microphone hung before him
+and his words rang through every vessel
+of his convoy.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> lust of battle was upon him.
+A fleet of the Zar&rsquo;s aeros had risen
+from below; twenty of them at least.
+These would be manned by Moon creatures,
+he knew, and would carry all of
+the dreadful weapons which had originated
+on that strange body. But he did
+not know that his own ships were insulated
+against most of the rays used
+by the Zar&rsquo;s forces. He knew only that
+he must fight; fight and kill; exterminate
+every last one of the Zar&rsquo;s adherents
+or be exterminated in the attempt.</p>
+<p>Kill! Kill! The madness was contagious.
+His pilot was a marvel and
+drove his ship straight for the massed
+ships of the foe. The air was vivid
+with light-streamers. A ray from an
+enemy vessel struck the thick glass of
+the port through which he looked and
+the outer surface was shattered and
+pock-marked. But a cloud of vapor
+and a dripping stream of fiery liquid
+told him his own ray had taken effect
+on a vessel of the enemy. One! They
+wheeled about and spiraled, coming up
+under another of the Zar&rsquo;s aeros. It
+vanished in a puff of steam and they
+narrowly missed being covered by
+the falling remnants of incandescent
+liquid. Two! Karl&rsquo;s aim was good and
+he gloated in the fact. Three! They
+climbed and turned over, dropping
+again into the fray. Four!</p>
+<p>The air grew stifling, for the expended
+energy of the enemies&rsquo; rays
+must needs be absorbed. It could not
+disintegrate them nor decompose their
+bodies, but the contacts were many and
+the liberation of heat enormous. They
+were suffocating! But Karl would not
+desist. They drove on, now beneath,
+now above an enemy ship. He lost
+count.</p>
+<p>One of his own vessels was in trouble.
+The report came to him from the
+little speaker at his ear. He looked
+around in alarm. A glowing object
+reeled uncertainly over there between
+two of the aeros of the Zar. The concentration
+of beams of vibrations was
+too much for the sturdy craft. It was
+red hot and its occupants burned alive
+where they sat. Suddenly it slipped
+into a spin and went slithering down
+into the city, leaving a gaping opening
+where it fell. This sobered him somewhat,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_369' name='page_369'></a>369</span>
+but he went into the battle with
+renewed fury.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>How</span> many had they brought
+down? Fifteen? Sixteen? He
+tore his purple jacket from his body.
+The perspiration rolled from his pores.
+His own ship would be next. But what
+did it matter? Kill! Kill! He shouted
+once more into the microphone, then
+dived into battle. Another and another!
+In Heaven&rsquo;s name, how many
+were there? It was maddening. If
+only he could breathe. His lungs were
+seared; his eyes smarting from the
+heat. And then it was over.</p>
+<p>Three of the Zar&rsquo;s aeros remained,
+and these turned tail to run for it. No!
+They were falling, nose down, under
+full power; diving into the city from
+which they had come. Suicide? Yes.
+They couldn&rsquo;t face the recriminations
+that must come to them. And anything
+was better than facing that burning
+death from the strange little fighters
+which had come from out the skies.
+Dorn was a mass of wreckage.</p>
+<p>Karl tore at the fastenings of the
+ports, searing his fingers on the heated
+metal. His pilot had collapsed, the
+little aero heading madly skyward with
+no guiding hand. Air! They must
+have air! He loosened the pilot&rsquo;s
+jacket; slapped frantically at his wrists
+in the effort to bring him to consciousness.
+Then he was at the controls of
+the vessel, tugging on first one, then
+the other. The aero circled and spun,
+executing the most dangerous of sideslips
+and dives. A little voice was
+speaking to him&mdash;the voice of the radio&mdash;instructing
+him. In a daze he followed
+instructions as best he could.
+The whirlings of the earth stabilized
+after a time and he found he was flying
+the vessel; climbing rapidly.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>A sense</span> of power came to him as
+the little voice of the radio continued
+to instruct. Here were the controls
+of the electronic motor; there the
+gravity-energy. He was proceeding in
+the wrong direction. But what did it
+matter? He learned the meaning of the
+tiny figures of the altimeter; the difference
+between the points of the compass.
+Still he drove on.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;East! Turn East!&rdquo; begged the little
+voice from the radio. &ldquo;You&rsquo;re heading
+west. Your speed&mdash;a thousand
+kilometers an hour&mdash;it&rsquo;s too fast. Turn
+back, Zar Peter!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He tore the loud speaker of the radio
+from its fastenings. West! He wanted
+to go west! On and on he sped, becoming
+more and more familiar with
+the workings of the little vessel as he
+progressed. A cooling breeze whistled
+from the opened ports, a breeze that
+smelled of the sea. His heart sang with
+the wonder of it all. He could fly.
+And fly he did. Zar Peter? Never!
+He knew now where he belonged; knew
+what he wanted. He&rsquo;d find the coast of
+North America. Follow it until he located
+New York. A landing would be
+easy, for had not the voice instructed
+him in the use of the gravity-energy?
+He&rsquo;d make his way to the lower levels,
+to the little book shop of Rudolph
+Krassin. A suit of gray denim awaited
+him there and he&rsquo;d never discard it.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Onward</span> he sped into the night,
+which was falling fast. He held
+to his westward course like a veteran
+of the air lanes. The pilot had ceased
+to breathe and Karl was sorry. Game
+little devil, that pilot. Have to shove
+his body overboard. Too bad.</p>
+<p>Rudolph&rsquo;s brother would understand.
+He&rsquo;d be watching in the detectoscope.
+And the others&mdash;those who had wished
+to seat him on a throne&mdash;they&rsquo;d understand,
+too. They&rsquo;d have to!</p>
+<p>Rudolph would forgive him, he
+knew. Paul Van Dorn&mdash;his own cousin&mdash;the
+secret agents of the Zar would
+never locate him! Too many friends
+of Rudolph&rsquo;s were of the red police.</p>
+<p>He gave himself over to happy
+thoughts as the little aero sped on in
+the darkness. Home! He was going
+home! Back to the gray denim, where
+he belonged and where now he would
+remain content.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_370' name='page_370'></a>370</span>
+<a name='THE_APEMEN_OF_XLOTLI_BY_DAVID_R_SPARKS' id='THE_APEMEN_OF_XLOTLI_BY_DAVID_R_SPARKS'></a>
+<h2>The Ape-Men of Xlotli</h2>
+<p><i>By David R. Sparks</i></p>
+</div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_7' id='linki_7'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/370.jpg' alt='' title='' width='451' height='500' /><br />
+</div>
+<h3>CHAPTER I</h3>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Kirby</span> did not know what
+mountains they were. He did
+know that the Mannlicher
+bullets of eleven bad Mexicans
+were whining
+over his head
+and whizzing
+past the hoofs of
+his galloping,
+stolen horse. The
+shots were mingled with yelps which
+pretty well curdled his spine. In the
+circumstances, the unknown range of
+snow mountains towering blue and
+white beyond the arid, windy plateau,
+offering he could not tell what dangers,
+seemed a
+paradise. Looking
+at them, Kirby
+laughed harshly
+to himself.</p>
+<p class='sidebarright'>A beautiful face in the depths of a
+geyser&mdash;and Kirby plunges into a desperate
+mid-Earth conflict with the dreadful
+Feathered Serpent.</p>
+<p>As he dug the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_371' name='page_371'></a>371</span>
+heels of his aviator&rsquo;s boots into the
+stallion&rsquo;s flanks, the animal galloped
+even faster than before, and Kirby
+took hope. Then more bullets and
+more yelps made him think that his
+advantage might prove only temporary.
+Nevertheless, he laughed again, and as
+he became accustomed to the feel of a
+stallion under him, he even essayed a
+few pistol shots back at the pack of
+frantic, swarthy devils he had fooled.</p>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_8' id='linki_8'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/371.jpg' alt='' title='' width='363' height='500' /><br />
+<p class='caption'>
+<i>His head wavered back and forth and his hiss filled the night.</i><br />
+</p>
+</div>
+<p>Three hours ago he had been eating
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_372' name='page_372'></a>372</span>
+a peaceful breakfast with his friend
+and commandant, Colonel Miguel de
+Castanar, in the sunlit patio of the
+commandant&rsquo;s hacienda. Castanar,
+chief of the air patrol for the district,
+had waxed enthusiastic over the suppression
+of last spring&rsquo;s revolutionists
+and the cowed state of up-country bandits.
+Captain Freddie Kirby, American
+instructor of flying to Mexican
+pilots in the making, had agreed with
+him and asked for one of the Wasps
+and three days&rsquo; leave with which to
+go visiting in Laredo. The simple matter
+of a broken fuel line, a forced landing
+two hundred kilometres from nowhere,
+and the unlucky proximity of
+the not-so-cowed horsemen, were the
+things which had changed the day
+from what it had been to what it was.</p>
+<p>The one piece of good fortune which
+had befallen him since the bandits had
+surrounded the wrecked Wasp, looted
+it, and taken its lone pilot prisoner,
+was the break he was getting now.
+During the squadron&rsquo;s first halt to feed,
+he had knocked down his guards and
+made a bolt for the grazing stallion.
+So far, the attempt was proving worth
+while.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>On</span> and on the stallion lunged toward
+the white mountains. Kirby&rsquo;s
+eyes became red rimmed now from
+fatigue and the glare of the sun and
+the dust of the pitilessly bare plateau.
+A negligible scalp wound under his
+mop of straw-colored hair, slight as it
+was, did not add to his comfort. But
+still he would not give up, for the
+horse, as if it sensed what its rider
+needed most, was making directly for
+a narrow ravine which debouched on
+the plateau from the nearest mountain
+flank.</p>
+<p>It was the promise of cover afforded
+by the jagged rocks and jungle growth
+of that ravine which kept hope alive
+in Kirby&rsquo;s throbbing brain.</p>
+<p>The stallion was blown and staggering.
+Foam from the heavily bitted
+mouth flashed back in great yellow
+flakes against Kirby&rsquo;s dust-caked aviator&rsquo;s
+tunic. But just the same, the five
+mile gallop had carried both horse and
+rider beyond range of any but the most
+expert rifle shot. And Kirby knew
+that if his own splendid mount was almost
+ready to crash, the horses of his
+pursuers must be in worse shape still.
+So for the third time since the fight
+had begun, he laughed. This time there
+was no harshness, but only relief, in
+the sound which came from his dry
+lips.</p>
+<p>Ten minutes later, he flung himself
+out of his saddle. Like the caress of
+a vast, soothing hand, the shadowed
+coolness of the ravine lay upon him.
+As his feet struck ground, they
+splashed in the water overflowing from
+a spring at the base of an immense
+rock. At once Kirby dropped the reins
+on the stallion&rsquo;s neck, giving him his
+freedom, and as the horse lowered his
+head to drink, Kirby stooped also.</p>
+<p>There was cover everywhere. Kirby&rsquo;s
+first move after pulling both himself
+and the horse away from the spring,
+was to glance up the long, deeply
+shaded canyon which he had entered&mdash;a
+gash hacked into the breast of the
+steep mountain as by a titanic ax.
+Then, reassured as to the possibilities
+for a defensive retreat, he glanced back
+toward the dazzling, bare plateau.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>It</span> was what he saw taking place
+amongst the sombreroed bandits
+out there which made the grin of satisfaction
+fade from his broad mouth.
+His last glance backward, before bolting
+into the canyon mouth, had showed
+him a ragged squadron of men left far
+behind, yet galloping after him still.
+But now&mdash;</p>
+<p>Presently a puzzled frown made
+wrinkles in Freddie Kirby&rsquo;s wide sunburned
+forehead. He relaxed his grip
+upon the heavy Luger, which, in his
+big hands, looked like a cap pistol, and
+rubbed his eyes.</p>
+<p>But he was not mistaken. The horsemen
+had halted! Out there on the glaring,
+alkali-arid plateau, they were
+standing as still as so many statues.
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_373' name='page_373'></a>373</span>
+Looking toward the canyon mouth
+which had swallowed their quarry,
+they certainly were, but they were
+halted as completely as men struck
+dead.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Huh,&rdquo; Kirby grunted, and scratched
+behind his ear.</p>
+<p>The next second he swung around
+to look at his horse, uncertain what he
+was going to do next, but aware of the
+fact that right now, with a lot of unknown
+country between himself and
+Castanar&rsquo;s sunlit patio, the stallion was
+going to be a friend in need.</p>
+<p>As he turned, however, prepared to
+take up the loose reins, something else
+happened. The stallion let out a neigh
+as shrill as a trumpet blast. As Kirby
+jumped, grabbed for the bridle, his fingers
+found empty air. Like a crazy
+animal the stallion leaped past him,
+barely missing him. Out toward the
+plain the horse jumped, out and away
+from the shaded canyon mouth, out
+toward the spot where other horses
+waited. And despite the animal&rsquo;s blown
+condition, the speed he put into his
+retreat left Kirby dazed.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>After</span> a helpless, profanity-filled
+second, Kirby scratched behind
+his ear again. As certain as the fact
+that almost his sole hope of getting
+back to civilization depended upon the
+stallion, was the fact that the brute
+did not intend to stop running until
+he dropped.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now what in the hell ever got into
+his crazy head?&rdquo; Kirby muttered
+grimly.</p>
+<p>Then he turned around to glance up
+the shadow-filled slash of a canyon,
+and sniffed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Huh!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Faintly in the air had risen an odor
+the like of which he had never encountered
+in his life. A combination, it
+was, of the unforgetable stench which
+hangs over a battlefield when the dead
+are long unburied, and of a fragrance
+more rare, more heady, more poignantly
+sweet than any essence ever concocted
+by Parisian perfumer.</p>
+<p>With the drifting scent came a
+sound. Faint, carrying from a distance,
+the rumble which Kirby heard
+was almost certainly that of a geyser.</p>
+<p>There was no telling what had
+brought the troop of horsemen to a
+halt, but after a time Kirby knew that
+the cause of his horse&rsquo;s sudden departure
+must have been a whiff of the
+strange perfume.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>For</span> a long time he stood still,
+watching the crazy stallion dwindle
+in size, watching the line of unexpectedly
+timid bandits. Then, when it
+became apparent that the horsemen
+were going to stay put either until he
+came out, or showed that he never was
+coming out, he shrugged, and swung
+on his heel so that he faced up the
+canyon.</p>
+<p>The odor was dying away now, and
+the geyser rumble was gone. In Kirby&rsquo;s
+heart came a mingled feeling of
+tense uneasiness and fascinated curiosity.
+Momentarily he was almost glad
+that his horse <i>had</i> bolted, and that his
+pursuers <i>were</i> blocking any lane of retreat
+except that offered by the canyon.
+If things had been different, the queer
+behavior of the Mexicans, the unaccountable
+actions of his horse and the
+equally strange growth of his own uneasiness
+might have made him uncertain
+whether he would go up the canyon
+or not. Now it was the only thing
+to do, and Kirby was glad because, fear
+or no fear, he wanted to go on.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wonder,&rdquo; he said out loud as he
+started, &ldquo;just what the denizens of
+First Street in Kansas would say to a
+layout like this!&rdquo;</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER II</h3>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>At</span> the end of an hour he was still
+wondering.</p>
+<p>At midday the canyon was chill and
+dank, lit only by a half light which at
+times dwindled to a deep dusk as the
+rock walls beetled together hundreds
+of feet above his head. Always when
+he stumbled through one of the darkest
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_374' name='page_374'></a>374</span>
+passages, he heard and half saw
+immense gray bats flapping above him.
+In the half-lit reaches, he hardly took
+a step without seeing great rats with
+gray coats, yellow teeth, and evil pink
+eyes. But rats and bats combined were
+not as bad as the snakes. They were
+almost white, and nowhere had he seen
+rattlers of such size. If his caution
+relaxed for a second, they struck at
+him with fangs as long and sharp as
+needles.</p>
+<p>The tortured, twisted cedars, the
+paloverdi, occatilla, cholla, opunti,
+through which he edged his laborious
+way, all offered an almost animate,
+armed hostility.</p>
+<p>Altogether this journey was the least
+sweet he had taken anywhere. Yet he
+went on.</p>
+<p>Why had eleven Mexican bandits refused
+to advance even to within decent
+rifle range of the canyon&rsquo;s mouth?
+What was there about the putrid yet
+gorgeous perfume that had made the
+stallion go off his nut, so to speak?</p>
+<p>After a time, Kirby veered away
+from a fourteen-foot rattler which
+flashed in a loathsome coil on his left
+hand. Hungry, weakened by all he had
+been through since breakfast time, he
+plodded doggedly on.</p>
+<p>But a moment later he stumbled past
+a twisted cedar, and then stopped, forgetting
+even the snakes.</p>
+<p>At his feet lay the bleached skeleton
+of a man.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Beside</span> the right hand, in a position
+which indicated that only
+the final relaxation of death had loosened
+his grip upon a precious object,
+lay a cylinder, carefully carved, of rich,
+yellow gold.</p>
+<p>Of the science of anthropology
+Kirby knew enough to make him sure
+that the dolicocephalic skull and characteristically
+shaped pelvic and thigh
+bones of the skeleton had belonged to
+a white man.</p>
+<p>As for the cylinder&mdash;But he was
+not so sure what that was.</p>
+<p>Regardless of the dry swish of a rattler&rsquo;s
+body on the rocks behind him,
+he lifted the object from the spot in
+which it had lain for no man knew
+how long. Of much the size and shape
+of an old-time cylindrical wax phonograph
+record, the softly gleaming
+thing weighed, he judged, almost two
+pounds.</p>
+<p>Two pounds of soft, virgin gold of
+a quality as fine as any he had seen
+amongst all the treasures brought out
+of Mexico, Yucatan, and Peru combined!</p>
+<p>But the gold was not the only thing.
+If Kirby was human enough to think
+in terms of treasure, he was also
+enough of an amateur anthropologist
+to hold his breath over the carvings on
+the yellow surface.</p>
+<p>First he recognized the ancient symbols
+of Sun and Moon. And then a
+representation, semi-realistic, semi-conventionalized,
+of Quetzalcoatl, the
+Feathered Serpent, known in all the
+annals of primitive Mexican religions.</p>
+<p>Good enough.</p>
+<p>But the mere symbols by no means
+told the whole story of the cylinder.
+The workmanship was archaic, older
+than any Aztec art Kirby knew, older
+than Toltec, older far, he ventured to
+guess, than even earliest archaic Mayan
+carvings.</p>
+<p>God, what a find!</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>For</span> a moment it seemed almost
+impossible that he, Freddie Kirby,
+native of Kansas, unromantic aviator,
+should have been the one to discover
+this relic of an unknown, lost race.
+Yet the cylinder of gold was there, in
+his hand.</p>
+<p>After a long minute Kirby looked
+around him, then listened.</p>
+<p>From up the canyon came the provocative
+rumble of the geyser. It was
+closer now, and Kirby, glancing at his
+watch which had been spared to him
+in the Wasp&rsquo;s crash, noted that just
+forty-four minutes had passed since
+the last eruption. There was nothing
+to be done about the bleached skeleton.
+So, tucking the precious cylinder into
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_375' name='page_375'></a>375</span>
+his tunic, Kirby headed on up the gash
+of a canyon.</p>
+<p>Far away indeed seemed the neat,
+maple-shaded asphalt street, the rows
+of parked cars and farm wagons, the
+telephone office and drug store and
+bank, of the Kansas town where he had
+grown up.</p>
+<p>Time passed until again he heard the
+geyser, and again was dizzied by the
+perfume. As the fragrance&mdash;close and
+powerful now&mdash;died away, he flailed
+with one arm at a two-foot bat which
+flapped close to his head.</p>
+<p>And then he trudged his dogged way
+around a deeply shadowed bend, and
+found the chasm not only almost
+wholly dark, but narrower than it had
+been at any previous point.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Holy mackerel,&rdquo; Kirby groaned.
+&ldquo;Phew! If this keeps up, I&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He stopped. His jaw dropped.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, hell!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The beetling walls narrowed in until
+the gash was scarcely fifteen feet
+wide. Further progress was barred by
+a smooth wall which rose sheer in
+front of him.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Kirby</span> did not know how many
+seconds passed before he made
+out through the gloom that the wall was
+man-made and carved with the same
+symbols of Sun, Moon, and Feathered
+Serpent, which ornamented the cylinder
+of gold. But when he did realize
+at last, the shout with which he expressed
+his feeling was anything but
+a groan.</p>
+<p>It simply meant that the skeleton
+which once had been a man, had almost
+surely found the golden cylinder beyond
+the wall and not in the canyon.
+And if the dead man had passed that
+smooth, carved barrier, another man
+could do it!</p>
+<p>Kirby jumped forward, began to
+search in the darkness for some hidden
+entrance.</p>
+<p>Minute after minute passed. He
+gave another cry. He saw a long, upright
+crack in the stone surface, and
+a quick push of his hands made the
+stones in front of him give almost an
+inch.</p>
+<p>All at once his shoulder was planted,
+and behind that square shoulder
+was straining all the muscle of his
+two hundred pound body. The result
+was all that he desired. When he
+ceased pushing, a slab of rock gaped
+wide before him, giving entrance to a
+pitch dark tunnel.</p>
+<p>For a moment he held the portal
+back, then, releasing his pressure, he
+stepped into the dark passage. By the
+time a ponderous grating of rocks assured
+him that the door had swung
+shut of its own weight, he had produced
+matches and struck a light.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> puny flame showed him a
+curving passage hewn smoothly
+through the heart of bedrock. Before
+the flare died he walked twenty feet,
+and as another match burned to his fingers,
+he found the right hand curve
+of the passage giving way to a left
+hand twist. After that he dared use
+no more of his precious matches. But
+just when the darkness was beginning
+to wear badly on his nerves, he uttered
+a low cry.</p>
+<p>As he increased his rapid walk to a
+run, the faint light he had suddenly
+seen ahead of him grew until it became
+a circular flare of daylight which
+marked the tunnel&rsquo;s end.</p>
+<p>Out of the passage Kirby strode with
+shoulders square and head up, his cool,
+level, practical blue eyes wide with
+wonder. Out of the tunnel he strode
+into the valley of the perfumed geyser.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;God above!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The words were vibrant with hoarse
+reverence. He saw the sunlight of a
+cliff-surrounded diminutive Garden of
+Eden. He saw a vale of flowering
+grass, of palms and live oaks, saw
+patches of lilies so huge as to transcend
+belief, and dizzying clumps of
+tree cactus almost as tall as the palms
+themselves.</p>
+<p>What was more, he saw in the center
+of this upland, cliff-guarded valley, a
+gaping black orifice which every faculty
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_376' name='page_376'></a>376</span>
+of judgment told him was the
+mouth of the geyser of perfume. And
+beside it, outstretched on a smooth
+sheet of rock which glistened as though
+coated with a layer of clear, sparkling
+glass, he saw&mdash;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Kirby</span> blinked his eyes rapidly,
+hardly believing what he saw.</p>
+<p>On the glistening rock lay the perfectly
+preserved figure of a Spanish
+Conquistadore in full armor. Morion
+and breast-plate were in place, and
+glistened as though they had been burnished
+this morning. And the Spaniard&rsquo;s
+dark, handsome, bearded face!
+Kirby saw instantly that no decay had
+touched it, that even the hairs of the
+beard were perfect. The whole armor-clad
+corpse gleamed softly with a covering
+of the same glassy substance
+which covered the rock.</p>
+<p>Kirby glanced at his watch, saw that
+twelve minutes must elapse before the
+geyser spouted again. Then his eyes
+narrowed. He remained standing where
+he was, hard by the mouth of the tunnel,
+knowing that a wise man would
+conduct cautiously his exploration of
+this valley of wonders.</p>
+<p>Arsenic! Silicon!</p>
+<p>The two words stood out sharply in
+his thought. In Africa existed plenty
+of springs whose waters contained
+enough arsenic to bring death to those
+who drank. Might not the Spaniard&rsquo;s
+presence here be explained, then, by
+assuming that the geyser water was
+charged with a strong arsenic content,
+and, in addition, with some sort of silicon
+solution which, left to dry in the
+air, hardened to glass?</p>
+<p>Lord, what a discovery to take back
+with him to Kansas! Almost it made
+the discovery of the golden cylinder
+pale by comparison. Why, the commercial
+uses to which this silicon water
+might be put were almost without
+limit, and the owner of the concession
+might confidently expect to make millions!</p>
+<p>It was while Kirby stood there,
+breathless and jubilant, waiting for
+the geyser to spout, that he began to
+feel that <i>he was being watched</i>.</p>
+<p>Suddenly, with a start, he shot a
+sweeping glance over the whole grove.
+But that did no good. He saw nothing
+save sunlight and waving green leaves.</p>
+<p>Eleven days were to pass before he
+discovered all that was to be involved
+in that sensation of being gazed at by
+unseen eyes.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER III</h3>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>At</span> the beginning of the eleventh
+morning in the valley, Kirby had
+again posted himself close to the mouth
+of the black tunnel, and again felt that
+hidden eyes were observing him.</p>
+<p>But this morning differed from the
+first morning, because now, for the first
+time, he was ready to do something
+about the watcher or watchers. Exploration
+of the whole valley had not
+helped. Therefore, there lay at his feet
+a considerable coil of rope, the manufacture
+of which from plaited strands
+of the tough grass in his Eden had
+taken him whole days. With what patience
+he could find, he was waiting for
+the gigantic spout of milky-colored,
+perfumed water which would mean that
+the geyser had gone off and would
+erupt no more for exactly forty-four
+minutes.</p>
+<p>Eleven days in the valley!</p>
+<p>While he waited, Kirby considered
+them. Who had made the beautiful
+footprints beside him, when he had
+slept at last after his arrival here?
+Why had so many of the queer, fuzzy
+topped shrubs with immense yam-shaped
+roots, which grew here been
+taken away during that first sleep, and
+during all his other periods of sleep?
+Who had taken them? Early in his
+stay, he had learned that the tuberlike
+roots were good to eat and would sustain
+life, and he supposed that the unseen
+people of the valley took them for
+food. But who were these people of
+the valley?</p>
+<p>Who had laid beside him during his
+first sleep the immense lily with perfume
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_377' name='page_377'></a>377</span>
+like that which came with the
+milky geyser spray&mdash;that spray of
+death and delight mingled? Why had
+someone scratched a line in the earth
+from him directly to the distant orifice
+of the geyser? Was this, as he
+believed, a signal to come not only to
+the edge of the orifice, <i>but to lower
+himself down into its depths</i>? And if
+the line were intended as a signal, did
+the persons who came to the valley
+while he slept, always eluding him,
+wish him well or mean to do him harm?</p>
+<p>Last question of all: had the beautiful
+girl&rsquo;s face he believed he had seen
+just once, been real or an hallucination?
+It had been while he was kneeling
+at the very edge of the geyser cone,
+staring down its many colored throat,
+that the vision had appeared. Misty
+white amidst the green gloom, the face
+had been turned up to him, smiling, its
+lips forming a kiss, and its great eyes
+beckoning. Had the face been real
+or a dream?</p>
+<p>Eleven days in the valley! Now,
+with his braided rope ready at last, he
+was going to do something which
+might help to answer his questions.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Kirby</span> reached out and began to
+run his grass rope, yard by yard,
+through his hands, searching carefully
+for any flaw. A canyon wren made the
+air sweet above him, while the morning
+sun began to wink and blink
+against the shadows which still lay
+against the face of the guardian cliffs.
+Kirby glanced at his watch and got up.</p>
+<p>Crossing beyond the mouth of the
+geyser, he grinned good morning at
+his friend the Conquistadore, and
+marched on into the shade of the live
+oak which grew nearest the geyser.
+Here he made one end of his rope fast
+to the gnarled trunk, inspected his pistol,
+patted his tunic to make sure that
+the cylinder of gold was safe, then
+stood by to await the geyser.</p>
+<p>With the passing of three minutes
+there came from the still empty orifice
+a sonorous rumbling. Kirby grinned.</p>
+<p>From deep in the earth issued a
+sound of fizzing and bubbling, and
+then, to the accompaniment of subterranean
+thunder, burst loose the milky,
+upward column which had never ceased
+to awe the man who watched so eagerly
+this morning. As the titanic jet leaped
+skyward now, the slanting rays of the
+sun caught it, and turned the water,
+fanning out, into a fire opal, into a
+sheet of living color.</p>
+<p>Kirby, hard headed to the last, drew
+from the supply in one pocket of his
+tunic, a strip of one of the tuberlike
+roots, and munched it.</p>
+<p>The thunder ceased. The waters receded.</p>
+<p>After that Kirby hesitated not a second.
+Promptly he moved forward,
+flung his coil of line down into the
+geyser tunnel, and swung on to the
+line. By the time he had swallowed
+the last bite of his breakfast, the world
+he knew had been left behind, and he
+was climbing down to a new.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>It</span> became at once apparent that the
+gorgeously colored, glassy-smooth
+throat glowed with tints which were
+unfamiliar to him. He could perceive
+these new shades of color, yet had no
+name for them.</p>
+<p>As he stopped after fifty feet to
+breathe, the color phenomenon made
+him wonder if the tuber roots he had
+been eating had affected his vision;
+then decided they had not. In addition
+to food value, the roots had some
+power to stimulate courage and a slight
+mental exhilaration. But the drug had
+proved non-habit forming, and Kirby
+knew that his powers of perception
+were not now, and never had been, affected.</p>
+<p>He swung down further.</p>
+<p>Just a moment after he began that
+progress was when things began to
+happen to him. First he heard what
+seemed to be the low titter of a human
+voice laughing sweetly. Next
+came a far off, unutterably lovely
+strumming of music. And then he
+realized that, at a depth of about a
+hundred feet, he was hanging level
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_378' name='page_378'></a>378</span>
+with a hole which marked the mouth
+of another tunnel.</p>
+<p>This new tunnel sloped down into
+the earth on his right hand. The floor
+and walls were glassy smooth, and the
+angle of descent was steep, but by no
+means as steep as the drop of the vertical
+geyser shaft in which he now
+hung.</p>
+<p>Laughter, music, the new tunnel suddenly
+aroused an excitement which
+made him quiver.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When I saw <i>her</i>,&rdquo; he gasped, &ldquo;she
+was standing here, in the mouth of this
+tunnel, looking up at me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Violently, Freddie Kirby forgot the
+maple-shaded street of his Kansas
+town, forgot everything but desire to
+reach the mouth of the new tunnel,
+where the girl of the exquisite face
+and beckoning lips had stood. Tightening
+his grip on the rope, he began to
+swing himself back and forth like a
+pendulum.</p>
+<p>It seemed probable that when the
+geyser water shot up past the horizontal
+tunnel, its force was so great
+that no water at all entered. He redoubled
+his efforts to widen his swing.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Then</span> his feet scraped on the floor,
+and in a second he had alighted
+there. He still hung stoutly to his line,
+however, for the tunnel sloped down
+sharply enough, and was slippery
+enough, to prohibit the maintenance of
+footing unaided.</p>
+<p>The music which issued from the
+depths of that stunningly mysterious
+passage swelled to a crescendo&mdash;and
+stopped. Kirby clung there to his
+precarious perch, his feet slipping on
+the glass under them with every move
+he made, and feelings stirred in his
+heart which had never been there before.</p>
+<p>Then, as silence reigned where the
+music had been, something prompted
+him to look up. The next instant he
+stifled a cry.</p>
+<p>With widening eyes he saw the flash
+of a white arm and the gleam of a
+knife hovering over the spot where his
+taut rope passed out of the geyser
+opening into the sunshine of the outer
+world. Again he stifled a cry. For
+crying out would do no good. While
+the suppressed sound was still on his
+lips, the knife flickered.</p>
+<p>Then Kirby was shooting downward,
+the severed line whipping out after
+him. The first plunge flung him off
+his feet. A long swoop which he took
+on his back dizzied him. But as the
+fall continued, he was able to slow it a
+little by bracing arms and legs against
+the tunnel walls.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Holy Jeehosophat!&rdquo; he gurgled.</p>
+<p>But there seemed to be no particular
+danger. The slide was as smooth as
+most of the chutes he had ever encountered
+at summer swimming pools.
+If ever the confounded spiral passage
+came to an end, he might find that he
+was still all right. As seconds passed
+and he fell and fell, it seemed that he
+was bound for the center of the earth.
+It seemed that&mdash;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>He</span> swished around a multiple bend,
+and eyes which had been accustomed
+to darkness were blinded by
+light.</p>
+<p>It was light which radiated in all
+colors&mdash;blue, yellow, browns, purples,
+reds, pinks, and then all the new colors
+for which he had no name. Somehow
+Kirby knew that he had shot out of
+the tunnel, which emerged high up in
+the face of a cliff, and that he was dropping
+through perfumed, brilliant air
+resonant with the sound of birds and
+insects and human cries. The funny
+thing was that the pull of gravity was
+not right, somehow, and he was dropping
+fairly slowly. From far below,
+a body of what looked like water was
+sweeping up to meet him. Kirby
+closed his eyes.</p>
+<p>When he opened them again, his
+whole body was stinging with the slap
+of his impact, and he found that it was
+water which he had struck. The proof
+of it lay in the fact that he was swimming,
+and was approaching a shore.</p>
+<p>But such water! It was milky white
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_379' name='page_379'></a>379</span>
+and perfumed as the geyser flow had
+been, and it seemed luminous as with
+a radium fire. Had he not realized
+presently that the fluid probably contained
+enough arsenic to finish a thousand
+like him, he would have thought
+of himself as bathing in the waters of
+Paradise.</p>
+<p>But then he began to forget about
+the poison which might already be at
+work upon him.</p>
+<p>Ahead of him, stretched out in the
+gorgeous, colored light, ran a beach
+which was backed by heavy jungle.
+And on the beach stood the lovely
+creatures, all clad in shimmering, glistening
+garments, whose flutelike cries
+had come to him as he fell.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Kirby</span> looked, and became almost
+powerless to continue his swim.
+The beauty of those frail women was
+like the reputed beauty of bright
+angels. That paralyzing effect of wonder,
+however, did not last long.</p>
+<p>The girls moved forward to the water&rsquo;s
+edge, and, laughing amongst
+themselves, beckoned to him with
+lovely slender hands whose every motion
+was a caress.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be not afraid,&rdquo; called one in a curious
+patois dialect, about five-sixths of
+which seemed made up of Spanish
+words, distorted but recognizable.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The water would kill you,&rdquo; called
+another, &ldquo;as it killed the Spaniard in
+armor. But we are here to save you.
+I will give you a draught to drink
+which will defeat the poison. Come on
+to us!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby&rsquo;s heart was almost literally in
+his mouth now, because the girl who
+promised him salvation was she whose
+lips had formed a kiss at him from the
+green-gloomy throat of the geyser.</p>
+<p>His feet struck a shale bottom. Panting,
+he stood up and was conscious of
+the fact that despite his forlornly dripping
+and dishevelled condition, he was
+tall and straight and big, and that for
+some reason all of the girls on the
+gleaming sand, and one girl in particular,
+were anxious to receive him here.</p>
+<p>The one girl had drawn a small,
+gleaming flask of gold from the misty
+bodice of her gown, and was holding
+it out while she laughed with red lips
+and great, dazzling dark eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Pronto!</i>&rdquo; she called in pure Spanish,
+and other girls echoed the word. &ldquo;Oh,&rdquo;
+went on the bright owner of the flask,
+&ldquo;we thought you would <i>never</i> have
+done with your work on the rope. It
+took you so long!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Kirby</span> left the smooth lake behind
+him and stood dripping on the
+sand. The moment the air touched his
+clothes, he felt that they were stiffening
+slightly. Yet the sensation brought
+no terror. He could not feel terror as
+he faced the girls.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Give him the flask, Naida!&rdquo; someone
+exclaimed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, but the Gods <i>have</i> been kind to
+us!&rdquo; echoed another.</p>
+<p>The girl with the flask made a gesture
+for silence.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it Naida you are called?&rdquo; Kirby
+put in quickly, and as he spoke the
+Spanish words, the roll of them on his
+tongue did much to make him know
+that he was sane and awake, and not
+dreaming, that this was still the
+Twentieth Century, and that he was
+Freddie Kirby.</p>
+<p>Answering his question, Naida nodded,
+and gave him the flask.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A single draught will act as antidote
+to the poison,&rdquo; she said.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I drink,&rdquo; said Kirby as he raised the
+flask, &ldquo;to the many of you who have
+been so gracious as to save me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A flashing smile, a blush was his answer.
+And then he had wetted his lips
+with, and was swallowing, a limpid
+liquid which tasted of some drug.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Enough!&rdquo; Naida ordered in a
+second.</p>
+<p>As she reached for the flask, her
+companions closed in as though a ceremony
+of some sort had been completed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is it time to tell him yet, Naida?&rdquo;
+piped one of the girls, younger than
+the rest, whom someone had called
+Elana.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_380' name='page_380'></a>380</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, <i>do</i> begin, Naida,&rdquo; chorused two
+more. &ldquo;We can&rsquo;t wait <i>much</i> longer to
+find out if he is going to help us!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby turned to Naida, while a
+soothing sensation crept through him
+from the draught he had taken.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Pray tell me what it is that I am to
+be permitted to do for you. I can
+promise you that the whole of my life
+and strength, and such intelligence as
+I possess, is yours to command.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Excited</span> small cries and a clapping
+of hands answered him. As
+for Naida, her face lighted with glowing
+joy.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, one who could say that, <i>must</i>
+be the friend and protector of whom
+we have stood in such bitter need!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What,&rdquo; asked Kirby, &ldquo;is this need
+which made one of you cut my rope,
+so that I should come here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A momentary silence was broken
+only by the hum of insects in the perfumed
+air, and by the golden thrilling
+of a bird back in the jungle. Then
+Kirby beheld Naida bowing to him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So be it,&rdquo; she said in a voice low
+and flutelike. &ldquo;I will speak now since
+you request it. Already you have seen
+that you are here in our world because
+we conspired amongst ourselves to
+bring you here. Our reason&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She paused, looked deep into his
+eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Amigo,&rdquo; she continued slowly, &ldquo;we
+whom you see here are the People of
+the Temple. For more centuries than
+even our sages can tell, our progenitors
+have dwelt here, where you find us,
+knowing always of your outer world,
+but remaining always unknown by it.
+But now the time has come when those
+of us who are left amongst our race
+need the help of one from the outer
+races we have shunned. Dangers of
+various orders confront us who have
+waited here for your coming. When we
+first discovered you in the Valley of
+the Geyser, the idea came to me that
+we must make you understand our
+troubles, and ask of you&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But then she stopped.</p>
+<p>As Kirby stared at her, the gentleness
+of her expression was replaced by
+a swift strength which made her majestic.</p>
+<p>The next moment bedlam reigned
+upon the beach.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>They are after us!</i>&rdquo; gasped one of
+the girls in terror. &ldquo;Quick, Naida!
+Quick! Quick!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Whatever</span> it was that threatened,
+Naida did not need to be
+told that the need for action was
+pressing. She shouted at her companions
+some order which Kirby did
+not understand. From a pouch at her
+side, she snatched out a greyish, spherical
+vegetable substance which looked
+almost like a tennis ball. Then she
+braced herself as if to withstand an assault.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Stand back!&rdquo; she cried to Kirby.</p>
+<p>He had long ago ceased to wonder
+at anything that might happen here.
+Disappointed that Naida&rsquo;s story had
+been interrupted, wondering what was
+wrong, he obeyed Naida&rsquo;s order to keep
+clear.</p>
+<p>As he fell back and stood motionless,
+there came from behind a dense screen
+of shrubs which would have resembled
+aloe and prickly pear bushes, save that
+they were as big as oak trees, a ghastly
+howling. The next second, hopped and
+hurtled across the beach toward the
+girls, a group of hair-covered, shaggy
+creatures which were neither apes nor
+men. The faces, contorted with lust,
+were hideously leathery and brown, the
+foreheads small and beetling, and the
+mouths enormous, with immense yellow
+teeth.</p>
+<p>Helpless, Kirby realized that Naida
+and all the others had clapped over
+their faces curious masks which seemed
+to be made of some crystalline substance,
+and that now others had armed
+themselves with the tennis balls. And
+that was the last observation he made
+before the battle opened furiously.</p>
+<p>With a cry muffled behind her mask,
+Naida leaped out in front of her
+squadron and cut loose her queer
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_381' name='page_381'></a>381</span>
+vegetable ball with whizzing aim and
+force.</p>
+<p>Full into the snarling face of one of
+the ape-men the thing smashed, filling
+the air all about the creature with a
+yellow, mistlike powder. Kirby was
+half deafened by the yells of rage and
+terror which went up from the entire
+attacking band. The creature who had
+been hit fell to his knees the while he
+made agonized tearing movements at
+his face and uttered shrill, jabbering
+yelps.</p>
+<p>Other balls flashed instantly from
+Naida&rsquo;s ranks, and each brought about
+the same ghastly result as the first. But
+then Kirby saw that the whole jungle
+seethed with the hairy, awful men.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Keep back!&rdquo; Naida shrieked at him
+through her mask. &ldquo;We have no mask
+for you. If the powder from our fungi
+touches you, it will be the end!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>With</span> gaps in the advancing line
+filled as soon as each screeching
+ape went down, the attackers leaped on
+until Kirby knew they would be upon
+the girls in a matter of seconds. A
+sweat broke out on his neck.</p>
+<p>But then an idea gripped him, and
+suddenly, without even a last glance at
+Naida, he leaped away even as she had
+commanded.</p>
+<p>A great boulder lay on the shore fifty
+yards away. Toward it Kirby streaked
+as though he had become coward. But
+he had not turned coward.</p>
+<p>By the time he reached the shelter
+which would protect him from the
+fungus mist, a turning point had come
+in the battle. The ape-men had closed
+in on the girls, were swarming about
+them, and the mist balls had almost
+ceased to fly. But the thing which
+gave Kirby hope was that the apes
+were not attempting to harm the girls.
+They seemed victors, but they were not
+committing atrocities.</p>
+<p>It was the sharp intuition that something
+like this might happen which had
+sent Kirby fleeing from the fight. He
+believed he might yet prove useful.</p>
+<p>The thickest group of attackers were
+jostling about Naida. As the screams
+and sobs of the girls quivered out,
+mingled with the guttural roaring of
+the men, Naida was shut off by a solid
+wall of aggressors.</p>
+<p>Then Kirby saw her again. But now
+two of the most powerful of the ape-men
+had caught her up and was carrying
+her. Her kicking and writhing and
+biting accomplished nothing. The apes
+were headed directly back to the
+jungle.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Now</span>, however, most of the yellow
+mist had disappeared, and that
+was all Kirby had been waiting for.
+With a growling shout, he tore out
+from behind his boulder, his Luger
+ready. Naida&rsquo;s captors were in full retreat,
+and other pairs of men were
+snatching up other girls and hopping
+after them. Toward Naida Kirby ran
+madly but not blindly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Naida! Naida!&rdquo; he bellowed.</p>
+<p>He got in two strides for every one
+the apes made.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Naida!&rdquo; he shouted, and at last saw
+her look at him.</p>
+<p>Her face was pallid with loathing and
+terror. As her glimmering dark eyes
+met his, they flashed a plea which made
+his heart thrash against his lungs.</p>
+<p>With a final roar of encouragement
+Kirby closed in on the hair-covered
+men, and fired instantly a shot which
+caught one full in the heart. The
+creature wavered on its legs, looked at
+the unexpected enemy with dismayed,
+swinish little red eyes, and relaxing his
+hold upon Naida, dropped without making
+a sound.</p>
+<p>After that&mdash;</p>
+<p>But suddenly Kirby found himself
+unable to comprehend fully the other
+terrific results of his intervention. Before
+the echoes of his shot died, there
+came to him the rumble of what seemed
+to be tons of falling rock. In the bright
+air a slight mist was precipitated. To
+all of which was added the effect upon
+the ape-men of fear of a weapon and a
+type of fighter utterly new to them.</p>
+<p>Kirby had fired believing that he
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_382' name='page_382'></a>382</span>
+would have to fight other ape-men when
+the first fell. But not so. Instead of
+that&mdash;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>He</span> blinked rapidly as he took in
+the scene.</p>
+<p>Naida had been released. Lying
+on the sand beside the dead ape-man,
+she was looking up at him in stupefied
+wonder. And her other captor, instead
+of remaining to fight, had clapped
+shaggy hands over his ears, and was
+leaping headlong for the protection of
+the jungle!</p>
+<p>Moreover, the soprano cries of the
+girls and the deep howls of the men
+were rising everywhere, and everywhere
+the ape-men were dropping their
+captives and plunging away after their
+leader.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Huh,&rdquo; Kirby muttered aloud, and
+wondered what the citizens of Kansas
+would have to say about <i>this</i>.</p>
+<p>Naida looked at the dead and bleeding
+ape-man and shuddered, and then
+at the score or so of others brought
+down by the puff balls. Then she
+looked up at Kirby, raised her arms for
+his support, and smiled up into his
+brown face.</p>
+<p>Kirby forgot Kansas, lifted her,
+warm and alive, radiantly beautiful, in
+his arms.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Our friends the enemies,&rdquo; she whispered
+as she remained for a second in
+his embrace and then drew away, &ldquo;will
+attack no more this day&mdash;thanks to
+you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>There was no possible need for another
+shot, Kirby saw. In terrified
+silence, the first of the apes had already
+floundered behind the prickly pear and
+aloe bushes, and the last stragglers
+were using all the power in their legs
+to catch up. On the beach, Naida&rsquo;s
+followers were picking themselves up,
+and already a few of them had burst
+into ringing laughter.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come on, all of you,&rdquo; Naida said to
+them, and, including Kirby in her
+glance, added, &ldquo;We may as well go to
+the caciques now, and have it over
+with.&rdquo;</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER IV</h3>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>It</span> was with Naida at his side and
+the other girls grouped about them,
+that they started their journey to the
+&ldquo;caciques,&rdquo; whoever they might be, &ldquo;to
+have it over with,&rdquo; whatever that might
+mean. As they strode along in silence,
+Kirby did what he could to straighten
+out in his mind the many curious things
+which had happened since he sat testing
+his rope in the upper world this
+morning.</p>
+<p>In final analysis, it seemed to him
+that, extraordinary as his experience
+had been, there was nothing so much
+out of the way about it, after all. The
+only unusual thing was the existence
+of this inhabited pocket in the earth.
+For the rest, the strange colors to
+which he could not put a name, were
+simply some manifestation of infra-reds
+and ultra-violets. And then the
+startling effect of his single shot at
+the ape-men&mdash;that was simply the old
+story of savage creatures running from
+a new weapon and a new enemy; naturally
+the shot had sounded loud in this
+enclosed cavern. Lastly, the pull of
+gravity down here seemed upset somehow.
+But why should it not seem so,
+at this distance within the earth? The
+American was no scientist; the conclusions
+he reached seemed very reasonable
+to him.</p>
+<p>All told, the last thing Kirby found
+he needed to do was pinch himself to
+see if he was awake.</p>
+<p>A place of indefinite extent, the
+cavern seemed to be exactly what he
+had already judged it&mdash;a giant pocket
+within the earth. The ceiling, or the
+sky, was of some kind of natural glass&mdash;no
+doubt the same kind which was
+crackling on his clothes now&mdash;and
+from it emanated the brilliant, many
+colored glow which lighted the cavern.
+Radium? Perhaps it was that. Perhaps
+the rays were cast off from some
+other element even less understood
+than mysterious radium. As for the
+plant and animal life with which the
+cavern teemed, it was amazing.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_383' name='page_383'></a>383</span></div>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>But</span> Kirby did not give himself up
+to silent observation any longer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Will you finish telling me,&rdquo; he asked
+of Naida, &ldquo;about the task I am to perform
+for you here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Naida, walking with lithe strides
+along a path jungle-hemmed on both
+sides, smiled at him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are to be our leader.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Now both Naida and the other girls
+became sober.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will lead us in a revolt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; Kirby whistled softly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;In a revolt against the caciques&mdash;the
+wise men&mdash;whose kind have governed
+the People of the Temple since
+the beginning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Her statement was received with acclaim
+by the whole troop, who crowded
+close around, the while they smiled at
+Kirby.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You mean I am to lead a revolt,&rdquo; he
+asked, &ldquo;against these same caciques
+whom we are going now to face?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Naida nodded emphatically.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, if revolt proves necessary. And
+it probably will.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hum.&rdquo; Kirby scratched behind his
+ear. &ldquo;You&rsquo;d better tell me what you
+can about it.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Then</span>, as they hurried on, Naida
+spoke rapidly.</p>
+<p>The situation before the People of
+the Temple was that for a long time
+now, the only children to be born had
+been girls. Worse still, not even a girl
+had been born during a period equal to
+sixteen upper-world years. The only
+remaining members of a race which had
+flourished in this underground land for
+countless thousands of years, consisted
+of the caciques, a handful of aged people,
+and the thirty-four girls, including
+Naida, who accompanied Kirby now.</p>
+<p>On one hand was promised extinction
+through lack of reproduction. On
+the other, even swifter and more terrible
+extinction at the hands of the
+ape-men, whom Naida called the Worshippers
+of Xlotli, the Rabbit God, the
+God of all bestiality and drunkenness.</p>
+<p>It was the menace of the ape-men,
+rather than the less appalling one of
+lack of reproduction, which was making
+the most trouble now. Ages ago,
+when the People of the Temple had
+flourished as a race, they had been untroubled
+by the Worshippers of Xlotli.
+But now the ape-men were by far the
+stronger; and they desired the girls
+who had been born as the last generation
+of an ancient race. The battle of
+this morning had been only one of
+many.</p>
+<p>Dissension between the caciques, who
+ruled the People of the Temple, and
+their girl subjects, had arisen on the
+subject of the best way of dealing with
+the ape-man menace.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Some</span> time ago, Naida, heading a
+council of all the girls, had proposed
+to the caciques that support be
+sought amongst the people of the upper
+world. This would be done judiciously,
+by bringing to the lower realm
+a few men who were wise and strong,
+men who would make good husbands,
+and who could fight the ape-men.</p>
+<p>This proposal the priests had
+promptly quashed. They would never
+receive, they said, any members of the
+teeming outer races from whom the
+People of the Temple had so long been
+hidden. Those few who had blundered
+into the Valley of the Geyser during
+the centuries, and who had never escaped,
+were enough. Better, said the
+caciques, that a compromise be arranged
+with the subjects of the Rabbit
+God.</p>
+<p>Flatly then, the priests had proposed
+that some of the girls, the number to
+be specified later, should be given to
+the ape-men, and peace won. During
+the time of reprieve which would thus
+be afforded, prayers and sacrifices
+could be offered the Lords of the Sun
+and Moon, and to Quetzalcoatl, the
+Feathered Serpent. In answer to these
+prayers, the Gods would surely send
+the aged people who alone were left as
+prospective parents, a generation of
+sons.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_384' name='page_384'></a>384</span></div>
+<p>Once the priests&rsquo; program of giving
+up some of the girls to the ape-men had
+been made definite, it had not taken
+Naida and the others long to decide
+that they would never submit. And
+then, while matters were at an acute
+stage, a tall, blond white man had come
+to the Valley of the Geyser&mdash;Kirby.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>As</span> Naida had finished her story,
+Kirby mustered a smile despite
+the soberness which had come upon
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;So the white man came,&rdquo; he repeated
+after her, &ldquo;and all of you decided
+forthwith to stage your revolt.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; Naida answered. &ldquo;We
+observed you until we were sure you
+possessed the qualities of leadership we
+wanted. After that, we did what we
+could to coax you to come here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby grinned at that.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; Naida ended simply, &ldquo;we will
+go to the caciques. If they accept you,
+and grant our requests to them, there
+will be peace. If they rage, it will be
+war.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Suddenly she drew closer to Kirby as
+they swung along, and slipped her hand
+into his, looking up at him in silent entreaty.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;How much farther,&rdquo; he asked in
+a voice which became sharp, &ldquo;until
+we reach the headquarters of these
+caciques?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They live in a castle which our
+ancestors built ages ago on a protected
+plateau,&rdquo; Naida answered tensely. &ldquo;It
+is a good distance still, but we will
+cover it soon enough.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>They crossed now one edge of a
+shadow-filled forest composed principally
+of immense, pallid palmlike trees.
+Farther on, the path wound through a
+belt of swampy land covered by gigantic
+reeds which rustled above their
+heads with a glassy sound, and by
+things which looked like the cat-tails
+of the upper world, but were a hundred
+times larger. Everywhere hovered
+odd little creatures like birds, but with
+teeth in their long snouts and small
+frondlike growths on each side of their
+tails. About some swamp plants with
+very large blooms resembling passion
+flowers, flitted dragon flies of jeweled
+hues and enormous size, and under the
+flowers hopped strange toadlike creatures
+equipped with two pair of gauzy
+wings.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Finally</span>, through a tunnel composed
+of ferns a hundred feet
+high, they emerged to a still densely
+overgrown but higher country which
+Naida said was a part of the Rorroh
+forest.</p>
+<p>In the forest, Kirby gained a hazy
+impression of bronzy, immense cycads
+and what appeared to be tree chrysophilums
+with gorgeous blossoms.
+Then he received a much clearer impression
+of other trees with blossoms
+of bright orange yellow and very thick
+petals, each tipped with a glassy sharp
+point. The disconcerting thing about
+the tree was that, as they approached,
+the scaly limbs began to tremble and
+wave, and suddenly lashed out as
+though making a human effort to snatch
+at the bright travelers.</p>
+<p>Naida and all the others hurried
+along without offering comment, and
+Kirby asked no questions.</p>
+<p>Once he thought he saw a group of
+gorilla creatures parallelling their
+course back amongst the forest growth,
+but if Naida observed the animals, she
+paid no attention. The one thing which
+had any effect upon the company was
+the appearance, presently, of two vast,
+birdlike creatures. As these things approached,
+Naida signaled to all to
+crouch beneath the shelter of a tall
+rock beside the path.</p>
+<p>Enormous, the birds had bat wings,
+and carried with them, as they approached,
+the stink of putrid flesh. The
+long beaks were overfull of sharp teeth.
+The heads, set upon bodies of glistening
+white-grey, were black. Reddish
+grey eyes searched the jungle as the
+creatures flapped along. But, the
+Pterodactyls&mdash;if they were that&mdash;passed
+above Naida&rsquo;s band without offering
+attack, and presently Naida
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_385' name='page_385'></a>385</span>
+gave the command to advance again.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>In</span> time, they came to a chasmlike
+gorge across which was suspended
+a slender long thread of a bridge. Not
+far above the bridge, a considerable
+river emptied itself into the gorge in
+a mirrorlike ribbon. Kirby could not
+hear the torrent fall&mdash;or rather could
+not hear it strike any solid bottom.
+But from somewhere in the unlighted,
+unfathomed depths of the abyss rose
+strange bubbling and whistling sounds.</p>
+<p>At the bridge, Naida paused and
+pointed to the land across the river.
+And as Kirby looked in the direction
+indicated, he beheld a rocky eminence
+rising for several hundred feet straight
+up from the expanse of a level, tree and
+grass covered plain. Atop of the
+plateau, glimmered the complex towers
+and turrets, the crenellated walls of a
+castle which, in its grey antiquity,
+seemed as old as the race of men.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is behind those walls that the
+caciques dwell,&rdquo; Naida said quickly.
+&ldquo;It is behind the castle, in a series of
+separate houses, that the older members
+of the race dwell. We shall go
+and look upon them presently. But
+first we will force an interview with
+the caciques.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In silence Kirby took her hand, and,
+with the others following, they moved
+out upon the swaying, perilous causeway
+which hung above the chasm.
+After that, the trip across the plain to
+the foot of the plateau cliffs was
+quickly accomplished.</p>
+<p>Here, however, Kirby thought they
+must face trouble, for he found that the
+great walls, of a sparkling, almost
+glassy smoothness, shot up to a height
+of at least three hundred feet, and that
+no path of any sort was visible.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re here,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;but how can
+we get up?&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>But</span> understanding began to dawn
+as Naida laughed, and produced
+from the pouch at the side of her gauzy
+dress four pliable discs of a substance
+which resembled rubber.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You are very strong, are you not?&rdquo;
+she asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you will have no trouble in
+following us up the cliff. Our Serpent
+God, Quetzalcoatl, taught us how to
+climb long ago.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With that she handed Kirby the set
+of vacuum discs, and producing another
+for herself, moistened them in a
+pool of water close at hand. Then, as
+all of the girls followed her action, she
+strapped them to her hands and feet,
+and in a moment they had begun the
+ascent.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; Kirby said presently, &ldquo;with
+these things you could hang by your
+feet and walk on a smooth ceiling!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Naida laughed, and they worked
+their way upward.</p>
+<p>When the climb was accomplished
+and the discs were put away, Kirby
+found himself standing on the outer
+edge of a mediaeval paradise, of a
+magnificent plateau partly fortified by
+nature, partly by the hand of man.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; he cried in deep admiration,
+then followed Naida.</p>
+<p>The building&mdash;the castle&mdash;in the near
+distance, resembled a castle of Spain,
+save that there was greater beauty and
+subtlety of architecture. Turreted on
+all four corners, constructed of material
+which looked like blocks of
+natural glass, the fairylike structure
+was crowned by a gigantic tower of
+something which resembled obsidian.
+Up and up this tower soared until its
+gleaming black tip seemed almost to
+touch the glassy-radiant sky of the
+cavern.</p>
+<p>No people showed themselves, and
+Kirby saw that the bronze-studded
+portals set in the front of the castle
+were closed.</p>
+<p>Admiringly, he glanced at the surrounding
+land laid out in checkerboard
+patches of gardens and orchards where
+grew a bewildering variety of unknown
+fruits and blooms. Butterflies drifted
+past, and the air was freighted with
+the scent of flowers. Inside a walled
+enclosure, Kirby saw a good-sized plot
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_386' name='page_386'></a>386</span>
+heavily grown with the plant on which
+he had been subsisting. As they passed
+this ground, each of the girls, Naida
+leading, made a strange little bowing,
+gliding genuflection, and Kirby wondered.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Now</span>, however, new sights distracted
+him as they crossed a
+port drawbridge above a deep moat
+which was a fairyland of aquatic
+plants. Although not a sound had
+come from the castle, the great entrance
+doors were swinging back.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Be ready,&rdquo; Naida whispered, &ldquo;for
+almost anything. The doors are being
+opened by some of the palace guard. I
+have little doubt that word was long
+ago rushed to the caciques that we are
+come to them with an upper-world
+man!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby answered with a nod. Then
+they passed the outer doors, passed inside,
+and Kirby blinked at what he
+saw.</p>
+<p>In a long hall decorated bewilderingly
+with a carven frieze in which appeared
+all of the symbols common to
+early Mexican religions, and many new
+ones, stood a row of bright suits of
+armor of the Sixteenth Century. From
+each suit peered the glassy face and
+shovel beard of a dead Conquistadore.</p>
+<p>So this was what happened to intruders
+from the upper world! The
+Conquistadore who kept his long watch
+beside the geyser was not the only one!
+Kirby felt an involuntary chill prickle
+up his back. But he was not given long
+to think before Naida, ignoring the
+gruesome array, clasped his arm.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look! Behold!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>And Kirby saw that with almost
+magical silence the whole wall at the
+end of the corridor was sliding back
+to reveal an enormous amphitheatre in
+the center of which stood a vast circular
+table. Ranged in a semicircle about
+that table, stood fifteen incredibly
+ancient men clad in long, glistening
+grey robes. Blanched beards trailed
+down the front of the garments until
+they all but touched the floor.</p>
+<p>The caciques!</p>
+<p>Kirby, on the threshold of the amphitheatre,
+squared his shoulders and held
+his head high. Then with Naida on his
+right, his own eyes boring unyieldingly
+into the smouldering, narrowed
+eyes which stared at him, he advanced.</p>
+<p>But in front of him the priests
+moved suddenly. From Naida burst a
+shriek. In the radiant glare of the
+council room flashed the long, thin,
+cruel blade of a sacrificial knife.</p>
+<p>The cacique who had whipped it
+from his robe flew at Kirby with a
+condor swoop, talon-hands outstretched,
+his wrinkled, bearded face contorted
+with fury.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER V</h3>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Before</span> Kirby was more than half
+set to fight, the priest was clawing
+at his throat, and a gnarled old fist
+was poised to drive the knife in a death
+stroke.</p>
+<p>Kirby did the only thing he could do
+quickly&mdash;sprang to one side. The move
+saved him. The knife whipped past his
+shoulder, and the cacique nearly fell.
+But it had been a close enough squeak
+for all that.</p>
+<p>Nor was it over. After Kirby the
+priest sprang with unexpected agility,
+and before Kirby could snatch at his
+pistol the talon-hands were lunging at
+his throat once more.</p>
+<p>With the gasps of the girls ringing
+in his ears, Kirby bunched himself for
+another side leap only to find the
+cacique all over him like an octopus.
+Momentarily the knife hung above his
+chest, and Kirby, dismayed at the
+powers of his opponent, almost felt that
+the thing must plunge before he could
+break the octopus hold.</p>
+<p>But he had no intention of being defeated,
+and now he was getting used to
+the fight. The priest&rsquo;s left arm swiftly
+clenched about his neck and shoulders,
+and the right arm, with the knife, attempted
+a drive through to the heart.
+Suddenly, however, Kirby lurched
+sideways and backward, and as the
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_387' name='page_387'></a>387</span>
+octopus grip slackened for a flash, he
+himself got a wrestler&rsquo;s grip that left
+him ready to do business. As the priest
+broke free, he slid around in an attempt
+to fasten himself on Kirby&rsquo;s
+back. Quickly, tensely Kirby doubled,
+and knew that he had done enough.
+The cacique shot over his shoulders,
+described a somersault in midair, and
+landed with a sharp crack of head and
+shoulders against unyielding stone.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>From</span> the semicircle of other
+priests went up a gasp. From
+Naida came a strangled cry of joy.
+Kirby made one leap for the knife
+which had fallen from the cacique&rsquo;s
+hand as he slumped into unconsciousness,
+and then he straightened up
+with the weapon safe in his possession.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There, you old billygoat,&rdquo; he
+croaked in English, &ldquo;maybe you won&rsquo;t
+try any more fast ones for awhile.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A second later he stepped over the
+sprawled body to stand beside Naida.</p>
+<p>Upon the wrinkled countenances of
+the remaining caciques was stamped a
+look of dismay and hatred which
+boded no good. It was plain to Kirby
+that in battering up the man detailed
+to kill him, he had committed a
+desecration of first order.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Is there anyone else who cares to
+fight?&rdquo; he flung at them in Spanish,
+showing a contempt as great as their
+rage.</p>
+<p>The response he got was instant.
+From one old gullet, then from others,
+came choking, snarling sounds which
+presently became words. By those
+words Kirby heard himself cursed with
+a vituperation which made him, even in
+his temporary triumph, feel grave.</p>
+<p>But he did not let that soberness
+trouble him long. For the main point
+now was that no one made a move to
+fight further, which was what he had
+expected. He had flung them the challenge,
+knowing that he was possessed
+of their knife, and suspecting that it
+was their only weapon. The belief that
+no one would care to try a barehanded
+conflict, no matter what insult was
+waiting to be avenged, seemed justified
+as none of the caciques advanced, and
+as even the cursing presently ceased.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No?&rdquo; Kirby asked. &ldquo;There is to be
+no more fighting?&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>One</span> of the caciques now came forward
+a few steps.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; he answered with a lameness
+which was not to be denied. &ldquo;But you,
+a criminal interloper in our realm, have
+been marked as a victim for sacrifice,
+and from this there is no power in the
+universe which can save you.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby, after a reassuring glance at
+Naida, looked at the floored priest who
+was sitting up now, looking stupidly
+about, and feeling himself all over, and
+Kirby suppressed a grin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah, I am to be sacrificed, eh? But
+what happens until that time comes?
+Listen my Wise Ones&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He stabbed a finger at them, and his
+eyes flashed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Listen! What you mean to say is
+that I have defeated you, and you must
+lay off me until you can launch another
+attack. But I have a few things to say
+to that. One is that I am not going to
+permit myself to <i>be</i> sacrificed. Another
+is that I demand, right here and now,
+that you begin to discuss with me certain
+agreements which are going to
+regulate the future conduct of affairs
+in this world to which I have come.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A low exclamation answered that, but
+it came from no priest. They remained
+sullen and staggered. It was Naida
+who murmured, and there was excitement
+and pleasure in her voice. Suddenly
+she placed her lips against
+Kirby&rsquo;s ear.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You must not treat with them,&rdquo; she
+said. &ldquo;Tell them you want to see the
+Duca, and will destroy them all unless
+he comes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Understanding burst over Kirby. The
+Duca! Then these men were only the
+representatives of a High Priest, the
+Duca!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he repeated resolutely to the
+assembled greybeards, &ldquo;a meeting is
+going to be held in this chamber of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_388' name='page_388'></a>388</span>
+council at once. But I will not deal
+with you! Do you understand me? I
+must see the Duca. I leave it to you
+to decide whether you will summon
+him, or force me to fight my way
+through to wherever he is staying.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Duca!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> words burst in dismay from
+the gimlet-eyed cacique who had
+said there would be no more fighting.
+He looked at Naida, well aware of the
+fact that it was her interference which
+had made Kirby extend his demand.
+And his look was black.</p>
+<p>Kirby slid between Naida and the
+cacique.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; he spat out, &ldquo;the Duca! Will
+you summon him, or&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He did not repeat what he would do
+as an alternative. A second passed in
+silence. It seemed as if the cacique
+who had been speaking was ready to
+burst.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Answer me!&rdquo; Kirby thundered.</p>
+<p>And then the priest obeyed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; he growled in a voice
+which quaked with rage. &ldquo;I obey. But
+you will wish you had never made the
+demand!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The next second he swung on his
+heel, and leaving his company behind
+as a guard, headed toward a stair which
+led upward from one side of the amphitheatre,
+and which was protected by a
+door of heavy, grilled metal work. The
+stairway seemed to be spiral, and was
+all enclosed. Kirby realized that it
+must lead into the tall and beautiful
+tower of obsidion which he had seen
+outside.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; Naida whispered as looks and
+smiles of approval came from all of
+the girls, &ldquo;you have been magnificent!
+Mark now, what we must do. You must
+be the one to state our terms, because
+you have already won a victory for us.
+Tell the Duca that we will not submit
+to any compromise with the ape-men,
+and least of all will we let any of our
+number go to the ape-men.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A deep flush crept into Kirby&rsquo;s cheeks
+at thought of what he would like to do
+to the man who had proposed that sacrifice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then tell him,&rdquo; Naida continued,
+&ldquo;that we want men brought to our
+world from the world above. And
+finally tell him we will live under his
+dictatorship no longer, and hereafter
+demand a voice in all councils affecting
+temporal affairs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;All right,&rdquo; Kirby spoke grimly.
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll tell him. Naida, is this high priest
+we&rsquo;re waiting for, the one who proposed
+sacrifice of some of you to the
+apes?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Naida nodded.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Next</span> moment, she, Kirby, and all
+the others, including the row of
+glowering caciques, became silent. At
+sounds from above, all looked toward
+the grilled doorway to the tower. Then
+Kirby realized that all of the girls, as
+well as the caciques, were dropping to
+their knees.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; he commanded quickly. &ldquo;Get
+up! You must not abase&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He had not finished, and Naida had
+scarcely risen, when the heavy door
+swung on noiseless hinges.</p>
+<p>The light in the amphitheatre seemed
+to become more intense. Then, against
+the great glow, Kirby beheld majesty,
+beheld one who represented the apotheosis
+of priestly rank and power.</p>
+<p>Clad in robes of filmy material which
+glimmered white beside the gray robes
+of his underlings, the Duca wore about
+his waist the living flame of a girdle
+composed of alternate cut diamonds
+and blood red rubies each larger than
+a golf ball. And Kirby, searching for
+comparisons, realized that the Duca&rsquo;s
+face, upheld to others, would be as remarkable
+as his jewels must be when
+compared to ordinary gems. It was a
+chiseled face, seamed by a thousand
+wrinkles, which a god might have
+carved from ivory before endowing it
+with the flush and glow of life. A
+mane of snow white hair cascaded back
+from a tremendous forehead to fall
+about thin but square shoulders and
+mingle with the downward sweep of
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_389' name='page_389'></a>389</span>
+pure white beard. The eyes, black as
+polished jet, flamed now with the glare
+of baleful fires.</p>
+<p>As Naida, stealing close to Kirby,
+trembled, and even the abased caciques
+trembled, Kirby himself felt as if icy
+water was trickling over him.</p>
+<p>He fought the sensation off. For suddenly
+he knew that in spite of first impressions
+which made the man seem a
+living god, the old Duca was human.
+And what was more, he was in the
+wrong. All of which being true, the
+thing to do was keep a level head and
+fight.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>All</span> at once Kirby spoke across the
+silence in the great room.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have sent for you,&rdquo; he said, weighing
+words carefully.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I,&rdquo;&mdash;the Duca&rsquo;s voice was mellow
+and deep&mdash;&ldquo;have come. But I am
+not here because you summoned me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh!&rdquo; Kirby let sarcasm edge his
+words. &ldquo;Well, I won&rsquo;t quibble about
+your motives for coming. Did my
+messenger tell you why we are here
+and demand your presence?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Your messenger,&rdquo; the old man said
+calmly, &ldquo;told me.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well. Do you consent to listen
+to Naida&rsquo;s and my terms? If you <i>will</i>
+listen&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But wait a moment,&rdquo; the Duca interrupted,
+still calmly, but with a look
+in his eyes which Kirby did not like.
+&ldquo;Are you asking <i>me</i>, to my face,
+whether I will listen to terms which
+you offer as self-styled victor of a battle
+with my caciques?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby nodded. His apprehension increased.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ah,&rdquo; said the Duca softly. And
+then, amazingly, a smile deepened
+every wrinkle of his parchment face.
+&ldquo;But do you not remember that I said
+I had <i>not</i> come here because you summoned
+me?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Kirby said solidly. &ldquo;I remember
+very well.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The thing which brought me here
+was the failure of my followers to accomplish
+an assignment which I had
+given them&mdash;namely, that of ending
+your life.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hum.&rdquo; Kirby scratched behind his
+ear. &ldquo;You are <i>not</i> interested in arranging
+terms of peace, then.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I am here,&rdquo;&mdash;suddenly the Duca&rsquo;s
+voice filled the room&mdash;&ldquo;to do that
+which my priests were unable to do.
+And the moment has come when the
+Gods will no longer trifle with you.
+You dog! You thieving intruder!
+You&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Swiftly the Duca plunged one withered
+but still powerful hand into the
+folds of his robe above the flaming
+girdle. Then his hand flashed out, and
+in it he held&mdash;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>But</span> Kirby did not get to see.</p>
+<p>A strangled cry of terror smote
+his ears. Naida leaped toward him
+from one side, while Elana, the lovely
+youngest girl, sprang from another
+direction, hurled Naida aside, and
+stopped in front of Kirby.</p>
+<p>Through the glaring room flickered
+a tiny red serpentine creature which
+the Duca hurled from a crystalline
+tube in his hand. As the minute snake
+struck Elana&rsquo;s breast, she gave a
+choked cough, and then, as she half
+turned to smile at both Naida and
+Kirby over her shoulder, her eyes went
+blank, and she collapsed gently to the
+polished stones of the floor&mdash;dead.</p>
+<p>A second later came squirming out
+from under her the ghastly, glimmering
+little snake which had struck.</p>
+<p>Slowly, while every mortal in the
+room stood paralyzed, Kirby stepped
+forward and set his heel upon the
+writhing thing. When he raised his
+boot, the snake was only a blotch on
+the floor.</p>
+<p>The Duca was standing as still as
+girls and caciques. The laughter with
+which he had started to greet what he
+had thought would be Kirby&rsquo;s extermination
+had faded to a look of wonder&mdash;and
+fear. He was an easy mark.</p>
+<p>Up to him Kirby rolled, and with
+all the force of soul and muscular body,
+drove his fist into the Duca&rsquo;s face.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_390' name='page_390'></a>390</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;By God,&rdquo; he roared, &ldquo;you want war,
+and you shall have it!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Duca was simply out&mdash;not dead.
+Since Kirby did not want him dead,
+he did not strike again, but swung back
+from the sprawled body, faced Naida,
+and pointed to the tower door.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Up there!&rdquo; he snapped. &ldquo;Seize the
+tower. I have a reason!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>At the Duca&rsquo;s crashing downfall,
+had come to the caciques a tension
+which made Kirby know they would
+not be dummy figures much longer.
+His eyes never left them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quick, Naida!&rdquo; he snapped again.
+&ldquo;We must hold the tower!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Naida, all of the girls, were staring
+dazedly at Elana, dead.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The tower!&rdquo; she choked. &ldquo;But we
+cannot go there. It is the Duca&rsquo;s!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because it is the Duca&rsquo;s,&rdquo; Kirby
+said firmly, &ldquo;is exactly why we must
+hold it. Come, Naida, please&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>And</span> then he saw comprehension
+begin to dawn at last.</p>
+<p>He also saw two of the caciques
+glide from the wooden line, and slink
+toward him past the unconscious Duca,
+stealthily.</p>
+<p>As Naida suddenly cried out to her
+companions, pushed at two of them,
+and then darted like a rainbow nymph
+toward the silent and forbidding upward
+spiral of steps, Kirby faced the
+gliding caciques.</p>
+<p>One he clutched with viselike hands,
+and lifted him. As the other shrieked
+and sprang, he was mowed down by
+the hurtling body of his fellow priest
+which Kirby flung forward mightily.</p>
+<p>The rest of the caciques were howling.
+While Naida waited beside the
+tower door, the other girls flashed up
+the steps. The Duca still lay where
+he had fallen, a thread of blood oozing
+from his mouth. Kirby, after his last
+look over all, solemnly stooped and
+gathered in his arms the limp, radiant
+little body of the girl who had given
+her life that her friends might be left
+with a leader.</p>
+<p>A moment later, he was standing on
+the steps. Naida, unopposed by the
+still stupefied caciques, swung shut the
+tower door and shot a double bolt.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Naida&mdash;&rdquo; Kirby whispered as he
+held Elana closer to him, &ldquo;oh, I am so
+sorry that we could have won only at
+such a price.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As Naida stooped to kiss the pale
+little forehead with its halo of golden
+hair, sobs came. But then she raised
+her eyes, and they were, for Kirby,
+alight with the message that she could
+and would accept Elana&rsquo;s sacrifice, because
+she would gladly have made it
+herself.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We will not forget,&rdquo; she whispered.
+&ldquo;Carry her tenderly, and come.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>For better, for worse, the Duca&rsquo;s
+tower was theirs.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER VI</h3>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>At</span> the end of an hour, Kirby was
+taking a turn of guard duty at
+the foot of the steps, while the others
+remained with Elana in a chamber
+above. To Kirby, with things thus far
+along, it seemed that the seizure of the
+tower had proved a shrewd stroke.</p>
+<p>It seemed that the tower was to the
+Duca what hair was to Sampson. From
+Naida had come the information that
+the Duca lived hidden within the great
+shaft of obsidion, and appeared but seldom
+even before his caciques. Apparently
+a large part of his hold upon his
+subjects was maintained by the mystery
+with which he kept himself surrounded.
+And now his retreat was lost
+to him! Such had been the moral
+effect of the loss upon both Duca and
+caciques, that his whole first hour had
+gone by without their doing anything.</p>
+<p>Kirby, standing just around the first
+turn of the winding stairway, presently
+cocked his ears to listen to the
+conclave being held in the amphitheatre.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why not starve them out, O Holy
+One?&rdquo; he heard one of the caciques ask
+of the Duca, only to be answered by a
+growl of negation.</p>
+<p>The Duca, Kirby had gathered before
+this, wanted to fight.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_391' name='page_391'></a>391</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;But there is no food in the tower,
+is there?&rdquo; the cacique still pressed on,
+and this time he was supported by
+other voices.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; the Duca rumbled back. &ldquo;But
+am I to be deprived of my retreat,
+left here like a common dog amongst
+other dogs, while these accursed fiends
+starve slowly to death? No! I tell
+you, you must fight for me!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>But</span> he had told them so several
+times before and nothing had
+happened. Kirby grinned at the
+thought of the caste the Duca was losing
+by being driven to this belittling
+parley.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Holy One,&rdquo; exclaimed a new priest
+in answer to the urge to fight, &ldquo;what
+can we do against the golden haired
+fiend? The stairs are so narrow that
+he could defend them alone. And then
+there are the gates of bronze. If we
+could shatter the first, at the foot of
+the steps, we should only encounter
+others. The Duca must remember that
+his tower was built to withstand
+attack.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Even so,&rdquo; the Duca snapped back,
+&ldquo;it must be attacked! I&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But then he fell silent, having been
+made so by the sounds of dissension
+which arose amongst his caciques.
+Kirby, laughing to himself, turned
+away from his listening post, and tip-toed
+up the steps.</p>
+<p>After he had closed and bolted behind
+him three of the bronze portals
+so feared by the caciques, he turned
+to the entrance of the chamber in
+which he had left Naida and the others.
+Here all was silent, and he found his
+friends grouped about a couch on
+which lay Elana. Feeling the solemnity
+of the moment, he would have
+taken his place quietly amongst the
+mourners.</p>
+<p>Naida, however, came to him at once,
+and in a low voice asked for news from
+the amphitheatre, and when Kirby answered
+that the caciques were unanimously
+in favor of leaving them alone
+until they starved, she exclaimed:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, then it is good news!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>After that, however, a shadow of
+doubt flickered in her great eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And yet, is it? It means temporary
+immunity, of coarse. But&mdash;starvation!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby assured her with a grin.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If we had to starve we might worry.
+But there is more food here than the
+Duca thinks. Look!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>From</span> a bulging pocket of his
+tunic he fished a strip of the roots
+on which he had subsisted so comfortably.
+Naida&rsquo;s eyes widened, and
+several of the girls gave low cries.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; Naida exclaimed, &ldquo;but such
+food! Why&mdash;why, do you know what
+you are offering us? Why, this is the
+sacred Peyote! Only the Duca eats it,
+and, at rare intervals, his priests.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby was really startled now.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But surely you and the others have
+taken quantities of the stuff away from
+the Valley of the Geyser. Do you
+mean&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Because we gathered the Peyote
+does not mean that we have ever tasted
+it. We gather it for the Duca. To
+taste would be complete, utter sacrilege.
+Have <i>you</i> been eating it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Inwardly Kirby was chuckling at
+this added proof of the buncumbe with
+which the Duca&mdash;and other Ducas&mdash;had
+fooled all.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course I&rsquo;ve been eating the
+Peyote.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And&mdash;and nothing has happened to
+you?&rdquo; Naida asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hardly. I certainly haven&rsquo;t been
+blasted by the Lords of the Sun and
+Moon, or the Serpent either!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Naida and all the others were silent.
+The conflict between their reverence
+for the food and their clear desire to
+eat it, now that it was become the food
+of their leader, was pathetic.</p>
+<p>Kirby put one of the strips in Naida&rsquo;s
+hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; he asked. &ldquo;We have
+bested the Duca in fair fight. We have
+seized his tower. Why not eat his
+food?&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_392' name='page_392'></a>392</span></div>
+<p>As he had hoped it would, the suggestion
+at last settled the matter. A
+moment later, as Naida nibbled her
+first bite, she smiled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, it&mdash;it&rsquo;s good!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With the question of provisions settled
+at least for a time, Kirby&rsquo;s next
+thought was of the tower. The present
+lull of peace seemed made for exploration.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come along,&rdquo; he said to Naida,
+&ldquo;we&rsquo;ve plenty to do,&rdquo; and then, when he
+explained, they set out, accompanied
+by Nini, a cousin of Naida&rsquo;s, and Ivana,
+a younger sister.</p>
+<p>All of the others remained with little
+Elana.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>While</span> they climbed spiral
+stairs, Naida explained that the
+chamber they had just left was used
+by the Duca as a place in which he
+prayed before and after contacts with
+caciques or subjects. A sort of halfway
+station between earth and heaven,
+as it were, where the Duca might
+be purged of any sullying influence
+gained from human relationships.</p>
+<p>At thought of the rank, egotistical
+hypocrisy implied by the story, Kirby
+smiled grimly. Then they came to a
+new door, heavier than that which barricaded
+the prayer chamber. Unlocked,
+the thing swung ponderously at Kirby&rsquo;s
+push, and with the three girls pressing
+close beside him, he entered&mdash;and
+stopped.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Naida!&rdquo; he gasped.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, <i>oh</i>!&rdquo; she cried, and while Nini
+and Ivana gasped, she clapped her
+hands in an instinctive, feminine reaction
+of joy. &ldquo;But there are things
+here which I believe none but the Ducas
+of our race have ever seen! Oh!
+Why, the sacred girdle is as nothing
+compared to this display!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>By &ldquo;display&rdquo; she meant a treasure
+which took Kirby&rsquo;s breath away, which
+made his heart act queerly.</p>
+<p>The walls of the chamber were fashioned
+of polished blocks of obsidion
+on which stood out in heavy bas-relief
+a maze of decorative figures fashioned
+of pure, beaten gold&mdash;the same kind of
+gold which had gone into the making
+of the cylinder of gold. With his first
+glance at the gorgeously wrought motifs
+of Feathered Serpent and Sun and
+Moon symbols, Kirby knew to a certainty
+whence the golden cylinder had
+come originally.</p>
+<p>But even the gold&mdash;literally tons of
+it there must have been&mdash;was nothing
+compared to the gems.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>They</span> were spread out in blinding
+array upon a great table in the
+center of the room. There were pearls
+as big as turkey eggs and whiter, softer
+than the light of a June morning growing
+in the East. There were rubies.
+One amongst the many was the size of
+a baseball and glowed like the heart
+of a red star. The least of the two or
+three hundred gems would have outclassed
+the greatest treasures of the
+Crown jewels of England and Russia
+combined.</p>
+<p>Most overwhelming of all, however,
+was the jewel which rested against a
+square of black cloth all its own in the
+center of the table. While his heart
+still acted queerly, while Naida, Nini,
+and Ivana hung back, delighted, but
+still too bewildered to move, Kirby
+advanced and took gingerly in his
+hands a single white diamond about
+eighteen inches long, and almost as
+wide and deep as it was long.</p>
+<p>The thing was carved with exquisite
+cunning to a likeness of the living
+head of Quetzalcoatl, the Feathered
+Serpent.</p>
+<p>Kirby dared not guess how many
+pounds the carven hunk of flashing,
+blue-white carbon weighed. He knew
+only that like it there was no other
+diamond in the world, and that the
+thing was real. Naida and the two
+girls were silent now, and suddenly
+Kirby realized that to their awe of the
+gem was added awe of deepest religious
+nature. Slowly he put the diamond
+head of the Serpent back upon
+its square of cloth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&mdash;we had heard that this thing
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_393' name='page_393'></a>393</span>
+existed,&rdquo; Naida said presently, voice
+hushed, &ldquo;but no one except the holy
+men of our race has ever beheld it.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But, what is it?&rdquo; Kirby asked.
+&ldquo;Whence came it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>However, when Naida would have
+answered, he interrupted.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But wait! Tell me as we go. We
+could stay here for the rest of our
+lives without much trouble, but we&rsquo;ve
+got to cover the rest of the tower and
+get back to the others.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>It</span> was after they had closed the
+door to the treasure room that
+Naida told him the story.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is not so much to tell,&rdquo; she
+began. &ldquo;The diamond itself is so gorgeous
+that it is hard to talk about.
+But here is the story. A great many
+ages ago one of the Ducas of our race
+found the diamond, decided to carve
+it into a perfect likeness of the head
+of the Serpent God. All of the craftsmen
+of the race helped him and when
+they were done, they took their image
+to Quetzalcoatl himself, and showed
+him what they had done.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Quetzalcoatl was pleased. So
+pleased, that he promised all of the
+wise men that he would cease to prey
+upon them as he had in the past, and
+henceforward would take his toll of
+sacrifice from the ape-men alone. Them
+he hated and would continue to hate
+because they worshipped not him but
+Xlotli.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And so it came about,&rdquo; Naida went
+on slowly, looking up at Kirby as they
+still mounted wide steps to the upper
+reaches of the tower, &ldquo;that our people
+gained immunity from a God which
+had always before harmed and destroyed
+them. Our race presently began
+to build this castle here on the
+high plateau, and Quetzalcoatl kept his
+compact with them. He still comes out
+of his chasm at intervals and preys
+upon the ape-men, but no one of our
+race has seen him for thousands of
+years, and he has always let us alone.
+And there is the whole myth and explanation
+of why the great diamond is
+revered among us as a holy of holies.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>They</span> had mounted to a new door
+which Kirby guessed might give
+entrance to the Duca&rsquo;s living quarters.
+But he was in no mood to open it at
+once.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wait a minute,&rdquo; he said as they all
+paused. &ldquo;You say that, although none
+of your race has seen Quetzalcoatl
+since the diamond head was carved, he
+still comes out of his chasm and makes
+trouble for the ape-men. Just what
+does that mean?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why&mdash;&rdquo; Naida looked at him wonderingly.
+&ldquo;I mean what I have said.
+The Serpent comes out of his chasm
+and&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What chasm?&rdquo; Kirby asked sharply.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, the one we crossed this morning.
+It extends to the far reaches of
+our country, beyond the Rorroh forest,
+where the ape-men dwell but which
+our people never visit. It is in that distant
+part of the chasm that the Serpent
+dwells.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But&mdash;but&mdash;Oh, good Lord!&rdquo; Kirby
+whistled softly. &ldquo;Naida, do you mean
+to tell me that Quetzalcoatl was not
+simply a mythical monster, but an
+actual, living serpent which is alive
+<i>now</i>?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Naida and the others shrugged.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why not?&rdquo; she answered. &ldquo;Sometimes
+we have captured a few ape-men,
+and they tell us stories of how Quetzalcoatl
+kills them. <i>They</i> say he is very
+much alive.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But,&rdquo; Kirby mumbled in increasing
+wonder, &ldquo;is this living creature the
+same which your ancestors worshipped
+first as long ago, perhaps, as a million
+years?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;That,&rdquo; Naida answered unhesitatingly,
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;m not sure of. Our caciques
+believe that the Serpent, although it
+lives longer than any other sentient
+thing, finally dies and is succeeded by
+a new Serpent which is reproduced by
+itself, within its own body.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>So overwhelming did Kirby find this
+unexpected sequel to their discovery
+of the great diamond head, so staggered
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_394' name='page_394'></a>394</span>
+was he by the fact that Quetzalcoatl,
+of Aztecan myth, might exist as
+a sentient creature here in this cavern
+world, that he had little heart left for
+exploring other wonders.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Nevertheless</span>, he presently
+pushed open the new door before
+which they had paused, and behind
+it found, as he had expected, the
+Duca&rsquo;s living quarters.</p>
+<p>These were as severe as the jewel
+chamber had been gorgeous. A thin
+pallet spread upon a frame of wood
+formed the bed, and beside it stood a
+single stiff chair. That was all. The
+walls of glistening obsidion were bare.</p>
+<p>There was, however, a door in one
+circular wall, and as Kirby flung this
+open, his previous disappointment
+changed to delight. For shelves along
+the walls of the small chamber held
+roll after roll of parchment covered
+with script. And in one corner lay six
+undamaged, almost new Mannlichers
+and several hundred rounds of ammunition!</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Naida,&rdquo; he exclaimed, &ldquo;do you know
+what those are?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose that they are weapons of
+the sort you used against the ape-men
+this morning?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby grinned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They are the same kind I used, and
+then some. With these weapons we
+can do what we never could with the
+smaller one. How did they get here?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They came when I was much
+younger,&rdquo; Naida answered with a shade
+of sadness in her voice. &ldquo;The men who
+had them penetrated the Valley of the
+Geyser, coming by a different route
+from the one you followed. When
+the Duca learned they were there, he
+sent such men of the race as were still
+able to fight to kill them. That order
+of the Duca&rsquo;s was one of the first
+things to turn me against him. The
+men were not harming us, and they
+should have been permitted to go away.
+But the Duca insisted that they be
+killed, and in the fight were lost eight
+of our youngest and strongest men.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Kirby</span> stooped to inspect the
+rifles.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Has no one learned to use these
+weapons?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Naida answered. &ldquo;The Duca
+kept them for himself.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We think,&rdquo; put in Ivana, &ldquo;that he
+hoped to learn to use them, and was
+afraid for us to have the knowledge.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby filled one of the magazines,
+and felt the heft of the gun with pleasure.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Very well,&rdquo; he said. &ldquo;It looks to
+me as though your time to learn the
+art of shooting has come at last. Come,
+I think we had better be getting back
+downstairs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby took three guns himself, and
+with the others lugging the rest, they
+started back. The parchment rolls, he
+decided, must be left for examination
+later on.</p>
+<p>They were all elated when they rejoined
+the girls in the prayer chamber,
+and high spirits were still further increased
+by the report, promptly given,
+that all had remained quiet in the
+amphitheatre. Save only for the presence
+of Elana, radiant and calm in
+death, the give and take of questions
+would have been accompanied by actual
+gaiety.</p>
+<p>But the time of peace did not last
+much longer. While Naida was in the
+midst of answering incessant questions
+about the wonders of the jewel chamber,
+Kirby heard a sound from below,
+and suddenly went over to the downward-winding
+steps.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Listen,&rdquo; he called sharply back to
+the others.</p>
+<p>He had not been mistaken. Many
+footsteps echoed from the amphitheatre,
+and he made out that the
+caciques were coming toward the bolted
+gate at the foot of the steps. While he
+listened, and Naida came eagerly to
+his side, silence fell.</p>
+<p>But then clear words came up to
+them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Let the upper-world man come to
+the foot of the steps,&rdquo; called the Duca.
+&ldquo;I have an offer to make him!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_395' name='page_395'></a>395</span></div>
+<h3>CHAPTER VII</h3>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>To</span> himself Kirby chuckled. Such
+real entreaty filled the Duca&rsquo;s
+voice that there seemed no danger of
+further treachery from him at the moment.</p>
+<p>With a grin, Kirby took Naida&rsquo;s
+hand and led her down the steps, unbolting
+each bronze gate but the last.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you want?&rdquo; he asked in a
+cool voice a moment later, when he
+stopped on the final step and faced the
+Duca from behind the protection of the
+final gate.</p>
+<p>Clearly the parley was going to be
+a blunt one.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I want you to leave our world,&rdquo; the
+Duca rumbled promptly.</p>
+<p>He was drawn up in a posture intended
+to display dignity. But his left
+cheek, where Kirby had hammered
+him, was pulpy and discolored, and
+somehow he seemed to Kirby more
+than ever merely human.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Under what conditions am I to
+leave?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you will vacate my tower at
+once,&rdquo; the Duca said with a flush of
+eagerness which he could not conceal,
+&ldquo;I will permit Naida and one of my
+caciques to escort you back to the Valley
+of the Geyser. I will also give you
+directions by which you may travel in
+safety from there to the outer world.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby, wanting more details, made
+himself seem thoughtful.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what will happen to me, and
+to the girls, if I decline?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Encouraged, the Duca made an impressive
+gesture.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You will be left in the tower to die
+of starvation. Mine is not a complicated
+offer. It should require no complicated
+decision. What is your answer?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby dropped his carefully assumed
+mask of thought.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;My answer is this,&rdquo; he lashed out.
+&ldquo;I will not leave! The tower is ours,
+and we will hold it until you have accepted
+Naida&rsquo;s peace terms on your
+priestly oath!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But if you stay in the tower you will
+starve!&rdquo; thundered the Duca.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, we won&rsquo;t starve! We won&rsquo;t
+starve because we eat the food of Ducas!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>In</span> silence, Kirby took from his
+pocket a strip of the sacred Peyote
+and bit off one end of it. Suddenly
+the hush in the amphitheatre became
+complete. As he watched Kirby chewing,
+the Duca gasped and choked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Moreover,&rdquo; Kirby announced with
+slow emphasis, &ldquo;I have taken possession
+of the weapons which you took from
+men of the upper world, and which
+have already sent men of your race to
+their death. I have no wish to kill
+either you or your caciques, but if you
+do not presently discuss peace with me,
+you will certainly find yourself embroiled
+in a struggle more bitter than
+the mild one of this morning.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With that said, he swung on his
+heel, and taking Naida&rsquo;s hand again,
+started with her up the steps.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I have nothing more to say,&rdquo; he
+called over his shoulder to a Duca
+whose white haired majesty had been
+stripped from him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We&rsquo;re getting on,&rdquo; he whispered to
+Naida a moment later. &ldquo;The best thing
+for us is just to sit still now, and wait.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With the questions he wanted to ask
+Naida about her world becoming insistent,
+he found himself, as a matter
+of fact, glad for the prospect of further
+respite. As both of them rejoined
+the girls in the Duca&rsquo;s prayer chamber,
+the first thing he did was to take from
+his tunic the cylinder of gold which
+he had found in the canyon.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is this, Naida?&rdquo; he asked,
+hoping to start talk that would make
+all of them forget the Duca and politics,
+and at the same time help him to
+learn much that he wished to know.</p>
+<p>But a queer thing happened. Naida&rsquo;s
+reaction to the carven gold was as unexpected
+as it was marked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>Oh!</i>&rdquo; she cried in a voice which
+suddenly trembled with surprise, with
+blank dismay. Somehow, the cylinder
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_396' name='page_396'></a>396</span>
+of gold brought to her face things
+which not even the Serpent&rsquo;s head of
+the diamond had evoked.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> prospect of a long session of
+talk began to fade out in Kirby&rsquo;s
+mind.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But Naida, whatever is there about
+this fragment of gold to startle you as
+it does?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>By this time all of the thirty-odd
+other girls had come flocking about
+them, and all were staring at the cylinder
+as fascinatedly as Naida.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you see what he has there?&rdquo;
+Naida finally asked, ignoring Kirby in
+her continued excitement.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do we <i>see</i>?&rdquo; answered the girl she
+had addressed. &ldquo;Naida, surely it is the
+carving which was lost!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Naida was quivering with feeling
+now.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you realize what it means to our
+cause that it should have been returned
+to us in this way?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The girl to whom she had spoken,
+and the others, simply looked at her,
+but in one face after another presently
+dawned awe and joy.</p>
+<p>Kirby stood still, puzzled and interested,
+until at last Naida was recovered
+enough to speak to him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Where did you get this thing which
+you call &lsquo;a fragment of gold&rsquo;?&rdquo; she
+asked in a hushed voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I found it,&rdquo; Kirby answered, &ldquo;lying
+beside the skeleton of an upper-world
+man, while I was ascending the
+canyon which brought me to the Valley
+of the Geyser.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you do not know what the cylinder
+is? But no, of course you could
+not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>What</i> is it, Naida?&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Naida</span> glanced at her friends,
+then laid her hand on Kirby&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Next to the great diamond, it is the
+most cherished possession of our race.
+In some respects it is even more holy
+than the Serpent&rsquo;s head. The cylinder
+happens to be the first work in gold
+which was ever produced by our people.
+It was made when the race was
+new. It was because our first wise men
+had found they could create things of
+beauty like this cylinder, that they decided
+to attempt the creation of the
+Serpent&rsquo;s head, which is supposed to
+have brought all of our blessings upon
+us.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby thought he was beginning to
+understand the excitement which his
+introduction of the cylinder had created.
+He also thought he could see
+what Naida had meant by implying
+that the cylinder could be made to aid
+their cause.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tell me,&rdquo; he asked in a mood approaching
+reverence, &ldquo;how the cylinder
+came to be lying beside a dead
+man&rsquo;s bones.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It was stolen,&rdquo; Naida answered in
+the breathless silence which the others
+were keeping. &ldquo;When I was very
+young, an upper-world man found his
+way here, and the Duca captured and
+meant to sacrifice him. But while they
+were leading him to the temple where
+such special ceremonies are held&mdash;the
+building stands on another plateau, beyond
+this&mdash;the man broke away. Some
+of the priests in the procession were
+carrying the cylinder, for it was an
+occasion of great importance. The
+prisoner knocked them down, got the
+cylinder away from them, and finally
+escaped by the same route over which
+you came.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And he escaped,&rdquo; said Kirby wonderingly,
+&ldquo;only to be killed by a rattlesnake
+before he ever reached the civilized
+world. But do you mean that you
+never knew your sacred cylinder was
+so close to you all these years?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Naida shook her head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We never got to the canyon of
+which you speak, for a special reason
+which I shall explain some day. And
+besides that, I think the Duca was
+afraid of this man who fought so
+bravely. So he counted the cylinder
+as lost. And that is one of the reasons
+why he killed the men with the rifles,
+who appeared in the Valley a few years
+later.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_397' name='page_397'></a>397</span></div>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Kirby</span> looked at her thoughtfully.
+The mood for discussing all the
+wonders of this lower world, which
+had made him bring out the cylinder
+originally, had quite vanished.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I suppose,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;that anyone
+who was responsible for the return of
+the cylinder to its rightful owners,
+would be held in some respect?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Naida nodded vigorously, while little
+lightnings of excitement flickered
+in her eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He might be held in more than respect.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What, then, do you suggest that we
+do next?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Again the small lightnings darted,
+and Naida reached for the cylinder.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you mind if I take it for a moment?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Of course not.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Promptly then she faced around.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Wait here, everyone,&rdquo; she ordered.</p>
+<p>And with that she waved the cylinder
+in a flashing little arc before their
+eyes, and darted to the door.</p>
+<p>It was all so unexpected that she
+was gone before Kirby could speak.
+Slowly, with all of the suddenly gay
+company of girls following after him,
+he went to the doorway, and stood on
+the steps leading to the amphitheatre.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>A minute</span> passed. He heard
+voices downstairs. He heard Naida&rsquo;s
+voice ringing clearly, though he
+could not distinguish her words. He
+heard a great cry from a score of male
+throats. More minutes passed. Words
+that were low and tense poured out in
+a rumbling volume. Above the rumble,
+Naida&rsquo;s voice presently sounded
+again, clear and sweet, but incisive.
+Then, when no more than five or six
+minutes had gone, Kirby heard the
+clang of the bronze gate at the foot
+of the steps, heard light, swift footsteps
+ascending.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Naida!&rdquo; he called softly.</p>
+<p>She flashed upward toward him
+around the last curve in the stairway.
+Straight to his outstretched arms she
+went.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is done! It is done!&rdquo; she whispered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tell us!&rdquo; cried first one girl and
+then others.</p>
+<p>Naida drew away from Kirby at last.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I told the Duca,&rdquo; she said to all of
+them, &ldquo;that our leader would keep the
+cylinder for a period of time equal to
+one upper-world year. If the Duca
+grants all the terms of peace which
+we will ask of him, and if he accepts
+the upper-world man as our temporal
+ruler, and all goes well for a year, then
+we will consider replacing the cylinder
+where it belongs.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And what,&rdquo; Kirby asked exultantly,
+&ldquo;does the Duca say?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Suddenly, without warning, Naida
+dropped before him on one knee, and
+from that position gazed up at him
+laughing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;He says he will make you our King,
+to govern all temporal affairs within
+our realm! He is waiting for you to
+come and hold a conclave now.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;<i>What?</i>&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Still kneeling half in fun, half in
+sincere reverence, Naida held out the
+precious, potent cylinder of gold.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Guard it carefully!&rdquo; she exclaimed.
+&ldquo;So long as you keep it away from the
+Duca, making him hope to win it back,
+he will consent to almost anything.
+Yes, he is waiting with the caciques
+in the amphitheatre now; waiting to
+draw up terms of peace.&rdquo;</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER VIII</h3>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>To</span> be King amongst these people!
+A queer sensation tugged at Kirby&rsquo;s
+heart as he descended the steps
+with Naida at his right, and all of her&mdash;and
+his&mdash;dainty and gracious friends
+following after. Yet, intense as his
+emotion was, never for a second was
+he able to doubt the evidence of his
+senses which told him that all of this
+was real. As they descended the black
+steps of the tower, Naida&rsquo;s sweetness,
+her grace, the warm humanity of her,
+made him humble with gratitude for
+the extraordinary fortune which had
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_398' name='page_398'></a>398</span>
+come to him, an unromantic aviator
+born in Kansas.</p>
+<p>Then they were standing in the brilliant
+light of the amphitheatre, and
+the Duca, surrounded by his caciques,
+was advancing to meet them.</p>
+<p>It was not a long conference which
+followed. Kirby saw from the start
+that the Duca was indeed ready to
+come to terms. So treasured an object,
+it seemed, was the cylinder of gold,
+that the mere fact that Kirby possessed
+it made the Duca respect the possessor,
+whether he would or no. With this
+initial advantage, it did not take long
+to make demands and win acceptance.</p>
+<p>It was agreed that some systematic
+campaign of extermination should be
+planned and carried out against the
+ape-men. Further, the project for
+eventually bringing other upper-world
+men to the realm was accepted. Most
+notable of all, it was agreed that while
+the Duca should retain a voice in the
+regulation of temporal affairs, Kirby
+should possess an absolute veto over
+his word.</p>
+<p>Naida said there must be some formal
+ceremony to celebrate Kirby&rsquo;s
+ascendency to power. To this the Duca
+consented, and established the date as
+a fortnight hence, and the place as the
+temple on the plateau beyond the plateau
+of the castle, where the Ducas had
+been invested with their robes of state
+from time immemorial. At the end, it
+was decided that little Elana should
+be left in the prayer chamber until a
+burial ceremony could be held on the
+morrow.</p>
+<hr class='tb' />
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>In</span> less than an hour, Kirby, Naida,
+and the others withdrew from the
+amphitheatre to return to the regular
+dwelling places of the girls. Deep in
+his mind, Kirby did not know how sincere
+the Duca was, and fear lingered,
+somehow, but he put it aside for the
+present.</p>
+<p>As they came out of the castle, proceeding
+in a gay procession across the
+drawbridge above the moat of beautiful
+aquatic plants, Kirby saw that the
+light from the glass sky was fading
+to a glow like that of spring twilight
+in the upper world. Naida answered
+his question about the phenomenon by
+saying that day and night in the cavern
+corresponded to the same period
+above. What quality of the glass sky
+gave out light, she did not know, but it
+seemed definite that the element was
+sensitive to the presence of light in
+the upper world, and when the sun
+sank there, the glow faded here.</p>
+<p>A flower embroidered path led them
+around the castle to a group of little
+crystalline houses all overgrown with
+bougainvillea vines and honeysuckle.
+In front of the first, Naida paused, and
+while the others went on to the other
+houses, she looked at Kirby.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It is Elana&rsquo;s dwelling,&rdquo; she said
+simply, &ldquo;and it will be vacant now.
+Elana would want you to take it. Will
+you, please?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The twilight was deepening swiftly.
+Kirby nodded reverently, then drew
+close to Naida.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Naida?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He took her hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I can stay here, I can consent to
+become, after a fashion, a King, only
+if you will reign with me as Queen.
+Will you, Naida? Will you love me
+as I have learned to love you during
+this single day in Paradise?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She did not answer. But presently
+Kirby&rsquo;s mind went blank for sheer joy.
+For then Naida raised her face, and he
+kissed her lips.</p>
+<p>It made no difference then that, despite
+the day&rsquo;s victory, Kirby could see
+trouble ahead, and feared, rather than
+rejoiced at, the Duca&rsquo;s too easy acceptance
+of terms. The future could take
+care of itself. This moment in the
+dusk belonged to him and Naida.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> two weeks which passed for
+Kirby after that particular twilight
+sped quickly. During the first
+morning, all attended the ceremony
+which was held for Elana&rsquo;s burial in
+the plot of gardened ground where lay
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_399' name='page_399'></a>399</span>
+her ancestors. Ensuing mornings were
+devoted to conferences in the amphitheatre
+with Duca and caciques.</p>
+<p>After the fourth day Kirby, at Naida&rsquo;s
+insistence, moved into splendid
+quarters in the castle&mdash;a suite of chambers
+across the amphitheatre from those
+in which the caciques dwelt. In practically
+forcing the move on Kirby,
+Naida won his consent finally by agreeing
+to have their wedding ceremony
+performed on the day of his coronation;
+then she would come to the castle
+with him.</p>
+<p>The afternoons of that first fortnight
+before the wedding and coronation
+were spent in hunting and fishing.
+Also Kirby and Naida visited often the
+aged people of the race, who dwelt in
+crystalline, vine covered houses like
+those of the girls, but removed from
+them. Naida&rsquo;s relatives were dead, but
+she had relatives there, and to all these
+aged ones, who sat living in the past,
+she did what she could to explain present
+developments in the affairs of the
+younger generation.</p>
+<p>Last but not least, Kirby set aside
+certain hours each afternoon which he
+devoted to the formation of a rifle
+squad amongst the girls. Six rifles he
+had, and in turn he trained each of the
+girls in their use, having set up a range
+at the foot of the plateau cliffs. The
+results he gained made him feel that
+the day would come soon enough when
+he would dare launch an offensive
+against the ape-people; and especially
+pleasing was the sense of power over
+the Duca which he gained. The Duca
+showed no sign of treachery. Yet
+Kirby did not trust him. Never did he
+quite forget the misgivings which had
+lingered in his mind after the first conclave.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>As</span> for his relationship with Naida,
+that grew with every moment
+they could steal to spend with each
+other. And side by side with their
+growing knowledge of each other grew,
+for Kirby, an increasing store of
+knowledge of the realm.</p>
+<p>He learned, amongst other things,
+what seemed the origin of the worship
+of the Serpent, Quetzalcoatl, amongst
+primitive Mexican races. The time had
+been when the People of the Temple
+had mingled freely with the races
+above them; and, that they might have
+ready means of egress to the world,
+they had built the tunnel through
+which Kirby had entered the Valley
+of the Geyser. Thus, going and coming
+as they did, they had spread their
+cult of the worship of Quetzalcoatl;
+and when, eventually, strife arose between
+the peoples of upper world and
+lower, and the People of the Temple
+withdrew to their realm, they left behind
+them the Serpent myth which was
+to live through countless centuries.</p>
+<p>The tunnel, Naida said, had been
+abandoned when her people left the
+upper world once and for all, and its
+use for any reason prohibited. This,
+Naida gave as the reason why none of
+them went near the tunnel now, and
+why the cylinder of gold had lain in
+the canyon undiscovered. It was the
+explanation she had promised on the
+day in the tower, when first she saw
+the cylinder.</p>
+<p>So the days passed, until the day set
+aside for wedding and coronation
+dawned. On that morning, Kirby, having
+concluded a long conference with
+the Duca, was walking with Naida in
+the gardens outside the castle.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tell me,&rdquo; he said to her: &ldquo;do you
+yourself believe that this Serpent has
+the powers of a God?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Naida looked at him quickly, a sudden
+fright in her eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I believe the Serpent exists to-day,
+somewhere in the distant reaches of
+the chasm, beyond the Rorroh forest.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, but do you believe the Serpent
+is God?&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Actually</span> frightened now, she
+looked swiftly about. But when
+she saw that they were alone, confidence
+returned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No!&rdquo; she exclaimed. &ldquo;I do not believe
+Quetzalcoatl is a god. I believe
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_400' name='page_400'></a>400</span>
+he is the most terrible creature anywhere
+in our realm, and that men first
+worshipped him through fear. I believe
+our race would be better a hundred
+times if they had never made him
+their God.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby whistled.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Then you do <i>not</i> believe that the
+Ducas of past ages talked with him.
+You do not believe it was Quetzalcoatl&rsquo;s
+pleasure over the great diamond
+which made him cease preying on your
+people?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No! Long habit makes me show
+respect for these myths, and adhere to
+the customs of our cult, but I do not
+believe. I think our race gained immunity
+for the Serpent&rsquo;s ravages, not
+through a compact with Quetzalcoatl,
+but because our builders were intelligent
+enough to erect the castle up here
+on the plateau, where Quetzalcoatl
+could not reach them. To tell the
+truth, I think the whole cult is false
+and wrong, and I wish Quetzalcoatl
+were dead and gone from the world!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby smiled. In spite of Naida&rsquo;s
+reverence for certain features of the
+cult, he had long suspected that her
+true feelings were those she had just
+expressed. And he was glad for this
+new bond of understanding between
+them. He glanced at her with understanding
+and perfect trust.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Naida, since we have talked so
+frankly, there is one more thing which
+I must bring out.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>She looked up at him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is it?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Duca.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>She</span> drew closer, her perfumed body
+brushing his, her great eyes caressing
+him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Naida, I am afraid of the man.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And so am I!&rdquo; she confessed suddenly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It has all been too easy,&rdquo; Kirby said
+in a slow voice. &ldquo;There is no doubt
+whatever that our possession of the
+cylinder of gold has had great influence
+on the Duca, and yet&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He paused, taking her hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And yet,&rdquo; she went on for him,
+&ldquo;you do not believe he would have conceded
+what he has, unless he intends to
+make trouble?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby nodded twice, emphatically.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well, you have trained all of us to
+use the rifles.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He smiled gravely at her understanding.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, I have. And your skill, and
+that of the others, with the rifles, will
+always help us. Yet even so&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Closer still she drew now, and there
+was sadness in her eyes.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think I see,&rdquo; she said in a voice
+which choked. &ldquo;When do you think
+he will make a move to start trouble?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby hesitated, then drew a long
+breath.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;To-day!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;On&mdash;on the day of our union?&rdquo;
+Naida echoed in dismay. &ldquo;Can you
+tell where or how he will strike at us?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby shook his head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There are a hundred things he
+could do. Naida, I&mdash;I&mdash;Well, somehow
+I am afraid of the ceremony this
+afternoon&mdash;the wedding ceremony!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>He</span> felt a little shiver go through
+her, and would have taken her
+in his arms, save that a gay cry rang
+in the garden then.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Naida, Naida!&rdquo; It was her cousin,
+Nini, a bronze-haired youngster as elfin
+and Pucklike as her name. &ldquo;I thought
+we should never find you! Do you
+realize this is your <i>wedding</i> day, and
+that you&rsquo;re acting as if there was nothing
+to be done?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Nini darted a mocking glance at
+Kirby, who grinned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do come, Naida!&rdquo; cried another girl.
+&ldquo;Your gown is ready, and we want you
+to ourselves for awhile.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Other girls joined them, some singing
+and some carrying an obligato on
+the sweet, flutelike instruments which
+Kirby had first heard as he hung in
+the throat of the geyser. In front of
+them all, Kirby laughed and kissed
+Naida on the forehead. But as he took
+leave of her thus, he whispered:</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_401' name='page_401'></a>401</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;We must not let our guard relax
+for a second this afternoon. And I
+think there is a more definite precaution
+which I will take, besides.&rdquo;</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER IX</h3>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Some</span> hours later, Kirby smiled
+with tight-lipped satisfaction at
+thought of that precaution which he
+had taken. What it was only he, Nini,
+Ivana, and three other girls knew,
+which secrecy pleased him as much as
+the precautionary measure itself.</p>
+<p>Seated alone in a dimly-lighted,
+thick-walled cell of the ancient temple
+in which the dual ceremony of wedding
+and coronation would take place,
+he was waiting for the moment when
+the festivities would begin. Thus far
+the Duca had done nothing. Yet Kirby&rsquo;s
+uneasiness would not leave him,
+and he continued to be thankful that,
+if trouble should start, the Duca might
+not find as many trumps in his hand as
+he expected.</p>
+<p>A couple of hours after Kirby had
+left Naida and the other girls in the
+garden, all had begun the two-mile
+journey from the castle to the small
+plateau on which stood this temple,
+where the ceremony would be held.
+Now, while Kirby waited alone, the
+Duca and his caciques had gone to another
+wing of the temple. Naida, attended
+by her bridesmaids, had been
+assigned to a cell of their own, and the
+rest of the girls were waiting in the
+nave of the temple. Unable to attend
+the walk from their plateau to
+this, the old people of the race had remained
+in their crystal houses.</p>
+<p>With ten minutes more to wait,
+Kirby rose from a bench on which he
+had been seated, and began to pace his
+cell. It was this archaic pile of stone,
+he finally decided, which was causing
+his depression. Unlike the bright and
+cheerful castle, this place, older than
+any other building in the realm, was
+squat, thick-walled, and gloomy. Here,
+in the dusky cells which lined labyrinthine
+corridors, the early generations
+of the race had found protection from
+outside dangers. All of which was all
+right, Kirby thought, but just the same
+he wished he had insisted upon being
+wedded in the brilliant and cheerful
+amphitheatre.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>But</span> presently he stopped pacing
+and faced the door of his cell.
+Then he breathed a sigh of relief.</p>
+<p>From down the twisting corridors
+which wound out to the central nave,
+stole the high sweetness of soprano
+voices, the whisper of flutes, and the
+mellow resonance of little gongs of
+jade and gold. It was the signal for
+which he had waited.</p>
+<p>It had been the Duca&rsquo;s instructions
+that he should come out into the temple
+when the music began, and meet
+Naida there. Both would advance to
+the altar, and when they were in place,
+the Duca would come to them. Kirby,
+therefore, after a glance at the blue
+trousers and tunic of tanager scarlet
+which the girls had made for him,
+opened the door of his cell, and stepped
+out.</p>
+<p>In a moment he traversed the windings
+of the corridor, and halted under
+a flat arch at one side of the temple
+nave.</p>
+<p>As he paused so, to await the appearance
+of Naida and her bridesmaids under
+a similar arch directly across the
+temple, he held his breath. Not even
+nymphs could be as graceful as were
+the twenty-six girls who were performing
+the dance of Life Immortal,
+which tradition decreed should be
+given before the ceremony by which,
+in this realm, two souls were wedded.
+The flash of rainbow gowns was like
+the swirling of light in a sky at dawning.
+The music of voices, flutes, and
+the little gongs of jade, would have
+stirred the souls of the dead.</p>
+<p>If only the confounded sense of approaching
+disaster would leave him,
+Kirby thought grimly, this would be
+a magnificent moment. As it was, he
+turned his eyes away from the girls,
+and began to examine the temple.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_402' name='page_402'></a>402</span></div>
+<p>Just as Naida had told him the case
+would be, he found both sides of the
+nave surrounded by arches similar to
+the one under which he was standing.
+Everywhere, dim and tortuous corridors
+led to cells like the one he had
+just left. Then, in one end of the nave,
+loomed a closed door from behind
+which the Duca and caciques would
+appear when the couple to be wedded
+were in place, before the altar.</p>
+<p>The altar itself, a rectangular mass
+of some jadelike stone, stood at a distance
+of perhaps twenty paces in front
+of the closed door. On top of the
+greenish stones, resting on a cushion
+of some crimson material, flashed the
+crown which would be used at the coronation.
+Kirby&rsquo;s eyes widened as he
+beheld a single rose-cut diamond two
+inches in diameter, mounted in an exquisitely
+simple bandeau of wrought
+gold. But, a moment later, even the
+crown which would be his&mdash;if nothing
+happened&mdash;seemed only a bauble compared
+to the other prize which he had
+won in this world beneath the world.</p>
+<p>Naida!</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>He</span> realized that the dance was
+ended, the music stilled, and that
+the rainbow garbed girls had formed
+a double line in the center of the temple.
+Suddenly his heart beat fast, and
+for just a moment, as he dared look
+full and deeply at Naida, and she
+smiled back at him across the distance,
+he even forgot to be depressed.</p>
+<p>But even as he advanced to meet her,
+his uneasiness returned.</p>
+<p>Now the girls were singing again,
+their voices raised in a triumphant
+chorale as beautiful as Naida&rsquo;s face
+with its warm red lips and smiling
+eyes, as beautiful as her wedding gown
+that might have been woven, in its
+filminess, of mist from the sea. The
+bridesmaids, silent, their lovely faces
+alight, paused. But Naida came on.</p>
+<p>From her floated to Kirby a fragrance
+more overwhelming than even
+the perfume of the geyser. Presently
+he felt her hand on his arm, and at last
+they stood side by side. Now again,
+his premonition of evil left him for a
+flash; but again it returned.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I love you,&rdquo; he whispered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I love <i>you</i>.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I am still afraid.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Naida&rsquo;s smile faded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And I too. Oh, I&rsquo;ve been terribly
+afraid! We will keep our guard!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>In</span> front of them, on the altar, the
+crown diamond winked and shimmered
+in a dim light. The swelling
+chorus of triumph, in which the bridesmaids
+had joined now, made the whole
+temple ring. Slowly, while Naida
+moved easily beside him, Kirby began
+to march to the altar.</p>
+<p>Then it was done, and they were
+halted. After both of them had given
+a lingering glance at the crown whose
+diamond shimmered now within their
+reach, they raised their eyes to the
+closed door behind the altar.</p>
+<p>The thing was swinging open. An
+inch it moved, two inches.</p>
+<p>Kirby waited, never taking his eyes
+away from the widening crack. With
+a crashing final volume of sound, the
+chorus swept magnificently to its climax.
+Then the door was flung wide.</p>
+<p>Still Kirby stood stiffly before the
+altar, with Naida drawn up splendidly
+beside him. After two seconds, however,
+he moved.</p>
+<p>Duca and caciques were not standing
+in the corridor.</p>
+<p>In the semi-darkness, the only figures
+visible there were squatting, grotesque
+things whose bodies were covered
+with whitish hair and whose leathery
+faces were disfigured by gashes of
+mouths filled with enormous teeth.</p>
+<p>A feeling of standing face to face
+with final disaster, turned Kirby sick.
+As he jerked back from the altar,
+sweeping a paralyzed Naida with him,
+the ape-men let out gibbering howls,
+half-human. With gigantic, hopping
+strides, the foremost rank of the creatures
+swung forward, straight into the
+temple.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_403' name='page_403'></a>403</span></div>
+<h3>CHAPTER X</h3>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Kirby</span>, already falling back toward
+the other girls, caught
+Naida up in his arms, and ran.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nini!&rdquo; he bellowed. &ldquo;Ivana! Get
+the rifles!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>While the two whom he had ordered
+sprang to a corridor, and four others
+followed, Kirby fell in with the others
+and dropped Naida on her feet. Sick
+as he was, there was still a ray of hope,
+because the hard-headed precaution he
+had taken against treachery this morning
+was to have Nini and Ivana bring
+the rifles here and hide them.</p>
+<p>The first of the ape-men, snarling,
+laughing, had hopped beyond the altar,
+and the yellow foam of madness was
+slavering from his jaws. Over his
+shoulder he howled some jargon which
+made his hairy legion struggle to catch
+up with him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you got any puff balls?&rdquo;
+Kirby snapped at Naida.</p>
+<p>She shook her head numbly, just as
+Nini and Ivana swung forward with
+the Mannlichers.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No. But you had sense enough to
+bring the rifles! Oh, what does it
+mean?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Duca has sold himself out to
+the ape-man! He was helpless against
+us, and has brought them to destroy
+us for him. Here, Ivana, give me a
+rifle! Everyone for herself!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The next moment he had a Mannlicher
+at his shoulder.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>As</span> the thing kicked, an ape who
+would have reached him in two
+more jumps crashed over with his heart
+torn out, the temple echoed with sound
+which threatened to rip its solid walls
+apart, and bright flashes at Kirby&rsquo;s
+right and left told him that other rifles
+were getting under way.</p>
+<p>He fired again, twice more, slaughtering
+an ape with each shot. The five
+other rifles were creating havoc.</p>
+<p>Blocked by a dozen torn and bleeding
+bodies on the floor, the reenforcements
+which still poured from the corridor,
+began to mill around amongst
+themselves, and the forward charge
+slowed down. All the panic which had
+sent the ape-men scuttling from the
+beach at their first experience of gunfire,
+seemed ready to break loose again
+now.</p>
+<p>Kirby felt it was good enough for
+the work of a minute.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Get into line as I showed you how!&rdquo;
+he shouted. &ldquo;Rifles in the front rank,
+the others behind them. We&rsquo;re all right
+now! Keep firing!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Keep behind me!&rdquo; he ordered
+Naida, still unarmed.</p>
+<p>Then he placed a shell in the chest
+of one brute who was broader and
+heavier than the others&mdash;a leader&mdash;and
+saw that he had increased the demoralization;
+and from the hastily-formed
+front rank a volley leaped hot and
+jagged.</p>
+<p>Then the rout which had threatened
+broke loose. As eight ape-men slumped
+into blubbering, bleeding heaps, the
+milling remainder of the horde turned,
+and in a fighting, scrambling frenzy
+attempted to get back to the corridor.</p>
+<p>Kirby let his triumph take the form
+of thoughts about what he would do
+to the Duca when that personage could
+be rounded up.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Follow after them!&rdquo; he ordered.
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t stop until we have located the
+Duca. He is the one we must settle&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p>But he never finished.</p>
+<p>As he himself, holding fire for
+a second, prepared to follow up the retreat,
+he found himself confronted by
+the utterly unexpected.</p>
+<p>A voice unquestionably the Duca&rsquo;s
+began to shout orders at the ape-men
+from somewhere down the corridor!
+And, riot or no riot, the tones of that
+voice seemed to inspire the creatures
+with more fear than the rifle fire.</p>
+<p>So suddenly the change came, that
+by the time Kirby flung his rifle again
+to his shoulder, the crazy retreat had
+been halted, and as he fired again, the
+ape-men swung in their tracks and began
+to charge!</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_404' name='page_404'></a>404</span></div>
+<p>There was no time to guess by what
+power the Duca had turned the tables.
+There was not even time for orders.
+Kirby fired twice, knowing that the
+ape-men had been infused with some
+spirit which would bring them on in
+spite of rifle fire.</p>
+<p>Naida, unarmed, cried out behind
+him, and he shoved his gun at her.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Take it!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He had just inserted a new clip. He
+handed her others.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Fire for your lives!&rdquo; he shouted to
+the girls.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But you!&rdquo; Naida gasped. &ldquo;You are
+unarmed!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;ll be all right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>On the floor lay a jagged, hand-chipped
+knife of obsidion which had
+fallen as some ape died. Kirby
+grabbed it.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>In</span> another second the flood of ape-men
+had burst in all its fury over
+him. Crashing, thundering shots were
+dinning in his ears, animal death
+screams and the Valkyrie battle cries
+of the girls filled the temple. He could
+not tell how many of the apes were
+fighting him. As a cave-man&rsquo;s club
+whizzed past his head, he drove his
+knife once, and yanked it dripping
+from hairy, yielding flesh to plunge it
+again. A sudden side-step carried him
+away from another assailant. He
+dropped the knife to snatch the gigantic
+club of one of the creatures he had
+killed.</p>
+<p>Quicker in every movement than the
+ape-men, he laid on, right and left,
+with such power that blood spurted in
+a dozen places, and heads were split
+open on every side. And because of
+his speed, the frantic, clumsy blows
+and knife thrusts which were directed
+at him proved harmless.</p>
+<p>A terrific drive which smashed a
+snarling face into pulp, left Kirby free
+for a second, and he emerged from the
+first round of battle ready to cut in
+and help the girls. But then he saw
+that he had gotten separated from the
+main body.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Naida!&rdquo; he called. &ldquo;Naida!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A series of shots answered him, and
+as several apes fell, a gap was opened
+through which he saw her conducting
+a well ordered retreat of all the girls
+toward the dark corridors surrounding
+the temple. Again Kirby fell to with
+his club, swinging, hacking, fighting
+with his whole strength to catch up.
+He made headway, and hope began to
+come again. The ape-men would not
+kill, or even harm, the girls. What
+they wanted was to carry them off. If
+he and Naida together could get their
+party rounded up in the corridors, the
+chances were good.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Naida!&rdquo; he shouted again. &ldquo;Coming!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Battering down an ape in front of
+him, he jumped up on the corpse, and
+saw that already the vanguard of girls
+had reached the first sheltering corridor.
+Naida had been cut off from the
+others by eight or ten apes. But even
+so her fire made her mistress of the situation,
+and she seemed all right.</p>
+<p>It was just as Kirby started to jump
+down from the corpse that he saw
+something which put another complexion
+on the matter, and left him
+frozen where he was.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Behind</span> Naida, directly in the
+path in which her slavering aggressors
+were slowly forcing her, a
+huge stone slab in the temple floor had
+begun to tilt up as if it were a trapdoor
+raised by an invisible hand.
+Within the yawning opening, Kirby
+caught a glimpse of stone steps winding
+down into blackness.</p>
+<p>In a flash he saw that it was Naida,
+and her alone, that the ape-men were
+after. The Duca&rsquo;s determination was
+to capture her, and it was the presence
+of this trapdoor, making capture possible,
+which had brought on the second
+charge of the apes.</p>
+<p>A scream, high and wild, from Naida
+released Kirby from his trance of horror.
+He leaped off the corpse, and
+smashed a suddenly presented skull
+like an egg shell. Momentarily he saw
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_405' name='page_405'></a>405</span>
+Naida, too terrified to fire, staring at
+the open trapdoor. Kirby felled two
+apes and felt their blood on his arms.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ivana!&rdquo; he yelled. &ldquo;Help Naida,
+for God&rsquo;s sake!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>An answering shout, not from Ivana
+alone but from many girls, encouraged
+him, and he swung his club with a
+speed and force which would let nothing
+stand before him. But then another
+scream from Naida rang in his
+ears.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Naida!&rdquo; he shouted. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s all right!
+We&rsquo;re coming!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>He knew, though, that it <i>wasn&rsquo;t</i> all
+right. Fighting like a maniac, he
+opened another lane down which he
+glimpsed her. Fighting still, in a last
+terrific effort to force his way down
+the lane to her side, he saw the black
+opening gape at her feet; and, as Naida
+screamed again, a dozen hairy arms
+reached it at once, twisted the empty
+rifle out of her hands, and lifted her
+shining body as if it had been a
+feather.</p>
+<p>Shouts and murderous fire were coming
+from the other girls, and Kirby
+swung his club as never before. But
+even as he fell upon the last two or
+three apes which kept him away from
+Naida, those who had snatched her,
+bolted down the steps.</p>
+<p>Kirby was left with the memory of
+Naida&rsquo;s great eyes fixed upon his, fear-filled,
+beseeching his protection. In a
+second, the ponderous trapdoor crashed
+into place, and she was gone.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER XI</h3>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Dazed</span> and grief-stricken, Kirby
+stood in the bloody, corpse-filled
+nave of the temple, surrounded by
+thirty-two girls whose faces were
+blanched and most of whose eyes were
+tear-bright. The fight was over, and
+they were assembled to decide what
+must be done, but for a time no one
+spoke.</p>
+<p>Gaining the trapdoor just as it was
+pinioned from beneath, Kirby had torn
+at it with bare hands. But that had
+been hopeless. Then he had begun to
+fight again. But that had been hopeless
+also. With howls and screams they
+started to retreat, and it had not taken
+Kirby long to find out that every part
+of their raid had been carefully
+planned, even to this retreat under fire.
+Straight into the damp black tunnel
+which led away from the corridor behind
+the altar, the ape-men had leaped.
+And Kirby, in hot pursuit, had heard
+the Duca&rsquo;s voice driving them on. Too
+much the soldier to follow in that
+darkness where the Duca knew every
+foot of the way, and he knew nothing,
+Kirby had seen that he must go back
+to the girls and take stock.</p>
+<p>Now he looked at the strewn ape
+corpses, smelled the corrosive reek of
+burned powder, and tried to put aside
+his grief.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Duca,&rdquo; he said at last, &ldquo;must
+have been planning this with the apes
+ever since the first morning in the
+castle.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ivana, Naida&rsquo;s sister, nodded.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Duca brought the ape-people
+here, kept them in the tunnel, and then
+herded them back when their work was
+done. I suppose it was one of the
+caciques who opened the door when the
+time was right.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Does anyone think we ought to try
+the tunnels now?&rdquo; Kirby asked.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Several</span> girls shook their heads.
+He knew that already they felt he
+had been wise in giving up the pursuit.
+Ivana spoke.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If the Duca and his horde stay underground,
+we shouldn&rsquo;t have a chance
+against them. And if they don&rsquo;t, we&rsquo;re
+better here.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby shot a searching glance at her,
+somehow sure that her thoughts were
+running parallel with his.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You don&rsquo;t think they&rsquo;re going to
+stay here, do you?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No, and you don&rsquo;t either,&rdquo; Ivana answered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;It seems to me that they will retreat
+into the Rorroh as fast as they can,&rdquo;
+Kirby then observed.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_406' name='page_406'></a>406</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;And do you think the Duca and all
+the caciques will go with the apes?&rdquo;
+This time it was Nini who spoke, and
+with the council so well launched,
+Kirby began to feel better.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think,&rdquo; he answered Nini, &ldquo;that
+the Duca has gone over to Xlotli altogether.
+We fooled him to-day. Instead
+of killing or capturing us all, he&mdash;he
+only got Naida. But he won&rsquo;t give
+up. I think he is taking the apes off
+to some place from which he can launch
+a new attack. And we&rsquo;ve got to stop
+him before he is ready to deliver another
+blow.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What do you mean?&rdquo; Ivana now
+asked.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you know where the villages of
+the ape-people are?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. None of us has been very far
+into the Rorroh, but I could guess
+where some of the villages may stand.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Silence</span> fell after that, but Kirby
+knew from the glint in Ivana&rsquo;s
+eyes, and the quick breaths which other
+girls drew, that they understood.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ivana,&rdquo; he said suddenly, &ldquo;will you
+go with me into the Rorroh jungle, and
+stay with me, facing down every
+danger it may conceal, until we have
+found Naida and brought her back?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A flush of life crept into Ivana&rsquo;s
+pallid cheeks.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby faced the other girls, all of
+them keyed up now.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nini, will you go?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Nini, bronze-haired, dainty nymph of
+a girl, who had yet the stamina of a
+man, looked at him with brave eyes.
+Then her hands tightened on her rifle,
+and she stepped forward.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;When will you have us start?&rdquo; Ivana
+asked in a low voice.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Now!&rdquo; Kirby answered, and, taking
+up the rifle which lay beside him&mdash;the
+same with which Naida had fought&mdash;he
+looked at the other girls.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is not one of you,&rdquo; he said
+slowly, &ldquo;who would not go willingly
+on this quest. But the pursuit party
+must be small and mobile. And there
+is another duty. To all of you I leave
+the care of the castle and the plateau.
+Take the three rifles I shall leave behind,
+do what you can to reassure the
+old people, and hold the plateau safe
+until we return.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A murmur of girls&rsquo; voices sounded in
+the temple. Kirby motioned to Nini
+and Ivana, and followed by a low
+cheer, they moved off together.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> night was on them, where
+they crouched in a cave above a
+swiftly flowing river. Kirby, rifle
+across his knees, sat peering out across
+the black, invisible stretches of the
+forest. His nostrils quivered to this
+mingled smells of fresh growth and
+fetid decay of the grotesque land. In
+his ears shrilled the creaking and
+scraping of insects, the flap of unseen
+wings, the distant bellowing grunt of
+some unseen, unknown animal.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I cannot sleep,&rdquo; Ivana said presently,
+from back in the cave.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush,&rdquo; he whispered, &ldquo;you will
+wake Nini.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But I am already awake!&rdquo; came her
+answer. &ldquo;I&mdash;I cannot forget the white
+snakes which slid from that tree when
+you tried to cut firewood.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hush,&rdquo; Kirby murmured again.
+&ldquo;Presently the moon will rise on the
+earth above, and light will come here.
+Even if the jungle is terrible, were you
+not born with courage? Go to sleep
+now, both of you, because you must
+relieve me soon.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>As silence fell again, he knew that
+the real thing behind their nervousness
+was their ghastly doubt about what the
+night was bringing to Naida. But none
+of them spoke of Naida. So sickening
+were the possibilities that Kirby would
+not permit conjecture to occupy even
+his mind when, at length, the sound of
+even breathing told him that Nini and
+Ivana slept.</p>
+<p>After dreary passing of an hour, a
+faint light grew over the jungle, silver
+and clear, and Kirby let his mind run
+back to the two deserted ape-men communities
+which they had found and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_407' name='page_407'></a>407</span>
+searched before dusk sent them to the
+cave. From the signs of hasty departure,
+it looked as though a far-reaching
+order had taken the brutes
+away from their dwellings, and sent
+them&mdash;somewhere.</p>
+<p>That somewhere seemed likely to be
+the great central community which
+Ivana said was rumored to exist in the
+far reaches of the Rorroh. The problem
+was how to locate the community
+through the hideous country. But
+Kirby presently drove the question
+from his head. To-morrow&rsquo;s evils could
+best be faced when morrow dawned.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Enough</span> light had grown now so
+that the swirling bosom of the
+river, and a strip of sand directly below
+the cliff in which their cave was
+set, were visible. As Kirby let his eyes
+wander to the lush growth beyond the
+sand, he heard something which made
+him stir uneasily. Some creature which
+suggested power and hugeness immeasurable
+was moving there.</p>
+<p>The brush parted, and he saw plainly
+an animal with the bulk of a two-story
+house. On two feet the nightmare thing
+stood, as lightly as a cat, and then came
+down on all four feet as it ambled out
+on the sand and extended into the lapping
+river a tremendous beak studded
+with teeth. A smell of crushed weeds
+and the musty odor like that of a lion
+house filled the night. The tyranosaur&mdash;it
+was more like a tyranosaur than
+anything else&mdash;breathed heavily and
+guzzled in great mouthfuls of water.</p>
+<p>Kirby sat perfectly still. He hoped
+the thing would go away. But the
+tyranosaur did not go away. All at
+once it hissed loudly and stood up, its
+eyes glowing green and baleful, and
+Kirby leaned forward.</p>
+<p>From the water was slithering another
+creature with a gigantic, quivering,
+jelly body. Kirby saw to his horror
+that, in addition to four short legs
+with webbed, claw-tipped feet, there
+sprouted from the body a number of
+octopus tentacles. From the scabrous
+mottle of the head, cruel, unintelligent,
+bestial eyes glared at the rearing
+tyranosaur.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>One</span> of the serpentine tentacles
+whipped out, slapped against the
+tyranosaur&rsquo;s fore-shoulder to call forth
+a hiss and a short bellow. Then other
+tentacles waved in the moonlight, and
+in a flash the tyranosaur was enmeshed
+as by a score of slimy cables. He was
+not altogether helpless. Suddenly the
+steam shovel of a beak buried itself in
+the jelly body of the water animal, and
+there spurted out a flood of inky liquid.
+The water animal emitted a sickening
+gurgle. But the tyranosaur&rsquo;s advantage
+was only temporary. Closer and closer
+drew the ugly, scabrous tentacles. The
+tyranosaur never had a chance. Its
+green eyes flared, the shovel beak
+plunged and slashed, but never for a
+second did the tentacles relax. As
+Kirby stared, he saw the water animal
+begin to back up, dragging its gigantic
+enemy with it. For a second the whole
+night was hideous with the sound of
+hisses, gurgles, dashing water. Then
+the river boiled once and for all, and
+both animals sank in its depths.</p>
+<p>Kirby chafed cold hands together and
+shivered a little, then turned to see if
+Nini and Ivana had heard the struggle.</p>
+<p>Fortunately, however, they still slept.
+And as if this peace which was upon
+them were an omen of good, the jungle
+continued quiet for the next hour.
+Kirby wakened them at last, and after
+a snatched nap, was in turn awakened.</p>
+<p>The three of them started again when
+the first glimmerings of dawn came to
+the forest. Of food there was plenty&mdash;fruits
+which grew in profusion, and
+some roots which Nini grubbed out of
+the earth. Having started along the
+first trail which they encountered beside
+the river bank, they ate as they
+walked.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Kirby</span> judged they had kept their
+steady gait for more than two
+hours before a slight widening of the
+trail roused him from the preoccupation
+into which he had fallen.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_408' name='page_408'></a>408</span></div>
+<p>&ldquo;See there,&rdquo; he exclaimed to both
+girls, and pointed at a grove of trees
+with fanlike leaves which towered up
+to the right of the trail. &ldquo;What are
+those big bundles fastened to the lower
+limbs?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ivana glanced at Nini, who nodded as
+if in answer to a question.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;This must be one of the places
+where the ape-people leave their dead,&rdquo;
+Nini answered. &ldquo;The bundles&mdash;But
+come over to them.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby forced his way ahead until he
+stood beneath a huge, unsavory bundle
+wrapped in roughly woven brown fibre,
+and wedged in a fork between two
+limbs. Judging from the ugly odor
+which overhung the grove, there could
+be no question about what the bundle
+contained. Nini and Ivana, glancing at
+the scores of similar bundles which
+burdened the trees of the whole grove,
+made wry faces. Kirby slung his rifle
+in the crook of his arm, and nodded
+toward the trail.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There must be a village somewhere
+near,&rdquo; he said.</p>
+<p>A mile farther on they found what
+they were seeking, a colony of seventy
+or eighty conical dwellings of mud and
+thatch, which were ranged in a double
+circle about a central common of bare,
+well-trodden earth. It took no long
+reconnaissance to discover that the
+town was deserted completely of all
+inhabitants.</p>
+<p>Ivana beckoned and darted to one of
+the nearest huts, and Kirby, following
+her, found lying on the uneven earth
+floor within, a half-skinned animal
+which resembled a small antelope. An
+obsidion knife beside the carcass, the
+disordered condition of a couch of
+grass, the sour odor of recent animal
+occupancy, all told their story.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The owner left in a hurry,&rdquo; Kirby
+observed aloud.</p>
+<p>Nini, who had gone beyond, to a
+larger hut which might have belonged
+to a king ape, called out excitedly to
+them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;A great number of apes have eaten
+a hurried meal here!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Kirby</span> entered the shadowed, foul-smelling
+interior of the central
+hut to find her statement true. Broken
+meats, some raw, some cooked, lay on
+the dirt floor, and scattered bits of fruit
+were mingled with them. The ashes of
+a burned out fire at the hut entrance
+were cold, but had not been for long.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Do you think&mdash;&rdquo; Ivana began.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think the whole of the Duca&rsquo;s
+horde came this way, fed, and went on,
+taking everyone with them,&rdquo; Kirby
+finished.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But which direction did they take?&rdquo;
+asked Nini, who was standing at the
+door of the big hut and had already begun
+to examine the crowding, green,
+inscrutable walls of jungle which
+foamed up to the clearing on all sides.</p>
+<p>No less than seven trails wound away
+into the dark country beyond, and
+Kirby saw that the question would not
+be an easy one.</p>
+<p>Having hastily circled the clearing
+and peered down one trail after another
+without finding a clue, he knew that it
+was the Duca&rsquo;s intelligence which had
+made the ape-people depart without
+leaving even tracks behind them. He
+did not like the situation.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; he rumbled to his companions,
+&ldquo;we may as well take our
+choice. One chance in seven of coming
+out right!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the words were hardly out of his
+mouth before he pulled himself up
+with a jerk, and cursed himself for having
+given in.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Ivana! Nini!&rdquo; Sharpness, a sudden
+ring of hope edged his voice. &ldquo;Am
+I seeing things, or is that&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>As</span> he pointed to a huge aloe bush
+down one of the trails to their
+left, they started to run. Then Kirby
+knew that he was not seeing things.
+What his first inspection of the trails
+had failed to show, he saw plainly
+now.</p>
+<p>Tied loosely to one branch of the aloe
+bush, almost concealed amidst the deep
+green of foliage, was a bit of white
+cloth! In a second Kirby was holding
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_409' name='page_409'></a>409</span>
+out to his companions a tiny strip of
+Naida&rsquo;s wedding gown.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She knew we would come!&rdquo; He
+stared down the trail with narrowed,
+keen eyes.</p>
+<p>How Naida had contrived to leave
+her signal was more than they knew.
+The fact that she <i>had</i> done so, sent
+all three of them down the trail at driving
+speed.</p>
+<p>An hour passed, then another, and
+the morning which had been barely
+born when they first took the trail,
+wore on to the sultriness and vast,
+colored light of a tropical noon. Twice
+the main trail forked, and twice they
+found an unobtrusive bit of cloth to
+guide them beyond the works. When
+the hands of Kirby&rsquo;s still useful watch
+pointed to twelve, they paused to eat
+and rest. Then they pushed on.</p>
+<p>Meanwhile, the country through
+which they passed left Kirby with a
+clear understanding of why Naida and
+her people had shunned the Rorroh
+forest down the centuries of time.</p>
+<p>Just one thing which stuck in his
+head was the sight of a small creature
+like a marmoset, sticking an inquisitive
+nose into the heart of a sickly-sweet
+plant which resembled a terrestrial
+nepenthe. No sooner had the little pink
+snout touched the green and maroon
+splotched petals, than the plant
+writhed, closed its leaves, and swallowed
+the monkey whole. Little
+squeaks of agony and terror sounded
+for a moment, and ceased.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>At</span> midafternoon they paused in a
+spot where a forest of trees with
+whorled tops were slowly being
+strangled to death by immense orchids
+of every conceivable shape and color,
+and by a kind of creeping mistletoe
+which grew almost as they watched.
+Here also, the ground was covered with
+fluffy, grey-green moss which seethed
+constantly as if it were a carpet of
+maggots. Both Ivana and Nini warned
+Kirby on his life not to touch or go
+near the moss, and a moment later he
+knew why.</p>
+<p>From the forest came the flash of a
+small, five-toed horse being pursued by
+some animal with a hyena head that
+barked. At the edge of the mossy
+glade the hyena swerved aside, but the
+terrified horse plunged straight out on
+the carpet of moss. Instantly the air
+was filled with the sound of animal
+screams, and a series of tiny, muffled
+explosions. A cloud of greenish-red
+mist swirled about the horse. Quivering,
+still screaming, the animal went
+down on its knees, and as the reddish
+green smoke fell on him and settled,
+it became a mass of growing moss
+spores.</p>
+<p>Before Kirby&rsquo;s eyes, the pitiful animal
+was covered by a shroud of green
+that spread over him and cloaked him,
+licking over all with tiny sounds like
+far off muffled drums as fresh spore
+cases developed and burst. The screams
+died. Even as Kirby drew the girls to
+him and they passed on, the horse&rsquo;s
+nostrils, eyes, mouth were filled with
+choking green moss; and he lay still.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>On</span> and on, deeper into the jungle
+Kirby pushed, and never for a
+moment did his companions falter. But
+the way was not so easy now, for nerves
+were jaded, muscles sore, and no human
+will could have been powerful
+enough to cast aside the growing fear
+for Naida.</p>
+<p>Fear came finally to a head when, toward
+dusk, Kirby sighted a fork ahead
+of them, approached it confidently to
+look for Naida&rsquo;s sign, and found
+nothing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh Lord!&rdquo; he muttered, and realized
+that it was the first time any of them
+had spoken for long.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There must be something to guide
+us!&rdquo; Ivana exclaimed as she searched
+with questing eyes through the swiftly
+deepening gloom of evening.</p>
+<p>Nini, making an effort to keep up
+hope in spite of the paleness which
+came to her lovely face, darted down
+both paths, glancing as she went at
+every bush and shrub. But she returned
+in a moment, and as she shook
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_410' name='page_410'></a>410</span>
+her head, her great eyes were somber.</p>
+<p>Kirby grunted, scratched behind his
+ear. Then, however, he stifled an exclamation,
+and clutched at the hands of
+both girls.</p>
+<p>On one of the two trails appeared
+suddenly in the dusk an ape-creature.
+Kirby saw at once that the thing was
+small&mdash;a female undoubtedly&mdash;and that
+it had spied them and was moving toward
+them with all speed. And borne
+in upon him most certainly was the
+fact that the ape-woman was making
+signals of peace. In her outstretched
+hand flickered through the gloom a
+strip of cloth that was gauzy and white.</p>
+<p>Again&mdash;a strip of Naida&rsquo;s gown.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;If you know any words of her
+tongue, call to her,&rdquo; Kirby said sharply.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Ivana</span> obeyed. All three of them
+started forward. The ape-woman,
+after returning the hail in creaking
+gutturals, came up to them, and with an
+unexpected look of pathos and entreaty
+in her face, began to address the girls
+with a flood of talk.</p>
+<p>Word after creaking word she poured
+out while Nini and Ivana listened in
+silence. Finally Kirby could stand the
+suspense no longer.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What is it, Ivana? What does she
+say? Your eyes are lighting up with
+hope! Tell me&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ivana smiled and turned toward him,
+while the ape-woman still looked her
+entreaty.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She says,&rdquo; Ivana announced bluntly,
+&ldquo;that she and the other women amongst
+their people, do not want any of the
+girls of our race to be taken by their
+males. Already the men are quarreling
+about Naida. They will not look at
+their own women. Naida told this
+woman that we would be following,
+and sent her to lead us to the place
+where the ape-people are assembling!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby felt his lips tightening in a
+grim smile at the thought that jealousy
+was not unknown even to the semi-human
+creatures of this neither world.
+He looked at Nini and Ivana during a
+stretched out second. Then he moved.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Good,&rdquo; he snapped. &ldquo;We go on at
+once.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>That was his only recognition of
+what was surely one of the important
+happenings of a lifetime. But for all
+that, his tired brain, which so lately
+had felt the chill of black depression,
+was suddenly set on fire with triumph
+and thanksgiving.</p>
+<h3>CHAPTER XII</h3>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>As</span> they marched rapidly, the ape-woman,
+who called herself Gori,
+succeeded in making them understand
+that most of the ape-tribes, commanded
+by the Duca and his caciques, were assembled
+in the central community toward
+which they were heading, that
+grave danger of some sort threatened
+Naida, and that the need for haste was
+great. But what the danger was, the
+two girls could not understand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We can&rsquo;t make out what is going
+to happen&mdash;what they plan to do to-night,&rdquo;
+Ivana whispered at last to
+Kirby. &ldquo;All Gori says is that we must
+rescue Naida and take her away, and
+must take the Duca away so that he
+cannot influence the men any more.
+And she keeps repeating that we must
+hurry.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And you can&rsquo;t find out what we
+must rescue Naida <i>from</i>?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ivana shook her head.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I&rsquo;m afraid we&rsquo;re facing something
+of an appalling nature, as dangerous to
+ourselves as to Naida. But I know
+nothing more.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>By the time the silver glow which
+corresponded to moonlight flooded the
+jungle, Gori had left the open trail,
+and was leading them across country
+which humans could not have negotiated
+without the guidance she offered.
+Advancing cautiously always, she stopped
+for long seconds at a time to
+reconnoitre, shifting her huge ears
+about and changing their shape, twitching
+her nostrils, and glancing hither
+and thither with bright little eyes.
+Sometimes they passed immense spike-tipped
+flowers ten feet in diameter,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_411' name='page_411'></a>411</span>
+with fleshy yellow leaves which gave
+out a nauseating stench. Vines with
+long, recurved thorns and blossoms of
+deep scarlet, laced the undergrowth together
+and made passing dangerous.
+Fire-flies drifted past, and all above and
+about them flapped moths as big as
+bats.</p>
+<p>Kirby, his clothes almost torn from
+his body, sweat pouring from every
+pore, heard the labored breathing of
+the girls, and wondered how they could
+hang on. But they did, and after a
+long time, Gori, halting in the midst
+of a slight clearing, held up a warning
+hand.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>A queer</span> sensation came over
+Kirby. As he stared and listened,
+he realized that the twinkles he saw
+far ahead were not fire-flies, as he
+had thought, but lights. In the frosted
+moon glow, Nini and Ivana drew close,
+and Kirby clasped their hands and
+pressed them for a second. Too tired
+to exult further he was, even though
+they seemed close to their goal of
+goals.</p>
+<p>Gori swung her hairy arm in a
+signal, and with rifles clasped carefully,
+they began to advance. When, five
+minutes later, they stood in the heart
+of a rank glade beyond which they
+could see nothing, Gori spoke to the
+two girls in her creaking whisper, and
+Nini laid a restraining hand on Kirby&rsquo;s.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;We have gone as far as Gori dares!
+She says we must climb a tree here,
+and watch what will go on in a clearing
+just beyond this thicket.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And we still don&rsquo;t know what we&rsquo;re
+getting into,&rdquo; Kirby muttered.</p>
+<p>But at any rate they had reached the
+end of their march.</p>
+<p>Exultation did come to Kirby now,
+but still he was too completely fagged,
+as were both girls, to give much sign.
+Gori pointed to a tree some fifty feet
+away, which shot up to a great, foliage-crowned
+height. They moved toward
+it, and in a moment were climbing,
+Gori first, the girls after her, and Kirby
+last.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Here we are,&rdquo; Ivana presently whispered,
+at the same time drawing herself
+out on a limb just beneath one on
+which Gori and Nini had crawled.</p>
+<p>Kirby found himself hedged in by
+tasselated leaves through which he
+could not see. The foliage thinned,
+however, and soon Ivana halted,
+perched herself in a comfortable position.
+Kirby, making himself at ease
+beside her, and seeing that Nini and
+Gori were in place, turned his eyes
+slowly, expectantly downward.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>At</span> first, all that he saw from his
+bird&rsquo;s-eye perch, was a circular
+clearing two hundred yards across,
+which was surrounded on all sides by
+lowering jungle. In the exact center
+of the circle, like a splotch of ink on
+gray paper, there gaped a deep hole
+which might have measured six feet
+in diameter. Around this hole, eight
+poles as tall and stout as telephone
+poles stood up in bristling array. The
+moonlight showed that the whitish
+earth of the clearing was tamped
+smooth as though thousands of creatures
+had danced or walked about there
+for centuries. But not a living form
+was visible.</p>
+<p>A grunt of disappointment escaped
+Kirby after that one look. When he
+looked beyond the clearing, however,
+a change came to his feelings.</p>
+<p>A quarter of a mile away, lights were
+twinkling&mdash;the same ones which had
+been visible on the last stretch of the
+journey. And the moonlight touched
+the little conical roofs of fully two
+hundred huts of the ape-people. No
+sound was audible save the soughing
+of night wind in the trees, the shrilling
+of insects. Nevertheless, there stole
+over Kirby all at once a feeling that
+the great ape-village was crowded to
+overflowing. What was more, he felt
+himself touched by an eery sensation&mdash;familiar
+these days&mdash;of evil to come.</p>
+<p>Ivana, seated with her rifle across her
+knees, stirred on the limb beside him.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh,&rdquo; she whispered suddenly, &ldquo;I
+am afraid of this place!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_412' name='page_412'></a>412</span></div>
+<p>Kirby took her hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I know. Maybe it is the sensation
+of all the legions of the apes herded
+together so silently in their village. I
+wish we knew what to expect from
+them. I wish&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>But</span> he broke off, and called softly
+to Nini on the limb above. She
+looked down with a drawn expression
+about her mouth.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you all right?&rdquo; Kirby whispered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes. But&mdash;Well, are both of <i>you</i>
+all right? Gori says we have reached
+here in time, but I&mdash;&rdquo; A gasp of uneasiness
+escaped her, and Kirby heard
+Ivana echo it. &ldquo;There is something
+about that black, silent hole out there
+in the clearing, and about those poles
+sticking up like fangs, that makes me
+terribly, terribly afraid. Oh, what are
+they planning? Where is Naida?
+What are they going to do to her?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby whistled in a low key. He
+had not thought about the black hole
+in the clearing.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Hum,&rdquo; he muttered, &ldquo;that&rsquo;s interesting.
+Ivana, Nini, what do you suppose&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But he got no answer. Gori&rsquo;s twitching
+lips grimaced them to silence.</p>
+<p>The next instant, the stillness of the
+night was hurled aside by a howling,
+gurgling shout from a hundred, a thousand
+hysterically distended ape throats.
+With the sickening sound came from
+the village the sullen roaring of drums.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Ten</span> minutes later, a Kirby who
+was cold with apprehension and
+wonder looked down from his leaf-crowned
+height at such a spectacle as
+he knew human eyes had never before
+seen. The shouting had died away, the
+drums were silenced. Crammed into
+the clearing, their foul, hairy bodies
+packed close together, the silver light
+glinting against rolling red eyes and
+grinning white teeth, stood fully a
+thousand apes!</p>
+<p>Once the first tumult of shouting in
+the village had died, they had come on
+in silence, and in orderly procession.
+Those who bore the drums&mdash;huge
+gourds with heads of stretched skin&mdash;had
+formed a line entirely around the
+outer diameter of the circular clearing.
+Then others, lugging vats of a dark,
+heady-smelling liquor, had deposited
+their burden beside the drums, and
+formed a second circle. The balance
+of the thousand had crowded itself together
+as best it might, leaving bare
+the center of the clearing with its
+black hole and fangs of poles. Kirby,
+looking down at these legions, did not wonder
+that cold sweat wetted his back.</p>
+<p>Capable of thinking about only one
+thing&mdash;Naida&mdash;he was trying with all
+his strength not to think. Ivana, her
+face blanched in the light which filtered
+their camouflage of leaves, sat
+rigid, her hands locked about her cold
+rifle. On the branch above, Nini and
+Gori were as still as mummies. No one
+had spoken since the vanguard of apes
+had appeared.</p>
+<p>But at last Nini leaned close to
+Kirby.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Have you any idea of what all this
+means?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A draught of hot night air carried
+up a stench of drunkenness, and the
+goaty odor of massed animal bodies.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No,&rdquo; Kirby whispered. &ldquo;I suppose,
+from Gori&rsquo;s having brought us here,
+that Naida is going to appear somehow.
+We&rsquo;ve simply got to trust that
+Gori knows what she is about.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But listen&mdash;&rdquo; Ivana suppressed a
+shudder. &ldquo;Suppose they should bring
+Naida here presently to force her to
+take part in some ceremony at which
+we can only guess. Gori, who thinks
+we can work miracles, supposes we can
+rescue Naida. But I&mdash;I&rsquo;m not so certain.
+Is there <i>anything</i> we can do?&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>It</span> was exactly that question which
+had made Kirby fight to keep himself
+from thinking. His face turned
+gray before he answered. But answer
+he did, finally.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes, there is one thing we can do,
+Ivana. We&rsquo;ve got to be frank with
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_413' name='page_413'></a>413</span>
+each other, and so far, this is the <i>only</i>
+thing I&rsquo;ve been able to figure out. If
+Naida is brought here, and they make
+any move to harm her or torture her,
+we can, and we will, shoot her quickly,
+before harm or pain comes.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>A grim silence settled once more.
+During the last miles of march in the
+jungle, there had persisted in Kirby&rsquo;s
+heart the hope that there would be at
+least <i>something</i> favorable in whatever
+situation they might encounter. His
+spirits were so low now that he dared
+not speak again.</p>
+<p>Amongst the noiseless sea of ape-men
+below them came, every now and
+again, a little ripple of motion as some
+anthropoid shadow fell out of his place,
+approached the liquor vats, and swilled
+down the black brew, a quart at a gulp.
+But mostly there was little commotion.
+Ivana drew a sibilant breath and
+said that she wished something would
+happen.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I wish,&rdquo; Kirby answered tensely,
+&ldquo;that we knew <i>what</i> is going to happen.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>But the nightmare waiting was not
+to go on forever. Kirby leaned forward
+and pointed.</p>
+<p>It was only instinct that had made
+him know action must come. For a second,
+no change in the expression of
+the ape-men, no movement in their
+crammed ranks, was visible. Then,
+however, a queer, subdued grunting
+rumbled deep down in many throats,
+and those who had faced the hundred-foot
+space in the center of the clearing
+squatted down on their hams.</p>
+<p>In the back of the crowd necks were
+craned. The stronger shoved the
+weaker in an effort to get a better view
+of the cleared stage, and a few ape-men
+who had been drinking hurried
+on unsteady legs to their places.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The drums!&rdquo; Kirby whispered then.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>With</span> almost military precision,
+the scores of leather-faced creatures
+who had led the procession into
+the clearing, clasped the skin-headed
+gourds to their shaggy bellies, and
+stood with free arm raised as though
+awaiting a signal. Nini moved in her
+position, and Kirby felt Ivana shiver
+and edge close to him.</p>
+<p>From the front rank of the crowd,
+there sprang up a great male creature
+with the face of a gargoyle and the
+body of a jungle giant. Just once he
+reeled on his feet, as though black alcohol
+had befuddled him, then he steadied
+himself, flung both arms above his
+head, and rolled out a command which
+burst upon Kirby&rsquo;s ears like thunder.</p>
+<p>It was as if the whole cavern of the
+lower world, and the whole of the
+round earth itself, had been rocked
+uneasily, dreadfully by the bellowing,
+crashing explosion of the drums. Maddened
+by the turmoil he had let loose,
+the gargoyle-faced giant ape-man
+leered about him with blood-shot,
+drunken eyes, and beat on his cicatrized
+chest with massive fists. Suddenly
+he let out a bellow. Straight
+up into the air he sprang in a wild
+leap. When he came down, he was
+dancing, and the portentious, the sickeningly
+mysterious ceremony for which
+such solemn preparation had been
+made, was begun.</p>
+<p>Kirby drew a rasping breath. Knowing
+that there must be some definite
+reason for the dance having begun just
+when and as it had, he looked beyond
+the solitary dancing giant, on beyond
+the crowded legions of the apes, toward
+the village. There, where the
+main trail from the community approached
+the clearing, he saw precisely
+the thing which he had both hoped
+desperately and dreaded terribly to
+find.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Headed</span> directly toward the
+clearing, moving down the trail
+with slow, majestic pace, came a procession
+headed by a bodyguard of ape-men
+and augmented by other men
+whose nakedness was covered by unmistakable,
+unforgetable priestly robes
+of gray.</p>
+<p>All at once the ape-people in the
+clearing began to scuffle apart, opening
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_414' name='page_414'></a>414</span>
+a lane down which the procession
+might pass to the central stage with
+its dancer, its ink spot orifice, and its
+fangs of tall poles. Kirby, watching
+the congregation, watching the majestic
+approach of gray robes through the
+night, wiped away from his forehead
+a sweat of fear.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think,&rdquo; Nini called in a voice
+pitched high to outsound the drums,
+&ldquo;that the&mdash;the Duca is with them!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Yes.&rdquo; Kirby pointed jerkily. &ldquo;In
+the middle of the procession, there,
+surrounded by his caciques!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>The Duca!</p>
+<p>Yet his approach did not hold Kirby.
+Directly behind the priests were
+emerging now from the jungle a new
+company of ape-men. Squinting his
+eyes, Kirby saw that two of them were
+lugging on a pole across their shoulders
+a curious burden&mdash;a sort of monstrous
+bird cage of barked withes.
+Crouched on the floor of the cage in a
+little motionless, white heap&mdash;</p>
+<p>But Kirby closed his eyes. Ivana,
+cowering against him, gulped as
+though she were going to be sick. Nini
+leaned down from above and looked
+at them with dilated eyes. Although
+none of them spoke, all knew that they
+had found Naida at last.</p>
+<p>Kirby was the first to pull himself
+up. Opening his eyes, he stared long
+at the white gowned, motionless shape
+within the cage. Next summing up
+the whole situation&mdash;the cage surrounded
+by an armed band, the clearing
+crammed with a thousand ape-men&mdash;he
+shook his head. Afterward, he
+made a quick movement with his hands.</p>
+<p>Ivana, seeing that movement, seeing
+the expression on his face, started out
+of her daze.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;No! No! Oh, there must be some
+other way out for her! There must&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Her</span> cry, half a shriek, did not
+change Kirby&rsquo;s look. What he
+had done with his hands was to throw
+a shell into the chamber of his rifle.
+Now he held the rifle grimly, ready to
+carry it to his shoulder.</p>
+<p>The procession with the bodyguard
+of ape-men at its head, the renegade
+Duca and his caciques following next,
+and the cage bringing up the rear, advanced
+relentlessly down the lane to
+the central stage. The gargoyle-faced
+ape-man who held the stage alone
+danced with increasing wildness,
+writhing, twisting, with weird suppleness.
+Upon the dancing giant the procession
+bore down, and before him it
+finally halted.</p>
+<p>The halt left the Duca and the king
+ape facing each other, and the ape
+ended his dance. After each had given
+a salute made by raising their arms,
+both Duca and the king ape turned to
+face the creatures who were standing
+with the cage slung across their shoulders.
+Whereupon the bearers of the
+cage advanced with it until they stood
+between two of the tall poles. There,
+facing the ominous hole in the center
+of the clearing, with a pole on either
+side of them, the ape-men lowered the
+cage to the ground.</p>
+<p>Kirby felt his last hope and courage
+ebbing. Now he noticed that each pole
+was equipped with a rope which passed
+through a hole near its top, like a
+thread through the eye of a needle.
+And while he stared at the dangling
+ropes, the ape-men made one end of
+each fast to a ring in the top of the
+cage. The next instant they leaped
+back, and began to heave at the other
+end of the lines.</p>
+<p>From the drums came a quicker
+pounding, a more head-splitting volume
+of thunder. Over all the ape-people
+who watched the show, passed
+a shiver of what seemed to be whole-souled,
+ecstatic satisfaction. Slowly,
+as the two ape-men heaved hard, the
+cage swung off the ground, and slowly
+rose higher and higher into the moonlit
+air.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>When</span> finally the thing hung
+high above the heads of the
+multitude, swaying midway between
+its tall supports, the ape-men who had
+done the hoisting fastened their lines
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_415' name='page_415'></a>415</span>
+to cleats on the poles. Then they
+turned to the Duca and the giant king
+who stood behind them, executed a
+queer, lumbering bow, and fell back to
+the rear.</p>
+<p>The next moment it seemed as
+though every creature in the clearing&mdash;men
+and those who were only half
+men&mdash;had gone crazy. The king flung
+himself into the air as if he were a
+mass of bounding rubber. Following
+his lead, the whole assembly let out
+howls that drowned even the drums,
+and then began to sway, to squirm, to
+leap, even as their king was doing before
+them.</p>
+<p>The caciques and the Duca joined
+in the madness of foul dancing as
+heartily as any there. Their eyes were
+flaming, their long robes flapping, their
+beards streaming.</p>
+<p>On his perch in the tree Kirby muttered
+an oath which was lost, swept
+away like a breath, in the shrieking
+turmoil of sound. Then he turned to
+Ivana.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;They&rsquo;ve brought Naida here to sacrifice
+her.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But <i>why</i>?&rdquo; Ivana&rsquo;s sweet face was
+frozen in lines of horror. &ldquo;I&rsquo;ve been
+able to guess what was going to happen
+to her. But&mdash;<i>sacrifice</i>. Why will it
+be that?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you see?&rdquo; Looking up to include
+Nini, Kirby found his hands
+quivering against his rifle. &ldquo;It is easy
+to understand. In the temple yesterday,
+what the Duca hoped to do was
+to kidnap most, or all, of the girls for
+the ape-people. But he was able to get
+only Naida. The first result was that
+the ape-men started to quarrel over the
+one girl. From what Gori says, trouble
+started on all sides at once. It became
+inadvisable to let Naida live. So the
+Duca, in his shrewdness, planned a sacrifice.
+By sacrificing Naida, he rids
+himself of a source of contention
+amongst the ape-men. He also hopes
+his act will win favor from his Gods,
+and make them help him when he is
+ready to launch a new attempt to capture
+<i>all</i> the girls.&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Ivana</span> and Nini looked at each
+other, then at Kirby, and horror
+was etched deeper into their faces.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I think,&rdquo; gulped Ivana, &ldquo;that you&mdash;are
+right. I&mdash;begin to understand.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Nini leaned close to them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Tell us, then, <i>how</i> this sacrifice is
+to be made.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Silent at that, Kirby presently made
+a heavy gesture toward the maelstrom
+of howling, leaping animals below
+them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;I couldn&rsquo;t guess at first. Now I
+think I can. They have placed her in
+that cage and swung it high above the
+black hole you were afraid of. What
+can that mean except that she is to be
+offered to&mdash;to&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>It was a monstrous theory which had
+stunned his hope and courage, and to
+voice the thing in words was too gruesome.</p>
+<p>His bare suggestion, however, made
+Ivana pass a hand limply over her forehead
+and look at him with blank,
+stricken eyes. Nini tottered so uncertainly
+that Gori, who had remained
+motionless and silent throughout, had
+to steady her with muscular arms. If
+it was impossible for Kirby to utter
+his fears aloud, he had no need to speak
+to make them understood.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;And&mdash;and we can do nothing?&rdquo;
+Nini choked at last.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You can see for yourself how she
+is surrounded. If we had been able to
+get here sooner, we might have done
+something. Now&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby&rsquo;s voice trailed off, and he gave
+an agonized look at his rifle.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> terrific dance in the clearing
+was going forward with madness
+which increased second by second. It
+had been a general debauch at first,
+with the whole thousand of the apes
+bellowing and squirming. Now a
+change was becoming apparent. Red
+eyes which had caught the glare of
+ultimate madness, focused upon the
+caciques, the Duca, and the great king,
+all of whom were swaying together
+on the central stage. As they looked,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_416' name='page_416'></a>416</span>
+the horde of ape-men broke loose with
+a heightened frenzy of noise and movement
+too overwhelming for Kirby to
+follow. He leaned forward, making an
+effort to see what actions of Duca and
+king could be so influencing the congregation.
+And then he saw.</p>
+<p>Both of those central figures, the
+one with hair-covered giant&rsquo;s body and
+evilly grimacing face, the other with
+white robes and whipping silver hair,
+were definitely emulating the motions
+of a serpent!</p>
+<p>It was as if the angles and joints
+had disappeared from their bodies.
+They were become gliding lengths of
+muscle as swift, as loathsome in their
+supple dartings and coilings as any
+snake lashing across the expanses of
+primeval jungle. Lost in what they
+did, unconscious of the nightmare,
+demoniac legion before which they
+danced, they had eyes only for the
+empty, ominous hole beneath Naida&rsquo;s
+cage. As they circled the hole, drawing
+ever and ever closer to it, they
+opened and closed their arms with the
+motion of great serpent jaws biting
+and striking.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;God in Heaven!&rdquo; Kirby cried in a
+voice which shrilled with horror and
+then broke.</p>
+<p>It was not alone the Duca&rsquo;s dance
+which had wrung the shout from him.
+As Nina and Ivana shrieked and cowered,
+as Gori twitched, gasped, buried
+her head in trembling arms, Kirby
+knew that Naida was fully aware of
+what was going on&mdash;had been, perhaps,
+from the beginning.</p>
+<p>Slowly, numbly she raised herself
+from her huddled position, rose to her
+knees, and clutching with despairing
+hands at the sides of her cage, looked
+out from between the bars.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>The</span> king and Duca edged closer
+to the hole until they were dancing
+upon its very brink. From that
+position, they stared down into the
+depths, their faces tense and strained.
+And then their look became radiant,
+exalted, joyous. Suddenly the Duca
+leaped back. He shrieked something
+at the gargoyle ape, and they flung
+their arms high in a commanding,
+mighty signal which was directed
+across the nightmare legion of ape-men,
+to the drums.</p>
+<p>As Kirby winced in expectancy, the
+drums ceased to roar. Over the night
+smashed a hideous concussion of silence,
+deafening, absolute. And the
+ape-men&mdash;all of them&mdash;and the Duca,
+his caciques, and the king, ceased to
+dance. As if a whirlwind had hurled
+them, the caciques scattered in all directions.
+The Duca, having already
+leaped back from the gaping orifice,
+suddenly turned and ran with blurred
+speed over to the slobbering, deadly
+still front rank of the congregation.
+An instant later the king crouched
+down beside him, and the whole stage
+was left bare and deserted.</p>
+<p>Kirby gave one look at Naida, found
+her staring down, deeper and deeper
+down, into the hole which yawned beneath
+her so blackly. Then Kirby lowered
+his eyes until he, too, stared at
+the opening.</p>
+<p>Amidst the pressing silence there
+stole from the earth an uneasy sound
+as of some immense thing waking and
+stirring. Came a hissing note as of
+escaping steam. The tribes of the ape-men
+waited in silent rapture. Kirby
+saw Naida still looking down, and felt
+Ivana crouch against him, fainting.
+He held his rifle tighter, and continued
+to stare.</p>
+<p>Something red, like two small flames,
+licked up above the edge of the pit.
+Then Kirby gasped and all but went
+limp. Up and out into the moonlight
+slid a glistening white lump that
+moved from side to side and licked at
+the night with flickering black and red
+tipped forked tongue.</p>
+<p>The glistening white lump was the
+head of Quetzalcoatl, buried God of
+the People of the Temple. It was
+wider and bigger than an elephant&rsquo;s,
+and the round snake body could not
+have been encircled by a man&rsquo;s two
+arms. Kirby guessed at the probable
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_417' name='page_417'></a>417</span>
+length of the Serpent in terms of hundreds
+of feet.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Sick</span>, numb, he glanced at Naida,
+who was still staring silently, and
+hitched his rifle half up to his shoulder.
+But he did not look down the
+sights yet. Although it was time, and
+more than time, that he fired, he would
+not do it until the last possible second,
+when nothing else remained.</p>
+<p>Slowly from the hole slid a fifteen
+or twenty-foot column of the body,
+and Quetzalcoatl, thus reared, looked
+about him with a pair of eyes immense
+and not like snake&rsquo;s eyes, but heavily
+lidded and lashed; eyes that stared in
+a wise, evil way; eyes glittering and
+round and black as ink. After a time
+the mouth opened in a silent snarl,
+showing great white fangs and recurved
+simitars of teeth. The head was
+snow white, leperous in its scabby,
+scaly roughness, with here and there
+a patch of what looked like greenish
+fungus. From the rounded body trailed
+a short, unnatural, sickening growth
+of&mdash;feathers. Old and evil and very
+wise the Feathered Serpent seemed as
+his forked tongue flickered in and out
+and he stared at the ape horde, who
+stared back silently.</p>
+<p>He seemed in no hurry to devote his
+attention to the cage set forth for his
+delectation. The black eyes rolled beneath
+their lashes, staring now at the
+Duca in his robes, and again at the
+huddled ape-people. But after ghastly
+seconds, Quetzalcoatl at last had seen
+enough.</p>
+<p>Again the moonlight glinted against
+simitar teeth as the great, white, puffy
+mouth yawned in its silent snarl.
+Quetzalcoatl reared his head a little
+higher, slid further from his hole, and
+then looked up at the dangling cage
+of barked withes.</p>
+<p>In Kirby&rsquo;s mind stirred cloudily a
+remembrance of moments in the past:
+the feel of Naida&rsquo;s first kiss, her look
+as they advanced to the altar in the
+temple. Then he saw things as they
+were now, with Naida surrounded by
+all the tribes of the apes, and with
+Quetzalcoatl staring from beneath
+heavily lidded lashes at the whiteness
+of her.</p>
+<p>Suddenly Kirby stirred to free his
+shoulder of Ivana&rsquo;s supine weight
+against it, and he made himself look
+down his rifle. He let the breath half
+out of his lungs, and nursed the trigger.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>But</span> he did not fire.</p>
+<p>All at once he started so violently
+that he almost hurtled from the
+tree. Suddenly, trembling, he lowered
+his rifle.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Oh, thank God!&rdquo; he yelped in the
+silence of the night.</p>
+<p>The idea which had transformed him
+was perhaps the conception of a lunatic.
+But it was still an idea, and offered
+a chance.</p>
+<p>Again Kirby peered down his rifle.
+But he no longer aimed at Naida. As
+Quetzalcoatl lifted white fangs, Kirby
+aimed deliberately at him, and turned
+loose his fire.</p>
+<p>With the first shot, the Serpent
+lurched back from the cage, snapped
+his jaws, and closed evil, black eyes.
+From one lidded socket squirted dark
+blood. As a second and third shot
+crashed into the cavernous fanged
+mouth, and others ripped into the flat
+skull, Quetzalcoatl seemed dazed. His
+head wavered back and forth and his
+hiss filled the night, but he did nothing.</p>
+<p>But all at once Kirby felt that he
+was <i>going</i> to do something in a second,
+and a great calm came upon him.
+He quickly jammed home a fresh clip
+of shells.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Nini! Ivana! Fire at the Serpent.
+Give him everything you&rsquo;ve got! Do
+you understand? Fire! He thinks that
+the ape-people have hurt him, and he
+will be after them in a second. If we
+have any luck, he will do to them what
+we never could have done, and maybe
+destroy himself at the same time! Me,
+I&rsquo;m going down there and get Naida
+now!&rdquo;</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_418' name='page_418'></a>418</span></div>
+<h3>CHAPTER XIII</h3>
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>No</span> sooner did Kirby see comprehension
+in the girls&rsquo; faces than
+he swung around and let go of his
+perch. As he crashed, caught the next
+limb below him, and let go to crash
+to another, he had all he could do to
+suppress a yelp of joy. For all at once
+every voice in the ape congregation
+was raised in howls and screams of
+devastated terror.</p>
+<p>He did not care how he got down
+from the tree. Seconds and half seconds
+were what counted. From the
+last limb above the ground he swung
+into space, and a split second later
+staggered to his feet, clutched his rifle,
+and started for the clearing. His lungs
+seemed collapsed and both ankles shattered.
+He did not care. Not when the
+ape screams were growing louder with
+every step he took. Not when he heard
+Nini and Ivana pouring down from
+their tree a continuation of the scorching
+fire he had started.</p>
+<p>Panting, his breath only half regained,
+but steeled to make the fight
+of his life, he tore from the jungle
+into the clearing just in time to see a
+twisting, pain-convulsed seventy-foot
+coil of white muscle lash up and strike
+Naida&rsquo;s cage a blow which knocked it
+like a ball in the air. Naida screamed
+and hung to the bars.</p>
+<p>But she was all right. It was not
+against her that Quetzalcoatl was venting
+his wrath: the blow had been blind
+accident. As Kirby stood at the clearing&rsquo;s
+edge, he knew to a certainty that
+Quetzalcoatl&rsquo;s reaction to sudden pain
+had been all he had dared hope.</p>
+<p>In front of him forty or fifty ape-bodies
+lay in a crushed heap. While
+yard after yard of the Serpent&rsquo;s
+bleached length streamed out of the
+hole, the hundreds of feet of coils already
+in the clearing suddenly whipped
+about a whole squadron of ape-men,
+and with a few constrictions annihilated
+them as if they had been ants.
+Across the clearing, the leperous head
+reared up as high as the trees and
+swooped down, fangs gleaming. The
+howls of the ape-men trying to flee,
+the screams of those who had been
+caught, rose until they became all one
+scream.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>But</span> Kirby had not left the safety
+of the tree merely to get a ringside
+view of carnage. He faced his
+next, his final task unhesitatingly.
+Straight out he leaped from the shadows
+of the jungle into the clearing,
+out into the presence of the beleagured,
+screaming ape-men. Well enough
+he knew that those creatures, despite
+their frenzy, might sight him and fall
+upon him at any second; well enough
+he knew that a single flick of the white
+coils all over the clearing could crush
+him instantly. But the time to worry
+about those hazards would be when
+they beset him. With a yell as piercing
+as any in the whole bedlam, Kirby
+rushed forward.</p>
+<p>High up in the moonlit vault of the
+night, swaying between the two poles
+which supported it, hung the white
+cage which was Naida&rsquo;s prison. By
+the time Kirby had sprinted fifty
+yards, he knew that his yells had
+reached Naida. For she staggered to
+her knees and looked straight at him.
+A second later, though, he realized that
+the almost inevitable recognition of
+him by ape-men had come to pass.</p>
+<p>Eight or ten of the creatures, left
+unmolested for a second by the Serpent,
+halted in the mad run they were
+making for the sheltering jungle, and
+while one pointed with hairy arm, the
+others let out shrieks. Kirby gritted
+his teeth in something like despair.
+Then he realized that the worst danger&mdash;Quetzalcoatl&rsquo;s
+blurred coils&mdash;was not
+threatening him so far. And he went
+on, straight toward the ape-men.</p>
+<p>He did not look where, how, or at
+whom he struck. All he knew was that
+his rifle blazed, and as he clubbed at
+soft flesh with the butt, blood spurted,
+and new screams filled the night. He
+felt and half saw big, stinking bodies
+going down, and clawed his way forward,
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_419' name='page_419'></a>419</span>
+around them, over them. Then
+he felt no more bodies, and knew that
+he was through. A little farther he
+ran over the trampled earth, and
+stopped and looked up.</p>
+<p>The howls of the living, the shrieks
+of the dying deafened him. Renewed
+shots from the rifles in the tree, made
+the Serpent lash about in a dazzling
+white blur, smashing trees, apes, everything
+in its path. But Kirby, finding
+himself still safe, scarcely heard or
+saw. His eyes, turned upward, saw
+one thing only.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Naida!&rdquo;</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>She</span> had snapped two of the withes
+of the cage and was leaning forward
+through the opening. Her face
+was livid with horror and exhaustion,
+but she was able to look at him with
+eyes that glowed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;You&mdash;you came!&rdquo; she gasped. &ldquo;You
+came to me!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In a flash Kirby jumped over to the
+poles and began to cast off one of the
+lines which held the cage aloft.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Get ready for a bump!&rdquo; he shouted,
+as he lowered away, arms straining.</p>
+<p>Paying out the one line left the cage
+suspended from the second, but let it
+sweep from its position between the
+poles, down toward one pole. As the
+thing struck the tall support, Kirby
+bounded over to stand beneath it, only
+too sharply aware of the death waiting
+for him on every side, but ignoring
+it. Naida still hung suspended a
+good twenty feet above him, but there
+was no time to let go the other line.
+He braced himself and held up his
+arms.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Jump!&rdquo; he yelled.</p>
+<p>Then he saw the white gown sweeping
+down toward him, felt the crash of
+a soft body against his, and staggered
+back. Recovered in a tenth of a second,
+he drew a deep breath, and looked
+at Naida beside him, tall and brave,
+unhurt.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Are you able to run?&rdquo; he snapped,
+and then, the moment she nodded, motioned
+toward the jungle.</p>
+<p>Behind them, in front, on all sides,
+rose screams so horrible that he wondered
+even then if he would ever forget.
+As he started to run, he realized
+that when Naida had finally landed in
+his arms, the nearest squirming loop
+of the Serpent had been no more than
+four yards away, and that, right now,
+if their luck failed, a single unfortunate
+twist of the incredible hundreds
+of feet of white muscle could still end
+things for them.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>But</span> luck was not going to fail.
+Somehow Kirby knew it as they
+sprinted side by side, and the sheltering
+jungle loomed closer every second.
+And a moment later, something
+beside his own inner faith made him
+know it, too.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Look, Naida! Look!&rdquo; he screeched
+all at once.</p>
+<p>At the upper end of the clearing,
+where an unthinkable slaughter was
+going on, there leaped out from
+amongst a surging mass of apes, leaped
+out from almost directly beneath a
+downward smashing blur of white
+snake folds, a figure which Kirby had
+not seen or thought about for many
+seconds.</p>
+<p>The Duca&rsquo;s robe hung in tatters from
+his body. Blood had smeared his white
+hair. His eyes were those of a man
+gone mad from fear. And as he escaped
+the tons of muscle which so nearly had
+engulfed him, he began to run even as
+Kirby felt himself running.</p>
+<p>Straight toward him and Naida,
+Kirby saw the man spurt, but whether
+the mad eyes recognized them or not,
+he could not tell, nor did he care. All
+at once his feeling that they would
+escape the clearing, became conviction.</p>
+<p>For suddenly the same single twitch
+of Quetzalcoatl&rsquo;s vast folds which
+might have finished them, if luck had
+not held, put an end to the Duca&rsquo;s retreat.
+At one moment the man&rsquo;s path
+was clear. The next&mdash;</p>
+<p>Kirby, running for dear life, gasped,
+and heard Naida cry out beside him.</p>
+<p>The great loops flashed, twisted, and
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_420' name='page_420'></a>420</span>
+where had been an open way for the
+Duca, loomed a wall of scaly white
+flesh. The living wall twitched, closed
+in; and as the Duca dodged and leaped
+to no avail, a cry shrilled across the
+night&mdash;a cry that cut like a knife.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Kirby</span> saw no more. But it was
+likely that most, if not all, of the
+caciques had gone with the Duca.</p>
+<p>Somehow, anyhow, in but a few seconds
+more, Kirby dove into the spot
+from which he had left the jungle to
+enter the clearing. As Naida pressed
+against him, winded but still strong,
+he found his best hopes for immediate
+retreat realized, for Gori, Nini, and
+Ivana, down from their tree, ran toward
+them.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;She is all right,&rdquo; he said with a gesture
+which cut short the outbursts
+ready to come. &ldquo;But we&rsquo;ve got to keep
+going. Ivana, tell Gori that her people
+are gone, wiped out, but that if she
+will cast her lot with us, we will not
+forget what she has done. Come on!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>With Gori leading them they ran,
+stumbling, recovering themselves,
+stumbling again. To breathe became
+an agony. But not until many minutes
+later, when they plowed into the cover
+of a fern belt whose blackness not even
+the moonlight had pierced, did Kirby
+call a halt.</p>
+<p>Here he swept a final glance behind
+him, listened long for sounds of pursuit,
+and relaxed a little only when
+none came to disturb the night stillness.
+However, that relaxation, now
+that he permitted it at last, meant
+something.</p>
+<p>The complete silence gave him final
+conviction that what he had said about
+the whole ape-people being destroyed
+was true. As for the Serpent&mdash;well,
+perhaps he was destroyed even as they
+were. Perhaps not. In any case the
+grip which Quetzalcoatl held upon the
+imagination of the People of the Temple
+had been destroyed by this night&rsquo;s
+work, and that was what counted most.
+The Serpent would be worshipped no
+longer.</p>
+<hr class='invis' />
+<p class='dropcap'><span class='dcap'>Kirby</span> reached out in the darkness
+and found Naida&rsquo;s hand.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Come along,&rdquo; he said to all of the
+party. &ldquo;I think the past is&mdash;the past.
+And with Gori to guide us out of the
+jungle, and our own brains to guide
+us through the jungle of self-government
+after that, I think the future
+ought to be bright enough.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Ivana and Nini both chuckled as
+they moved again, and Gori, hearing
+her name spoken in a kindly voice,
+twitched her ears appreciatively. Naida
+drew very close to Kirby.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What are you thinking about?&rdquo; she
+asked presently.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The&mdash;temple,&rdquo; he answered.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;About the crown which probably is
+still lying on the altar there?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Kirby looked up in surprise.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Why, I had forgotten about that!&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What was it, then?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;But what could I have been thinking
+about except how you looked when
+we came together in that gloomy place,
+and walked forward, side by side?
+<i>Now</i> have I told you enough?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Naida laughed.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;There is so much to be done!&rdquo;
+Kirby exclaimed then. &ldquo;As soon as
+possible, we must climb to the Valley
+of the Geyser, go on into the outer
+world, and there seek carefully for
+men who are willing, and fit, to come
+here. And that is only one task.
+Others come crowding to me every second.
+But first&mdash;&rdquo;</p>
+<p>&ldquo;What?&rdquo; Naida asked softly.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The temple. Naida, we will reach
+the plateau sometime to-morrow. All
+of the girls who kept watch there will
+be waiting for us, and it will be a time
+of happiness. May we not, then, go to
+the temple? There will be no priests.
+But we will make our pledges without
+them. Tell me, may I hope that it will
+be so&mdash;to-morrow?&rdquo;</p>
+<p>Naida did not answer at once. She
+did not even nod. But presently her
+shoulder, still fragrant with faint perfume,
+brushed his. She clasped his
+hand then, and as they walked on in
+silence, Kirby knew.</p>
+<hr class='toprule' />
+<div class='chsp'>
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_421' name='page_421'></a>421</span>
+<a name='THE_READERS_CORNER' id='THE_READERS_CORNER'></a>
+<h2>The Reader&rsquo;s Corner</h2>
+</div>
+<div class='figtag'>
+<a name='linki_9' id='linki_9'></a>
+</div>
+<div class='figcenter'>
+<img src='images/421.jpg' alt='' title="The Readers' Corner. A Meeting Place for Readers of Astounding Stories" width='547' height='500' /><br />
+</div>
+<h3>&ldquo;<i>Literature</i>&rdquo;</h3>
+<p>Dear Editor:</p>
+<p>After comparison with various other magazines
+which specialize in the publication of
+Science Fiction, we&mdash;The Scientific Fiction
+Library Ass&rsquo;n, of 1457 First Ave., New York
+City&mdash;have found that your magazine,
+Amazing Stories, publishes stories to
+which the term &ldquo;literature&rdquo; may be applied
+in its real sense. A fine example of this is
+the story &ldquo;Murder Madness,&rdquo; by Murray
+Leinster. Others of the finer novels are:
+&ldquo;The Beetle Horde,&rdquo; by Victor Rousseau,
+and, up to the present installment, &ldquo;Earth,
+the Marauder,&rdquo; by Arthur J. Burks. &ldquo;Brigands
+of the Moon,&rdquo; by Ray Cummings, was
+interesting and well-written, but it was not
+literature (not a story which you will remember
+and read over again). Of the shorter stories,
+the novelettes, the best are: &ldquo;Spawn of
+the Stars,&rdquo; by Charles W. Diffin, &ldquo;Monsters
+of Moyen,&rdquo; by Arthur J. Burks, and &ldquo;The
+Atom Smasher,&rdquo; by Victor Rousseau.</p>
+<p>Since the magazine started, there are only
+three stories that did not belong in the magazine,
+and were not even interesting. These
+are: &ldquo;The Corpse on the Grating,&rdquo; by Hugh
+B. Cave; &ldquo;The Stolen Mind,&rdquo; by M. Staley,
+and the last (I wonder that the editors who
+used such good sense in picking the other
+finer stories, let it pass), &ldquo;Vampires of Venus,&rdquo;
+by Anthony Pelcher. May you keep
+up the high standard of fiction you are publishing
+at present.&mdash;Nathan Greenfeld, 873
+Whitlock Ave., New York City.</p>
+<h3><i>You See&mdash;It Didn&rsquo;t!</i></h3>
+<p>Dear Editor:</p>
+<p>Firstly, let me say that I am sending a
+year&rsquo;s subscription to Astounding Stories,
+which will tell you that they are good.</p>
+<p>On the average, the stories are of good
+literary merit and plot. However, there is
+one thing that seems to be getting rather
+pushed into the background and that is the
+second part of your title, &ldquo;Super-Science.&rdquo;
+If this is to be a Science Fiction magazine
+let us have it so. I am kicking against stories
+like &ldquo;Murder Madness&rdquo; and the like. They
+are really excellent in every way but just
+need that tincture of a little scientific background
+to make them super-excellent. &ldquo;Brigands
+of the Moon&rdquo; and &ldquo;The Moon Master&rdquo;
+seem to me more the type of story &ldquo;our
+mag&rdquo; should publish, from its name.</p>
+<p>No doubt this criticism will leave you cold
+and this effusion find its way into the nearest
+waste paper basket, but I find that a number
+of your readers in Australia think somewhat
+the same as I do.</p>
+<div><span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_422' name='page_422'></a>422</span></div>
+<p>More brickbats&mdash;I hope not! and more
+bouquets&mdash;I hope so! the next time I write.&mdash;N.W.
+Alcock, 5 Gaza Rd., Naremburn, N.S.W.,
+Australia.</p>
+<h3><i>Not in de Head!!</i></h3>
+<p>Dear Editor:</p>
+<p>I shall be glad to take advantage of your
+cordial invitation to come over to &ldquo;The
+Readers&rsquo; Corner.&rdquo; In the first place, I find
+your magazine the best of its kind on the
+market, and you are to be congratulated on
+having such excellent authors as Ray Cummings,
+Murray Leinster and Captain S. P.
+Meek. Nevertheless, there are so many
+things to be criticized that I hardly know
+where to begin.</p>
+<p>Let&rsquo;s start of with stories of future warfare.
+Although this class is potentially one
+of the most interesting, it is at the same time
+one of the most abused. Ray Cummings can
+write classics in this field, but the efforts of
+most the others are atrocities. I&rsquo;ll wager
+that their favorite childhood sport was mowing
+down whole regiments of lead soldiers
+with oxy-acetylene torches. It shows in their
+writings. Why can&rsquo;t they think of something
+original? Why can&rsquo;t they make their stories
+logical? The merits of a story are not dependent
+on the number of people wiped out
+by one blast of a death ray! But they all
+stick to the same old plot. A merciless but
+well-meaning scientist, or hordes from a
+foreign planet, wipe out thousands of American
+citizens at one blow. Hundreds of airplanes
+are disintegrated before they discover
+that the enemy is invulnerable. An ultimatum
+in domineering tones gives the terror-stricken
+populace forty-eight hours in which to surrender.
+But, all unknown to the dastardly
+villains, an obscure young scientist labors to
+save his country and the girl he loves. Fifteen
+minutes before the time set in the ultimatum
+he perfects a new weapon that soon
+sends the invaders to their well merited fate.</p>
+<p>Surely you realize how ridiculous the whole
+affair is. It is only slightly less nauseating
+than the plot used in the stories of advanced
+civilizations where the hero is conducted on
+a sight-seeing tour by the individual in whose
+path he popped upon entering this new world.
+I can&rsquo;t believe that more than a handful of
+my fellow beings are of such low intelligence
+that they can find enjoyment in such trash.
+You will notice that although every reader
+has a different list of favorite authors, Ray
+Cummings has his name in practically every
+list. He is easily your favorite author. Ray
+Cummings does not wipe out whole cities at
+one time. His heroes do not save the world
+by inventing a new weapon at a moment&rsquo;s
+notice. His wars are not of forty-eight hours&rsquo;
+duration. His conquerors do not attempt to
+win the war by one great attack on New
+York City. Do try to have your authors
+write logical stories.</p>
+<p>I would now like to criticize the love element
+in your stories. I do not claim that
+there should be none whatever from cover to
+cover of your magazine, but I do claim that
+there should be none unless it really helps
+the plot. Most of your authors seem to think
+that a girl is necessary in every plot and so
+they bring her in, disregarding the fact that
+they do not know how to handle such material.
+The way it stands now, the heroine is
+introduced in a lame, routine fashion; is
+rescued once or twice; and accepts the hero
+as a husband in an altogether lame fashion.</p>
+<p>There are many other points but they can
+wait. Logical war stories, no Utopias or
+sight-seeing tours, sensible love element, plus
+your present policy will make a corking
+magazine.&mdash;Philip Waite, 3400 Wayne Ave.,
+New York, N.Y.</p>
+<h3><i>No Present Plans</i></h3>
+<p>Dear Editor:</p>
+<p>Thanks for the new color cover. It certainly
+is a big improvement. The picture on
+the front of &ldquo;our&rdquo; magazine was just as
+astounding as the story by R. F. Starzl from
+which it was drawn. Let&rsquo;s have more stories
+from the pen of Mr. Starzl.</p>
+<p>In my opinion &ldquo;Beyond the Heaviside
+Layer&rdquo; is the best story I have read in
+Astounding Stories to date. I am very
+pleased that you intend to print a sequel to
+it.</p>
+<p>Now I would like to ask you a question.
+Do you intend to print an Annual or Quarterly,
+or do think you will ever enlarge the
+size of this magazine? I don&rsquo;t care so much
+whether you enlarge the magazine or not, but
+I certainly would like to read an Annual or
+Quarterly.</p>
+<p>Even though this letter meets the fate of
+thousands of other such letters and sees the
+inside of your wastebasket, I will at least
+have had the pleasure of writing to you and
+wishing &ldquo;our&rdquo; magazine success to the nth
+degree.&mdash;Forrest J. Ackerman,
+236½
+N. New
+Hampshire, Los Angeles, Calif.</p>
+<h3><i>&ldquo;Excellent&rdquo; to &ldquo;So-So&rdquo;</i></h3>
+<p>Dear Editor:</p>
+<p>I notice a large number of subscribers are
+giving their opinions of Astounding Stories.
+I hate to be with the crowd, but I have to
+side with the majority in this case and say
+it&rsquo;s just about right.</p>
+<p>My favorite writers are R. F. Starzl (that
+&ldquo;Planet of Dread&rdquo; was a peach). Chas. W.
+Diffin, A. Merritt, Ralph Milne Farley, Murray
+Leinster and Ray Cummings.</p>
+<p>Now as to the August issue, here is how I
+rate them:</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Planet of Dread&rdquo;&mdash;more than 20c. worth
+at the first crack. A real story.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Lord of Space&rdquo;&mdash;excellent. I meant to
+include Victor Rousseau in my list of favorites
+above.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Second Satellite&rdquo;&mdash;so-so.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Silver Dome&rdquo;&mdash;so.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Earth the Marauder&rdquo;&mdash;too deep for me.
+And that Beryl stuff is sheer bunk.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;Murder Madness&rdquo;&mdash;a real story. Get more
+like this.</p>
+<p>&ldquo;The Flying City&rdquo;&mdash;too much explanation
+and description and not enough action.</p>
+<p>Perhaps it looks like I&rsquo;m sort of critical
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_423' name='page_423'></a>423</span>
+after all, but I didn&rsquo;t mean it just that way.
+What I&rsquo;m driving at is that Astounding
+Stories is by far superior to its competitors,
+and I&rsquo;m telling you so because it might make
+you feel better to know it. If you want to
+print this testimonial, go to it. To tell the
+truth, I&rsquo;ll be looking for it.&mdash;Leslie P. Mann,
+1227 Ogden Ave., Chicago, Illinois.</p>
+<h3>&ldquo;<i>Too Many Serials</i>&rdquo;</h3>
+<p>Dear Editor:</p>
+<p>I have just finished the August issue, and
+I would like to tell you my opinion of it and
+the magazine as a whole.</p>
+<p>The stories in order of merit were:</p>
+<p>1&mdash;&ldquo;The Second Satellite&rdquo;; 2&mdash;&ldquo;The Flying
+City&rdquo;; 3&mdash;&ldquo;Silver Dome&rdquo;; 4&mdash;&ldquo;The Lord of
+Space&rdquo;; 5&mdash;&ldquo;The Planet of Dread.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>I won&rsquo;t pass judgment upon the serials, as
+I have not read all the parts.</p>
+<p>In &ldquo;The Flying City&rdquo; there are a number
+of points I am hazy about. How could Cor
+speak English? However, this could be
+cleared up by saying that Cor sent out men
+to get the language, etc.</p>
+<p>As a whole, Astounding Stories is a good
+magazine. There are too many serials, however,
+but since other readers like them I
+won&rsquo;t complain.</p>
+<p>You have a fine array of Science Fiction
+authors. With such writers as Vincent, Meek,
+Hamilton, Starzl and Ernst, your magazine
+can&rsquo;t be anything but a success.</p>
+<p>The September layouts look good to me.
+I hope it is.&mdash;E. Anderson, 1765 Southern
+Blvd., New York, N.Y.</p>
+<h3><i>Thanks, Mr. Glasser</i></h3>
+<p>Dear Editor:</p>
+<p>Somewhat belatedly I am writing to commend
+you most heartily on the August issue
+of Astounding Stories, which I consider by
+far the finest number since the inception of
+the magazine last January. The authors
+whose work appeared in this issue are among
+the greatest modern writers of fantasy and
+scientific fiction. Leinster, Burks, Hamilton,
+Rousseau&mdash;what a brilliant galaxy! And
+Starzl, Vincent, Rich; all writers of note. If
+ever a magazine merited the designation &ldquo;all-star
+number,&rdquo; your August issue filled the
+bill.</p>
+<p>However, I am confident that even this
+superb achievement will be surpassed by
+some future edition of Astounding Stories,
+for each succeeding number to date has improved
+on the one before. And with a new
+Cummings novel in the offing, it seems the
+August issue, despite its excellence, will
+speedily be eclipsed.&mdash;Allen Glasser, 1510
+University Ave., New York, N.Y.</p>
+<h3><i>Are Our Covers Too &ldquo;Gaudy&rdquo;?</i></h3>
+<p>Dear Editor:</p>
+<p>This is the first time that I have ventured
+to air my views to any magazine, but as yours
+interests me greatly I hereby shed my reticence.</p>
+<p>I believe, of all magazine of your type, you
+have come nearest perfection. But there are
+just a few things that bother me, and, no
+doubt, others like me. In the first place, must
+you make your covers as lurid and as contradictory
+to good design as they are?
+Really, I blush when my newsdealer hands
+me the gaudy thing. People interested in
+science do not usually succumb to circus
+poster advertising.</p>
+<p>Then there are the stories. I realize that
+you must cater to all tastes, but some of
+them are very childish, slightly camouflaged
+fairy tales. Science Fiction can be written
+very convincingly, as is testified by the stories
+of H. G. Wells, Ray Cummings, Jules Verne,
+and others. These writers attain their effects
+by the proper use of the English language,
+without silly and obviously tacked-on romance,
+the use of known scientific facts elaborated
+sensibly and by not trying to make a
+novel out of a short story.</p>
+<p>The stimulation of the imagination from
+Science Fiction is most enjoyable and I shall
+continue to read your magazine even though
+my fault finding is not considered, for, as I
+said before, you certainly have come nearer
+my ideal than any of the others.&mdash;Hector D.
+Spear, 867 W. 181st St., The Tri-Sigma
+Fraternity, New York City.</p>
+<h3><i>Nossir&mdash;Our Astronomy Is O. K.</i></h3>
+<p>Dear Editor:</p>
+<p>I am taking advantage of your invitation to
+write to you. Since Astounding Stories is
+available you have given me a lot of pleasure,
+and I hope you may get a little pleasure out
+of reading this.</p>
+<p>First, I want to say that you&rsquo;re hitting the
+ball as far as I&rsquo;m concerned. I could hardly
+suggest an improvement.</p>
+<p>In the August issue I liked &ldquo;Planet of
+Dread,&rdquo; by R. F. Starzl, best. When that
+thing in the &ldquo;pipe&rdquo; grabbed me, I mean
+Gunga, wow! And it gave me a lot of satisfaction
+to see the Master in &ldquo;Murder Madness,&rdquo;
+by Murray Leinster, get it in the neck.
+&ldquo;Lord of Space&rdquo; was good, too. In fact all
+the stories were good. I have only read two
+or three I really did not like since you started.</p>
+<p>Say, I never heard of a planet named Inra.
+Don&rsquo;t you think your author ought to brush
+up on his astronomy? I also noticed some
+other authors are a little weak on astronomy;
+not that I&rsquo;m complaining. The stories are
+O. K. with me.&mdash;Harry Johnson, 237 E. 128th
+St., New York City.</p>
+<h3><i>Mr. Yetter Checks Up on Us</i></h3>
+<p>Dear Editor:</p>
+<p>As I am a constant reader of Astounding
+Stories I wish to say that though S. P. Meek
+is one of my favorite authors his story, &ldquo;Cold
+Light,&rdquo; was a little wrong when he called the
+&ldquo;Silver Range&rdquo; by the name of &ldquo;Stillwater
+Range.&rdquo; I also think it would have been better
+if he had had a car take Dr. Bird and
+Carnes out to the hills, became even in Fallon
+a burro is a strange sight.</p>
+<p>But Meek, Cummings, Burks and all the
+rest of our famous authors&rsquo; stories should be
+<span class='pagenum pncolor'><a id='page_424' name='page_424'></a>424</span>
+in the magazine often. If Verrill, Wells,
+Nathenson and Hamilton would also write,
+the magazine would be perfect.</p>
+<p>I like all the stories, though some seem to
+be copies, and others lack science.</p>
+<p>Here is for a long life for Astounding
+Stories!&mdash;Frank Yetter, 369 Railroad Ave.,
+Fallon, Nevada.</p>
+<h3>&ldquo;<i>Charm All Its Own</i>&rdquo;</h3>
+<p>Dear Editor:</p>
+<p>Let me congratulate you. I have just read
+&ldquo;The Planet of Dread,&rdquo; by R. F. Starzl, in
+your August issue of Astounding Stories.</p>
+<p>Real science, you know, is pretty rigidly
+limited, but super-science of the kind you
+seem to run has a freshness and charm all
+its own.</p>
+<p>I came upon your magazine quite by accident,
+and from now on no doubt will look
+for it as I stand before the racks of magazines,
+trying to decide upon something to
+read&mdash;Anton J. Sartori, 1330 W. 6th St., Los
+Angeles, Calif.</p>
+<h3><i>Inra <em>Could</em> Exist</i></h3>
+<p>Dear Editor:</p>
+<p>You will have to excuse this old telegraph
+office typewriter. It is all I have to express
+my appreciation to you for the tremendously
+interesting magazine you put out. I have
+only read the last three issues, but those are
+enough to convince me that Astounding Stories
+fills a long-felt want. I read all the
+others too, but from now on I&rsquo;m going to
+look over their offerings at the stand before
+I buy. They have to go some to come up
+to the standard set by you, especially in the
+August copy.</p>
+<p>That story, &ldquo;The Planet of Dread,&rdquo; was the
+most weird, exciting, thrilling, satisfying&mdash;in
+short, the most &ldquo;astounding&rdquo; story I have
+ever read. Nothing has seemed so real since
+I first read Wells&rsquo; stories. I liked the characters.
+Poor Gunga. I could just see him,
+trying to sacrifice the man he obviously worshipped
+to stop that horrible noise. The picture
+of Gunga on the cover was just exactly
+what I would expect the Martian to look
+like. You have a good artist. I liked Mark
+Forepaugh, too. He didn&rsquo;t lose his nerve for
+one minute&mdash;not Mark. Who says civilization
+is going down, when the future holds men
+like that?</p>
+<p>Next to &ldquo;The Planet of Dread&rdquo; I liked
+&ldquo;The Lord of Space.&rdquo; That was a vivid and
+well-drawn story, too. Those two, I think,
+were the outstanding stories for August. But
+I must not forget &ldquo;Murder Madness,&rdquo; the
+serial; it was thrilling and convincing. That&rsquo;s
+the only kick I have: so many stories sound
+thin. I don&rsquo;t believe them when I read them.
+I also want to mention &ldquo;The Forgotten
+Planet&rdquo; and &ldquo;From An Amber Block.&rdquo; Good,
+exciting, and you can believe them without
+too much strain.</p>
+<p>Oh, by the way, the author of &ldquo;The Planet
+of Dread&rdquo; made a mistake when he chose
+a mythical planet for his terrific adventures.
+Why not Venus or Mercury? If they have
+water the conditions on them would be similar
+to what he described for Inra. There
+ain&rsquo;t no such planet. But why expect
+perfection! I&rsquo;m satisfied.</p>
+<p>I wish you success. That&rsquo;s a late wish.
+You&rsquo;re a success already.&mdash;Tom P. Fitzgerald,
+Newcastle, Nebraska.</p>
+<h3><i>Thus Ended the Quest</i></h3>
+<p>Dear Editor:</p>
+<p>This is my first letter to your magazine,
+and right away I&rsquo;m asking for a pair of
+sequels. One of these is to &ldquo;The Moon Master,&rdquo;
+by Charles W. Diffin. These sad endings
+depress me greatly, but if I looked at
+the ending first to see whether or not it was
+sad it would ruin the story; and besides sad
+endings usually have good stories in front of
+them. The other sequel I want is to &ldquo;From
+The Ocean&rsquo;s Depths,&rdquo; by Sewell P. Wright,
+and its sequel &ldquo;Into The Ocean&rsquo;s Depths.&rdquo;</p>
+<p>In looking over my back copies of the magazine
+I find that I have not disliked a single
+story. Thus endeth my quest for a brickbat.</p>
+<p>Are you going to put out a quarterly?
+Both the other Science Fiction magazines
+that I get do so, and I observe that it gives
+opportunity for a story of full novel length
+all in one piece. Not that I object to serials,
+but I like once in a while to sit down to a
+long story without having to dig out three
+or four magazines. However, please continue
+the long serials, for what is life without the
+element of suspense?&mdash;Hugh M. Gilmore, 920
+N. Vista St., Hollywood, Cal.</p>
+<h3>&ldquo;<i>The Readers&rsquo; Corner</i>&rdquo;</h3>
+<p>All Readers are extended a sincere
+and cordial invitation to &ldquo;come over
+in &lsquo;The Readers&rsquo; Corner&rsquo;&rdquo; and join in
+our monthly discussion of stories,
+authors, scientific principles and possibilities&mdash;everything
+that&rsquo;s of common
+interest in connection with our
+Astounding Stories.</p>
+<p>Although from time to time the Editor
+may make a comment or so, this is
+a department primarily for <i>Readers</i>,
+and we want you to make full use of
+it. Likes, dislikes, criticisms, explanations,
+roses, brickbats, suggestions&mdash;everything&rsquo;s
+welcome here; so &ldquo;come
+over in &lsquo;The Readers&rsquo; Corner&rsquo;&rdquo; and discuss
+it with all of us!</p>
+<p class='ralign'><i>The Editor.</i></p>
+<hr class='pb' />
+<div class="trnote">
+<p><b>Transcriber Notes</b></p>
+<p>Typographical and hyphenation inconsistencies have been standardized.</p>
+<p>Otherwise, archaic and variable spelling is preserved, including &lsquo;obsidion&rsquo; and &lsquo;tyranosaur&rsquo;.</p>
+</div>
+
+<!-- generated by ppg.rb version: 3.14k -->
+<!-- timestamp: Wed Dec 16 20:18:44 -0500 2009 -->
+
+
+
+
+
+
+
+<pre>
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Astounding Stories of Super-Science,
+December 1930, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ASTOUNDING STORIES, DEC. 1930 ***
+
+***** This file should be named 30691-h.htm or 30691-h.zip *****
+This and all associated files of various formats will be found in:
+ https://www.gutenberg.org/3/0/6/9/30691/
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+</pre>
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+The Project Gutenberg EBook of Astounding Stories of Super-Science,
+December 1930, by Various
+
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and with
+almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or
+re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included
+with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org
+
+
+Title: Astounding Stories of Super-Science, December 1930
+
+Author: Various
+
+Release Date: December 17, 2009 [EBook #30691]
+
+Language: English
+
+Character set encoding: ASCII
+
+*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ASTOUNDING STORIES, DEC. 1930 ***
+
+
+
+
+Produced by Greg Weeks, Katherine Ward, and the Online
+Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net
+
+
+
+
+
+ASTOUNDING STORIES OF SUPER-SCIENCE
+
+
+_On Sale the First Thursday of Each Month_
+
+ W. M. CLAYTON, Publisher
+ HARRY BATES, Editor
+ DR. DOUGLAS M. DOLD, Consulting Editor
+
+The Clayton Standard on a Magazine Guarantees
+
+_That_ the stories therein are clean, interesting, vivid, by leading
+writers of the day and purchased under conditions approved by the
+Authors' League of America;
+
+_That_ such magazines are manufactured in Union shops by American
+workmen;
+
+_That_ each newsdealer and agent is insured a fair profit;
+
+_That_ an intelligent censorship guards their advertising pages.
+
+
+_The other Clayton magazines are_:
+
+ACE-HIGH MAGAZINE, RANCH ROMANCES, COWBOY STORIES, CLUES, FIVE NOVELS
+MONTHLY, ALL STAR DETECTIVE STORIES, RANGELAND LOVE STORY MAGAZINE,
+WESTERN ADVENTURES, and WESTERN LOVE STORIES.
+
+_More than Two Million Copies Required to Supply the Monthly Demand for
+Clayton Magazines._
+
+
+ VOL. IV, No. 3 CONTENTS DECEMBER, 1930
+
+ COVER DESIGN H. W. WESSOLOWSKI
+
+ _Painted in Oils from a Scene in "The Ape-Men of Xlotli."_
+
+ SLAVES OF THE DUST SOPHIE WENZEL ELLIS 295
+
+ _Fate's Retribution Was Adequate. There Emerged a Rat with a
+ Man's Head and Face._
+
+ THE PIRATE PLANET CHARLES W. DIFFIN 310
+
+ _It is War. Interplanetary War. And on Far-Distant Venus Two
+ Fighting Earthlings Stand Up Against a Whole Planet Run Amuck._
+ (Part Two of a Four-Part Novel.)
+
+ THE SEA TERROR CAPTAIN S. P. MEEK 336
+
+ _The Trail of Mystery Gold Leads Carnes and Dr. Bird to a
+ Tremendous Monster of the Deep._
+
+ GRAY DENIM HARL VINCENT 354
+
+ _The Blood of the Van Dorn's Ran in Karl's Veins. He Rode
+ the Skies Like an Avenging God._
+
+ THE APE-MEN OF XLOTLI DAVID R. SPARKS 370
+
+ _A Beautiful Face in the Depths of a Geyser--and Kirby Plunges
+ into a Desperate Mid-Earth Conflict with the Dreadful
+ Feathered Serpent._ (A Complete Novelette.)
+
+ THE READERS' CORNER ALL OF US 421
+
+ _A Meeting place for Readers of Astounding Stories._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ Single Copies, 20 Cents (In Canada, 25 Cents)
+ Yearly Subscription, $2.00
+
+Issued monthly by Readers' Guild, Inc., 80 Lafayette St., New York, N.Y.
+W. M. Clayton, President; Francis P. Pace, Secretary. Entered as
+second-class matter December 7, 1929, at the Post Office at New York.
+N.Y., under Act of March 3. 1879. Title registered as a Trade Mark in
+the U.S. Patent Office. Member Newsstand Group--Men's List. For
+advertising rates address E. R. Crow & Co., Inc., 25 Vanderbilt Ave.,
+New York; or 225 North Michigan Ave., Chicago.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Slaves of the Dust
+
+_By Sophie Wenzel Ellis_
+
+ Fate's retribution was adequate. There emerged a rat with a man's
+ head and face.
+
+ _It's a poor science that would hide from us the great, deep,
+ sacred infinitude of Nescience, whither we can never penetrate, on
+ which all science swims as mere superficial film._
+
+ --_Carlyle_.
+
+[Illustration: _Sir Basil showed his teeth in his ugly smile. "A creator
+is never merciful."_]
+
+
+The two _bataloes_ turned from the open waters of the lower Tapajos
+River into the _igarape_, the lily-smothered shallows that often mark an
+Indian settlement in the jungles of Brazil. One of the two half-breed
+rubber-gatherers suddenly stopped his _bataloe_ by thrusting a paddle
+against a giant clump of lilies. In a corruption of the Tupi dialect, he
+called over to the white man occupying the other frail craft.
+
+"We dare go no farther, master. The country of the Ungapuks is
+bewitched. It is too dangerous."
+
+Fearfully he stared over his shoulder toward a spot in the slimy water
+where a dim bulk moved, which was only an alligator hunting for his
+breakfast.
+
+Hale Oakham, as long and lanky and level-eyed as Charles Lindbergh, ran
+despairing fingers through his damp hair and groaned.
+
+"But how can I find this jungle village without a guide?"
+
+The _caboclo_ shrugged. "The village will find you. It is bewitched,
+master. But you will soon see the path through the _matto_."
+
+"Can't you stay by me until time to land? I don't like the looks of
+these alligators."
+
+"It is better for a white man to face an alligator than for a _caboclo_
+to face an Ungapuk. Once they used to kill and eat us for our strength.
+Now--" Again his shrug was eloquent.
+
+"Now?" Hale prompted impatiently.
+
+"The white god who put a spell on these one-time cannibals will bewitch
+us and make us wash and rejoice when it is time to die."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He shuddered and spat at a cayman that was lumbering away from his
+_bataloe._
+
+Hale Oakham laughed, a hearty boyish laugh for a rather learned young
+professor.
+
+"Is that all they do to you?" he asked.
+
+"No. All who enter this magic _matto_ die soon, rejoicing. Before the
+last breath comes, it is said their bodies turn into a handful of silver
+dust--poof!--like that." He snapped his dirty fingers. "Then the life
+that leaves them goes into rocks that walk."
+
+Hale sighed resignedly. There wasn't any use to argue.
+
+"Unload your _bataloe_," he ordered testily, "and get your filthy
+carcasses away."
+
+The half-breeds obeyed readily. As the departing _bataloe_ turned from
+the _igarape_ into the open water of the river, the young man repressed
+a sudden lifting of his scalp. He was in for it now!
+
+His long body sprawled out in the _bataloe_, he paddled about aimlessly
+for several minutes until he found an aisle through the jungle--the path
+that led to the jungle village which he was visiting in the name of
+science, and for a certain award.
+
+Before plunging into that waiting tangle where life and death carried on
+a visible, unceasing struggle, he hesitated. Instinctively he shrank
+from losing himself in that mad green world.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He had first heard of the Ungapuks at the convention of the Nescience
+Club in New York, that body of scientists, near-scientists and
+adventurers linked together for the purpose of awarding the yearly
+Woolman prizes for the most spectacular addition of empiric facts to
+various branches of science. One of the members of the club, an
+explorer, had told a wild yarn about a tribe of Brazilian Indians,
+headed by Sir Basil Addington, an English scientist, who was conducting
+secret experiments in biochemistry in his jungle laboratory. The
+explorer had said that the scientist, half-crazed by a powerful
+narcotic, had seemingly discovered some secret of life which enabled him
+to produce monsters in his laboratory and to change the physical
+characteristics of the Ungapuk Indians, who, in five years, had been
+transformed from cannibals into cultured men and women.
+
+And now Hale Oakham, hoping to win one of the Woolman prizes, was here
+in the country of the Ungapuks, entering the jungle path that lead to
+the unknown.
+
+Fifty feet from the _igarape_, the path curved sharply away from a giant
+tree. Hale approached the bend with his hand on his gun. Just before he
+reached it, he stopped suddenly to listen.
+
+A woman's voice had suddenly broken forth in a wild, incredibly sweet
+song. Hale stood entranced, drinking in the heady sounds that stirred
+his emotions like _masata_, the jungle intoxicant. The singer
+approached the bend in the path, while the young man waited eagerly.
+
+The first sight of her made him gasp. He had expected to see an Indian
+girl. No sane traveler would imagine a white woman in the Amazon jungle,
+with skin as amazingly pale as the great, fleshy victoria regia lilies
+in the _igarape_.
+
+When she saw Hale, she stopped instantly. With a quick, practiced twist,
+she reached for the bow flung across her shoulders and fitted a barbed
+arrow to the string.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She was a beautiful barbarian, standing quivering before him. In the
+thick dull gold braids hanging over her bare shoulders flamed two
+enormous scarlet flowers, no redder than her own lips pouted in alarm.
+There was a savage brevity to her clothing, which consisted only of a
+short skirt of rough native grass and breastplates of beaten gold, held
+in place by strings of colored seeds.
+
+The girl held out an imperious hand and, in perfect English, said:
+
+"Go back!"
+
+Hale drew his long body up to its slim height, folded his arms, and gave
+her his most winning smile. His insolence added to his wholesome good
+looks.
+
+"Why?" he exclaimed. "I've come a couple of thousand miles to call on
+you."
+
+He saw that the eyes which held his levelly were pure and limpid, and of
+an astonishing orchid-blue.
+
+"Who are you?" Her throaty, vibrant voice was a thing of the flesh,
+whipping Hale's senses to sudden madness.
+
+"I'm Hale Oakham," he said, a little tremulously, "a lone, would-be
+scientist knocking about the jungle. Won't you tell me your name?"
+
+She nodded gravely. "I am Ana. I, too, am white." Her rich voice was
+quietly proud. "Come; I'll see if Aimu will receive you."
+
+With surprising, childlike trust, she held out her little hand to him.
+The gesture was so delightfully natural that Hale, grinning boyishly,
+took her hand and held it as they walked down the jungle path.
+
+"Sing for me," he demanded abruptly. "Sing the song you sang just now."
+
+"That?" asked the girl, turning the virgin-blue fire of her eyes on him.
+"That was my death-song that I practice each day. Perhaps soon I shall
+be released from this." She passed her hands over her beautiful,
+half-clothed body.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hale's warm glance swept over her. "Do you want to die?"
+
+"Yes; don't you? But you do not, or you would not have retreated from my
+poisoned arrow."
+
+"No, Ana; I want to live."
+
+"To live--and be a slave of _this_?" Again her hand went over her slim
+body. "A slave of a pile of flesh that you must feed and protect from
+the agonies that attack it on every side? Bah! But I am hoping that my
+turn will come next."
+
+"Your turn for what, Ana?"
+
+"To enter the Room of Release. Perhaps, if Aimu approves of you, you,
+too, may taste of death." Her gentle smile was beatific.
+
+"Do you speak of Sir Basil Addington?"
+
+"He was called that once, before he came to us. Now he has no name. We
+can find none holy enough for him; and so we call him Aimu, which means
+good friend." Her beautiful face was sweet with reverence.
+
+And now, in the distance, Hale saw that the path led into a large
+clearing. He slowed his pace, for he wanted to know this lovely girl
+better before he joined the Ungapuks.
+
+"Who are you, Ana?" he asked suddenly, bending closer to the crinkled,
+dull-gold hair.
+
+"I am Ana, a white woman." She looked at him frankly.
+
+"But who are your parents, and how did you get among the Ungapuks?"
+
+Ana's red lips curved into a dewy smile. "I thought all white men were
+wise, like Aimu. But you are stupid. How do you think a white woman
+could appear in a tribe of Indians who live in the jungle, many weeks'
+journey from what you call civilization?"
+
+Hale looked a little blank and more than a little disconcerted.
+
+"I suppose I am stupid," he said dryly. "But tell me, Ana, how did you
+get here?"
+
+"Why," she exclaimed, "he made me!"
+
+"Made you? Good Lord! What do you mean?"
+
+"Just what I said, Hale Oakham. If he can take a few grains of dust and
+make a shoot that will grow into a giant tree like yonder monster
+itauba, don't you think he can create a small white girl like me?" Her
+orchid-blue eyes glowed innocently into his.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The eager questions that he would have asked froze upon his lips, for a
+party of Indians approached.
+
+The six nearly naked red men came close and surveyed him, toying
+nervously with their primitive, feather-decorated weapons.
+
+A tall, handsome young fellow who possessed something of the picturesque
+perfection of the North American plains' Indian stepped forward and, in
+perfect English, said:
+
+"Good morning, white stranger. What is it you wish of the Ungapuks?"
+
+"I came to see your white _cacique_," said Hale.
+
+"Aimu? What is it you wish of Aimu? He is ours, white stranger."
+
+"Yes, he is yours. I come as a friend, perhaps to help him in his great
+work."
+
+"Perhaps!" The young Indian folded his bronze, muscular arms over his
+broad chest and continued his cool survey of Hale. "White men before you
+have come: spies and thieves. Some we poisoned with curari. Others Aimu
+took into the Room of Release."
+
+He turned to Ana, who was still standing by Hale, and his expression
+softened.
+
+"What shall we do with him, Ana?" he asked the question, a fleeting look
+of hunger swept his fine, flashing eyes.
+
+Ana flushed beautifully, and, moving closer to Hale, with an impulsive,
+almost childish gesture, slipped her arm through his.
+
+"Let us take him to our village, Unani Assu!" she suggested. "I like
+him."
+
+It was Hale's turn to flush, which he did like a schoolboy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Unani Assu's brows drew together in a scowl. The hand holding his
+blow-pipe jerked convulsively.
+
+"Ana! Come away!" he growled. "You mustn't touch a stranger!"
+
+Ana's blue eyes stretched with astonishment. "But I like to touch him,
+Unani Assu!"
+
+The tall Indian, with a half comical gesture of despair, said:
+
+"Don't misunderstand her, stranger. She is young, very young, ah! And
+she has known only the reborn men of the Ungapuks."
+
+He stepped firmly over to Ana, and, taking the girl by the arm, drew her
+away.
+
+"Run ahead," he commanded, "and tell Aimu that we come."
+
+Ana, her feathered bamboo anklets clicking together, sped away.
+
+Unani Assu bowed courteously to Hale.
+
+"Come, stranger. If you are an enemy, it is you who must fear." He
+motioned for him to proceed down the jungle path.
+
+The path ended at a clearing studded with _moloccas_, the Indian grass
+huts made of plaited straw. Altogether the scene was peaceful and sane
+and far removed from the strange tales that Hale had heard concerning
+the Ungapuks.
+
+Hale was conducted to a long, low stone building, where, in the
+doorway, stood a tall and emaciated white man.
+
+"Aimu!" said the Indians reverently, and bowed themselves.
+
+Over the bare, brown backs, the white man looked at Hale.
+
+"Sir Basil Addington?" asked the young man.
+
+"Yes. You are welcome. Come in."
+
+Hale entered the building.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He was in a book-filled study, furnished with hand-made chairs and a
+desk. Sir Basil asked him to be seated. He offered the young man long,
+brown native cigarettes and a very good drink made from yucca.
+
+After several minutes of conversation, Sir Basil suddenly changed his
+manner.
+
+"And now," he shot out, eyeing the young man through narrowed lids,
+"will you please state the purpose of this visit?"
+
+Hale looked squarely at his questioner. "Frankly, Sir Basil, I have
+called on you because I am so intensely interested in your work among
+the Ungapuks that I wish to offer my services."
+
+He gave in detail his family history, his education, and his experience
+as a teacher and a scientist.
+
+Sir Basil tapped his teeth thoughtfully with a pencil.
+
+"But why do you think you can be of assistance to me?"
+
+"That, of course, is for you to decide."
+
+Hale thought that the scientist looked like a huge, starved crow in his
+loose-fitting coat. He was so fleshless that, when the light fell
+strongly on his face as it now did, the bones of his head and hands
+showed through the skin with horrible clearness.
+
+Hale, under Sir Basil's scrutiny, decided instantly that he did not like
+him.
+
+"I need a helper," the scientist went on, with the air of talking to
+himself. "A white assistant who neither loves nor fears me. Unani Assu
+is good enough in his way, but I need a helper who has had technical
+training." Suddenly he wheeled on Hale and asked sharply, "How are your
+nerves, young man?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hale started, but managed to answer calmly. "Excellent. My war record
+isn't half bad, and that was surely backed with good nerves."
+
+"And you say you have no close relatives, no ties of any sort to
+interfere with work that is dangerous--and something else?"
+
+"Not a soul would care if I passed out to-day, Sir Basil."
+
+"Good! And now tell me this: are you one of those scientists whose minds
+are so mechanical, so mathematically made, as it were, that your entire
+outlook on science is based on old, established beliefs, or do you
+belong to that rare but modern type of trained thinker and dreamer who
+refuse to permit yesterday's convictions to influence to-day's
+visions?"
+
+Hale smiled quietly. "I recently lost my chair in a famous university
+because of my so-called unscientific teachings regarding ether-drift."
+
+Expressing himself in purely scientific terms, he went into an
+elaboration of his revolutionary theory. When he had finished, Sir Basil
+reached out his clawlike hand to him.
+
+"Good!" he approved. "You have dared to think originally. Now listen to
+my theory of mind-electrons which has grown into the established fact
+that I have discovered the secret of life and death."
+
+The long, thin hands reached into a pocket for a box of pills. He
+swallowed one greedily, and immediately his emaciated face seemed
+charged with new virility.
+
+He spoke out suddenly. "Our world, you know, is made up of three powers:
+matter, energy and what you call life. I might really say that there are
+but two powers, for matter, in its last analysis, is a form of energy.
+And what is life? You can't call it a form of energy, for every
+inorganic atom has energy without having life. Life, Mr. Oakham, is
+mind or consciousness."
+
+He began pacing the floor restlessly. "Everything that lives has this
+consciousness, and I say this in defiance of some fixed scientific
+views. The amoeba in a stagnant pool, a thallophyte on a bit of old
+bread, any of the myriads of trees and plants that you see in the jungle
+all have consciousness as well as you. And why?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He brought his fist down upon the table. "Because they issue from the
+same source as you and I, the almighty mind, eternal, indestructible,
+which has permitted itself to be enslaved by matter. You are Hale
+Oakham. I am Basil Addington, yet we are one and the same. Let me
+illustrate."
+
+He seized a glass and poured it full of _masata_. "Look! Two portions of
+_masata_. But I pour what is in the glass back into the bottle. The
+molecules cohere and the two portions become one again. Some day you and
+I--our individual consciousnesses--will flow back to the Whole. That
+sounds mystical, but listen.
+
+"We scientists hold that the electron explains nearly all the physical
+and chemical phenomena. I go further and say that it explains _all_.
+Matter, electricity, light, heat, magnetism--all can be reduced to the
+ultimate unit. So, Mr. Oakham, I am going to make clear to you how life
+itself is electronic."
+
+His long finger touched Hale's arm. "You, I, yonder mosquito on your
+sleeve, even one of the germs that is causing my malaria, all being
+individual living things, are the ultimate units of what I shall
+personify as the Mind. When I say _you_ I do not speak of that mound of
+flesh in which you exist, and which can be reduced to the same familiar
+basic elements and compounds as make up inorganic structures; I speak of
+your mind, your consciousness--for that is the real you. Are you
+following me?"
+
+"Perfectly, Sir Basil." Hale reached for another drink. "But do you
+mean to say that you and I are no more than a mosquito, a malaria
+protozoan, or even one of those trees in the jungle?"
+
+Sir Basil's dry skin slipped back into a long smile. "Startling,
+isn't it? You, I, and all other living organisms are nothing but
+matter, energy and consciousness. You and I have a larger share of
+consciousness, because our organic structure permits the mind-electrons
+greater freedom over the matter than composes our bodies. We are more
+acutely aware of the universe about us, have a greater facility for
+enjoyment and suffering, a more intricate brain and nervous system.
+Yet when our bodies die and our consciousness is released, the
+mind-electrons enslaved by our atoms go back to the elemental Whole.
+This holds good for the protozoan, the tree, the man--for all things
+that live."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hale was drinking again. "You mean, Sir Basil, that there is a sort of
+war waged against what you personify as the Mind by matter; that matter
+is constantly seeking to enslave mind-electrons, so that it may become
+an organism which, for awhile, may enjoy what we call life?"
+
+Sir Basil pushed back his tufted hair and looked happy. "Yes! And it's
+Nature's supreme blunder! In the end, the Mind always conquers and gains
+its release, yet the eternal chain of enslavement goes on and on, and
+will continue to go on as long as there is a living organism in the
+world to bind mind to matter."
+
+Hale was excited now, as much from the fiery intoxicant as from the
+scientist's weird revelation. "I get you," he said, rather inelegantly
+for a professor. "You mean that if every living thing in the world
+should pass out, every man, every plant, every animal, even down to
+microscopic infusoria, the Mind would collect all its electrons, and
+through some more jealous law of, er, cohesion hold these electrons
+inviolate from matter and energy?"
+
+"Right! And again, as in the beginning, the Mind would rule supreme. By
+what I have proved, you and I and all other creatures that now have life
+may, as separate unfleshed electrons, enjoy eternal consciousness as a
+part of the Mind." A new passion leaped to his dark eyes. "When I have
+finished my mission, no more need we be slaves of the dust, subject to
+all the frightful sufferings of this dunghill of flesh."
+
+He brought his fist down upon his skinny leg with a resounding blow.
+
+"But you cannot reduce your theory to fact, Sir Basil!"
+
+"No?" Again came that frightful grin to his cadaverous face. "Can you
+withstand shock?"
+
+"If you mean shock to the eye, let me remind you that I served two years
+in the big fight."
+
+"Then come to my laboratory. Better take another drink."
+
+While Hale helped himself again from the _masata_ bottle, Sir Basil
+swallowed another pellet.
+
+Then the two went into the adjoining apartment.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sir Basil, his hand over the doorknob, paused.
+
+"Before we go in," he said, "I want you to remember that we call natural
+that which is characteristic of the physical world. Everything alive in
+this laboratory was produced by nature. I merely made available the
+materials, or, rather, I made the conditions under which matter was able
+to enslave mind-electrons."
+
+He opened the door, slipped his body through, and, with his ugly,
+teeth-revealing grin, gestured for Hale to follow him.
+
+Hale steeled himself and looked around half fearfully. The first glance
+took in a large and well-equipped laboratory, somewhat fetid with animal
+odors. The second lingered here and there on cages, aquariums,
+incubators, and other containers where creatures moved.
+
+Suddenly, as something scuttled across the floor and disappeared into a
+hole in the wall, Hale cried out and covered his eyes with a hand.
+
+Sir Basil laughed aloud. "Why didn't you examine it closer?"
+
+Hale looked nauseated. "My God, Sir Basil! A rat with a man's head and
+face!"
+
+Sir Basil's voice was sharp, decisive. "Before you leave this
+laboratory, you're going to come out of your foolish belief that man is
+a creature apart from other living organisms. You--the conscious you--is
+no greater, no more important in the final balance than the spark of
+consciousness in that rat. When your body and the rat's body give up
+their atoms to nature's laboratory, the little enslaved mind-electron
+that is you and the one that is the rat will be identical."
+
+Again Hale shivered and turned away from that cold, too-thin face.
+
+The scientist was speaking. "Step around to all those cages and pens. I
+want you to see all my slaves of the dust."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But long before Hale had encircled the room, he was so disturbed at what
+he saw that he could scarcely complete his frightful inspection. In
+every enclosure he viewed a monstrosity that in some way resembled a
+human. Every reptile, every insect, every queer, misshapen animal not
+only looked human in some shocking manner, but also seemed to possess
+human characteristics. It seemed as though some demented creator with a
+perverted sense of humor had attempted to mock man by calling forth
+monsters in his image.
+
+At last the young man cried out: "How did you breed these freaks?"
+
+"They are not freaks, and I did not breed them. They are nature's
+parentless products whose basic elements were brought together in
+this laboratory, and, by a scientific reproduction of the functions
+of creation, endowed with the life principle, which is merely
+mind-electrons." He smoothed his long tuft of hair nervously. "Would
+you like to see how life springs from a wedding of matter, energy,
+and consciousness?"
+
+"I suspect I can stand anything now," Hale admitted.
+
+"Then come and peep into a very remarkable group of apparatus I have
+developed, where you can watch atoms building molecules and molecules
+building living organisms."
+
+"You say I can see atoms?"
+
+"Not directly, of course. The light waves will forever prevent us from
+actually seeing the atom. But I have perfected a system of photography
+which magnifies particles smaller than light waves, and, separating
+their images from the light waves, renders detail clear in the moving
+pictures."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He went to a huge machine or series of machines which took up all the
+center floor space of the laboratory, where he busied himself in an
+intricate network of wires, mirrors, electrodes, ray projectors, and
+traveling metal compartments. Presently he called out to Hale.
+
+"Let me remind you, Oakham, that while any scientist can break up any of
+the various proteid molecules which are the basis of all living cells,
+animal and vegetable, no scientist before me has been able to compound
+the atoms and build them into a proteid molecule."
+
+He bared his teeth in the smile that Hale hated.
+
+"I am proud to tell you that the proteid molecule can be built up only
+when the third element of nature's trinity is added--the mind-electron.
+I have found a means of capturing the mind-electron and of bringing it
+in contact with proteid elements. And now it is possible to bring forth
+life in the laboratory. Come closer and watch proteid forming
+protoplasm, protoplasm forming a cell, and the cell evolving into--well,
+what do you want, an animal, plant, or an insect?"
+
+Hale had fallen under the scientist's spell. He did not feel foolish
+when he said:
+
+"Let's have a rat!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hale became so absorbed in the wonders of the laboratory that when lunch
+time came, Sir Basil had food brought to them. While they were eating a
+very good vegetable stew, farina, and luscious tropical fruits, a
+sudden, agonized scream rang out, followed by other screams and wails.
+
+Sir Basil opened the door and looked out. Ana came running forward. Her
+blue eyes were flooded with tears.
+
+"Oh, Aimu!" she moaned. "A tree fell on Unani Assu."
+
+She buried her beautiful face in her hands and sobbed aloud.
+
+Sir Basil frowned heavily.
+
+"I can't lose Unani Assu yet," he declared. "He is a wonderful help
+around the laboratory. Is he dead?"
+
+"No. We should rejoice if his time of release had come. But his legs,
+Aimu! No one wants to suffer and be crippled."
+
+Even in her distress, the girl's voice was rich and vibrant, and every
+tone moved Hale curiously.
+
+"Hurry!" cried the scientist. "Have them bring him here before he
+dies."
+
+The girl leaped to her feet and sped away.
+
+"Come, Oakham," continued Sir Basil. "Here is a rare opportunity for you
+to see how completely I have mastered the laws that govern organic
+matter. Help me prepare."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For several minutes, Hale worked under the scientist's sharply spoken
+directions. By the time the injured man was brought to the laboratory,
+Sir Basil was ready for him.
+
+Unani Assu was still conscious, but his pale face indicated that he had
+lost much blood. When the improvised stretcher was lowered to the floor,
+Sir Basil sent all the Indians away.
+
+Unani Assu opened his eyes and called feebly, "Ana!"
+
+"Be still!" ordered Sir Basil. "Ana is not here."
+
+"Please!" gasped the dying man. "I want her--my Ana!"
+
+Sir Basil sucked in his breath sharply. "What's this? Have you been
+making love to Ana again, after my warning to you?"
+
+The sufferer stirred uneasily. "No!" he panted. "But perhaps my hour of
+release has come, and I want to look at her--once more."
+
+The scientist smiled unpleasantly as he eyed the magnificent body which
+looked like a broken statue in bronze.
+
+"Some human characteristics are strange," he muttered. "In spite of
+everything I do, this fellow continues to love Ana: Ana whom I intend
+for myself."
+
+He stepped to the apparatus and swiftly changed one of the adjustments.
+
+"Perhaps," he resumed, with a gleam in his eyes that chilled Hale, "this
+will forever cure him."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In another moment, the still, half-dead body was lifted and gently
+slipped into a compartment.
+
+Before Hale's horrified gaze fastened on the eye-piece which revealed
+moving pictures of every process that went on within, Unani Assu's body
+was reduced almost instantly to a fine, silvery dust.
+
+"Good God!" he cried. "You have killed him."
+
+The scientist's teeth showed in his wide smile. "Think so? Does a woman
+destroy a dress when she rips it up to make it over?"
+
+"Do you mean me to understand that you can reduce a living body to its
+basic elements and then rebuild these elements into a remade man?"
+
+"Watch!" warned the scientist.
+
+Hale looked again and saw the silver dust that was once a living body
+being whirled into a tiny, grublike thing. He saw the grub expand into
+an embryo, and the embryo develop into a foetus. From now on the
+development was slower, and he often stopped to talk with Sir Basil.
+
+Once he asked: "If this man had died naturally, could you have brought
+him back to life?"
+
+Sir Basil shook his head. "No. When once the mind-electron is completely
+freed from its enslavement by matter, it is forever beyond recall by the
+body it has just vacated. Like atomic electrons, whose equilibrium
+disturbed break away from their planetary system and go dashing off into
+space, only to be drawn into another planetary system, the mind-electron
+may be enslaved almost immediately by extraneous matter. Had Unani Assu
+died, his liberated mind-electron might at once have been captured by a
+jungle flower going to seed. Immediately a new seed would be started.
+And now the former Unani Assu would be a seed of a jungle flower, later
+to find new life as a plant."
+
+Suddenly the scientist threw up his hand and cried: "You see? The Mind
+will be eternally enslaved as long as there is life! Oh, for the time of
+deliverance!" He gazed fanatically into space, as though he dreamed
+magnificently.
+
+Hale observed him thoughtfully. When that great brain weakened, the
+consequences would be frightful.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sir Basil, as though he had made a sudden decision, went over to that
+part of his machine which he called the molecule-disintegrator.
+
+"Oakham!" he called out. "I have taken you partly into my confidence.
+Now I want to show you something. Come here."
+
+Hale obeyed with misgivings. The scientist pointed out the window to a
+group of Indians, anxious relatives of Unani Assu.
+
+"Watch!" he ordered.
+
+Turning one of the projectors on the machine toward the window, he
+sighted carefully and pressed a button.
+
+Immediately one of the Indians fell to the ground and struggled. His
+companions began dancing around him in evident joy. Faintly to the
+laboratory came a familiar chant, which Hale recognized as Ana's death
+song.
+
+ Dust to dust
+ Mind to Mind--
+ He will shed his body
+ As the green snake sheds his skin.
+
+As Hale watched, the struggling Indian's body seemed to shrink, and
+then, instantly, it disappeared.
+
+"Watch them scatter the dust!" said the scientist.
+
+One of the Indians stooped and blew upon the grass.
+
+"What have you done!" Hale gasped. "You've killed this one. Oh, I see
+now! These poor devils are totally ignorant that you are killing them
+for practice. They worship you while you turn them to--silver dust!" He
+turned angrily on the scientist as though he longed to strike him.
+
+"Keep cool, young man!" Sir Basil held up his fleshless hand. "There is
+no death! Change, yes; but no permanent blotting out of consciousness.
+Can't you see the horror of it as nature works? When your time for
+release comes, as it inevitably will, your mind-electron might find new
+enslavement in a worm!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hale's reply came hotly. "If that is true, why do you murder these poor
+devils deliberately!"
+
+"My dear Oakham, perhaps you are not so brilliant as I had hoped! All
+that I have done thus far is only child's play, in preparation for my
+real work. Haven't you guessed by now what I am getting ready to do?"
+
+"No; I'm a poor guesser."
+
+The scientist made a gesture of mock despair. "Then let me tell you. The
+molecule-disintegrator is active only on organic structures. When I
+concentrate it so"--he reached out again, sighted the projector on some
+point beyond the window and pressed a button--"one single living
+organism passes out. See that jupati tree by the rock disappear?"
+
+Before Hale's eyes, the tall, slender tree melted into air.
+
+"But," continued Sir Basil, "if I should _broadcast_ my
+molecule-disintegrator on electron magnetic waves, destruction would
+pass out in all directions, following the curve of the earth's surface,
+penetrating earth, air, water." He wet his lips carefully. "You
+understand?"
+
+Hale stiffened suddenly. "I understand. No life could survive these
+vibrations of destruction? Through every corner of the earth where life
+lurks, they would reach?"
+
+"Yes!" cried Sir Basil. "There would be not a blade of grass, not a
+living spore, not a hidden egg! Think of it, Oakham! No more would the
+clean air and the sweet earth reek with life, and at last the ultimate
+mind-electron would be released forever."
+
+He was breathing fast, and his emaciated face burned with two red
+spots.
+
+Hale thought rapidly. He was convinced now that the fate of all life lay
+within that diabolical network of chemical apparatus.
+
+At last he said: "And what of you and I, Sir Basil? Shall we, too, be
+caught in this wholesale destruction?"
+
+"Not immediately," replied the scientist. "Of course, I want to
+remain in the flesh long enough to be sure that my purpose has been
+accomplished. I have provided a way for my own safety. If you desire,
+you may remain with me." He smiled craftily. "I have planned to keep
+Ana also, the woman whom I called into life and made as I wished."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+His words pounded against Hale's tortured ears with almost physical
+force. With a supreme effort, the young man controlled his rage and
+despair. Ana needed him too much now for him to risk defeat by showing
+his emotions.
+
+To Sir Basil he said: "But if all life disappears from the earth, what
+shall we do for food--you, Ana, and I?"
+
+Sir Basil lifted his brows. "You don't think I overlooked that, do you?
+What is food? Various combinations of the basic elements. I who have
+conquered the atom need never worry about starving to death."
+
+All this time, the machinery had been humming, and now the humming
+changed its note to a shrill whistle. Sir Basil went to the eye-piece
+and looked into it. Opening a door in the machinery, he disappeared
+inside. He came out soon, flushed and evidently elated.
+
+"Bring the stretcher, Oakham," he ordered.
+
+Hale brought the stretcher, placing it close to the machine. Then Sir
+Basil opened a metal door and gently eased out a human body.
+
+It was Unani Assu, unconscious but alive and breathing. Hale, helping
+the scientist to get the man on the stretcher, noticed that the crushed
+legs were perfectly healed. Together they bore him to a long seat. The
+Indian's eyes were still closed, but his even breathing indicated that
+he was only sleeping.
+
+Suddenly Hale pointed a finger and cried out. "My God, Sir Basil, look
+at his hands and feet!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Unani Assu, still lying like a recumbent bronze statue sculptured by a
+master, was perfect from shoulder to wrist, from thigh to ankle. But,
+somewhere in that diabolical machine through which he had passed, his
+hands and feet had undergone a hideous metamorphism which had
+transformed them from the well-formed extremities of a splendid young
+Indian into the hairy paws of a giant rat!
+
+Hale turned away his head, sick with disgust.
+
+Sir Basil cut the silence triumphantly:
+
+"Now he'll never again face Ana with love in his eyes!"
+
+"What!" broke in Hale. "Did you plan this monstrous thing?"
+
+"Of course! I told you I should forever cure him of his mad
+infatuation."
+
+"But why didn't you kill him, as you killed the others? It would have
+been the most merciful way."
+
+Sir Basil showed his teeth in his ugly smile. "A creator is never
+merciful."
+
+A quiver passed through the Indian's body and presently, he sighed
+deeply and opened his eyes. He seemed dazed, puzzled. He looked from
+Hale to the scientist, and turned seeking eyes to other parts of the
+laboratory.
+
+"Ana!" he called weakly. "Where is Ana?"
+
+He pulled himself a little unsteadily to his feet--to the spatulated,
+hairy _rodent_ feet that had come out of the life-machine. Staggering,
+he would have fallen, had he not thrown out his arm to steady himself.
+Instinctively he tried to grasp something for support, and then, for the
+first time, he discovered his deformity.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hale was never to forget that expression of horror and disgust that
+swept over the Indian's face as he spread open his revolting extremities
+and stared at them.
+
+A sudden, wild roar of despair rang through the room. "Aimu! My hands!"
+
+The scientist smiled with evident amusement. "You are a grotesque sight,
+Unani Assu. Do you want to see Ana now?"
+
+The fright and horror faded from the Indian's face, for now he glared
+with hate into the mad, mocking eyes.
+
+"You did it!" the Indian ground out. "You've made me into a thing from
+which Ana will run screaming."
+
+Through the quiet rage of the perfectly spoken English ran a thread of
+sorrow. "Aimu, whom we considered too holy to name!"
+
+Choking, he hobbled away to the door, which he unbolted. As he passed
+out into the open, Sir Basil went over to the machine and began sighting
+the projector which cast forth the ray of destruction.
+
+"No!" cried Hale. "You've done enough murder for to-day."
+
+The scientist paused. "I was trying to be merciful. And then, I wonder
+if it is safe to let him go, hating me? Oh, well!" He shrugged his
+narrow shoulders. "I seldom leave the laboratory, and certainly nothing
+can harm me here." He touched the death-projector significantly.
+
+Hale made a mental decision. "I must find out how the damned thing works
+and put it out of commission."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+With this determination uppermost in his mind, he assumed a more intense
+interest in the strange laboratory. For the next two days, he assisted
+Sir Basil so assiduously that he learned much about the operation of the
+life-machine. And gradually he stopped being horrified as the
+fascination of producing life in the laboratory grew upon him.
+
+After he had assisted the scientist in building living organisms from
+basic elements, he ceased to cringe when he remembered that perhaps it
+was true that Ana was created in the mysterious life-machine.
+
+Once the scientist declared, "She is untainted with inheritance. She is
+the perfect mate that I called into life so that before I pass from the
+flesh I may taste that one human emotion I've never experienced--love."
+
+That very night Hale kept a secret tryst with Ana after the village
+slept. Sweet, virginal Ana, who knew less of the world than a civilized
+child of twelve--what a sensation she would create in New York with her
+beauty, her culture, her natural fascination! With her in his arms and
+an orange tropical moon hanging low in the hot, black sky, he ceased to
+care that she had no ancestors, for now his one passionate desire was to
+save her from Sir Basil and to hold her forever for himself.
+
+He might have been content to go on like this for months, tampering with
+creation in the day time, courting Ana in secret at night, had not Unani
+Assu come back for revenge.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On the fourth night after Unani Assu had disappeared into the jungle,
+Hale went to the _igarape_ to meet Ana. He had gone only half the
+distance when he encountered her, running frantically up the path toward
+him.
+
+"Hale!" she gasped, falling into his opened arms, where she lay panting
+and exhausted.
+
+Hale gently patted the long braids, shimmering in silver tangles under
+the moonlight, and, crushing the soft little trembling body close, he
+murmured:
+
+"What's the matter, darling?"
+
+She dug her face deeper into the bend of his arm. "Oh, Hale! I saw Unani
+Assu a few minutes ago." For several moments she was unable to go on,
+for sudden sobs cut off her breath. "It's terrible, Hale, what Aimu did
+to his hands and feet, but what Unani's going to do to Aimu is still
+more terrible."
+
+Hale placed his hand gently under her chin and tilted up her small,
+pale, tear-drenched face.
+
+"Be calm, Ana, and tell me plainly."
+
+Still clinging to him, she went on. "He told me that Aimu is a devil,
+Hale. He showed me his hands and asked me if I could ever get used to
+them and be--his squaw." The round gold breastplates and the necklace of
+painted seeds clinked together over her panting bosom. "I told him about
+you, Hale. And then he seemed to go mad. He said he'd kill Aimu
+to-night."
+
+"But, Ana! Why did he let you go, knowing that you would give the
+alarm?"
+
+"He didn't let me go." Her petaled lips parted in a faint smile. "I
+escaped. Unani Assu tied me to a tree by the _igarape_. Because he
+doesn't ... hate me, he could not bear to tie me too tightly."
+
+"Then he must be close to the laboratory now. If he breaks in upon
+Aimu--oh, my God!"
+
+Hale remembered the death-projector. If Sir Basil were in danger of
+attack, he would not hesitate to touch the waiting button that would
+broadcast death throughout the world.
+
+He seized Ana's little hand and cried out: "Run, Ana! The only safe
+place now is Aimu's laboratory. Run!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As they dashed on madly, Hale opened wide his nostrils to scent the
+heavy, flower-laden air of the jungle. Any moment all this sweet, rich
+life might vanish instantly. He had a horrible vision of a world devoid
+of life, a world of bare rocks, dry sand, odorless, dead waters. For it
+was life that greened the landscape, roughened the stones with moss and
+lichen, thickened the ocean with ooze, and turned the dry sand into
+loam--life that swarmed underfoot, overhead, all around!
+
+And now, just as they reached the laboratory door, panting and frantic,
+a hoarse shriek broke forth. Dragging Ana after him, Hale dashed
+forward, conscious of two masculine voices raised in passion.
+
+The door to the room where the life-machine performed its vile work was
+locked. Hale pounded against it and called out to Sir Basil, but only
+curses and the sound of tumbling bodies came from beyond the door.
+Although originally the door had been thick and strong, the destructive
+forces of the tropics had pitted and rotted the wood. A few blows of
+Hale's shoulder broke it down.
+
+Under the brilliant electric light, Sir Basil and Unani Assu were
+fighting upon the blood-spattered floor. The struggle was uneven: the
+scientist's emaciated body was no match for the splendid strength of the
+young Indian.
+
+"Help Aimu!" cried Ana, pushing Hale forward.
+
+Aimu was being choked to death.
+
+Hale acted fantastically but efficiently. Catching up a bottle of
+ammonia, he moistened a handkerchief and clapped it against Unani Assu's
+nose. Instantly the Indian choked, released Sir Basil, and fell back,
+gasping for breath.
+
+Hale thrust the handkerchief into his pocket.
+
+"Get out!" he ordered Unani Assu. "Quick!" He threatened him with the
+ammonia bottle.
+
+But Unani Assu was not looking at the bottle. "Aimu!" he screamed,
+pointing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When Hale saw and understood, he leaped across the room to plant his
+body in front of Ana; for Sir Basil was behind the life-machine,
+reaching for the controls of the ray projector.
+
+Suddenly, from behind Hale, a silver streak shot across the room. Sir
+Basil groaned and sank to the floor of the laboratory.
+
+A keen-bladed dissecting knife, thrown by Ana, stuck out from his left
+breast.
+
+Ana ran forward, sobbing wildly. "Oh, Aimu! I'm sorry! I didn't mean for
+it to strike you there. Only your hand, Aimu! I didn't want Hale to die,
+Aimu. I didn't--oh!"
+
+She was on her knees by the scientist's side, his head held in her
+slender arms.
+
+"He's breathing!" she rejoiced. "Some _masata_, Hale, quick!"
+
+Hale found a bottle of good brandy which he had contributed from his own
+supplies. Soon Sir Basil gasped and opened his eyes. He stared about him
+wildly, then gasped:
+
+"I'm dying, Hale Oakham! Quick, the life-machine, before my mind-electron
+escapes."
+
+He tried to pull his body up, but fell back, weak and panting.
+
+Hale hesitated, looking doubtfully at Ana.
+
+"For God's sake, quick!" screamed Sir Basil. "I'm dying, I say! I must
+have--rebirth. Lift me to the disintegrator. Hurry!..." His voice
+trailed off faintly.
+
+"He is dying," snapped Hale. "We might as well try it." He jerked open
+the door to the disintegrator. "Here, Unani Assu! Lend a hand!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Instantly the Indian came forward, a peculiar, pleased expression on his
+handsome face. In a moment, Sir Basil's body was inside, and the machine
+began its weird humming, the humming that indicated the transformation
+of a human body into dust.
+
+"Now!" cried Unani Assu exultingly, going behind the machine. "I have
+helped him enough to understand that if one changes this--and this--and
+this"--he made some rapid adjustments on the machine--"something that is
+not pleasant will happen."
+
+"Stop!" cried Hale. "What did you change?"
+
+The Indian laughed mockingly. "Wouldn't you like to know? But, yet, you
+should not worry. You have no cause to love him, have you?"
+
+"I can't be a traitor, Unani Assu! Arrange the machine as it was
+originally, and I give you my word of honor than when Sir Basil comes
+out, I'll wreck the damned thing beyond repair. See, Unani Assu? You and
+I together will smash it."
+
+The Indian folded his arms so that the repulsive things that should have
+been hands were hidden.
+
+"It's too late now," he admitted, shaking his head. "Yet I've done no
+more to him than he did to me."
+
+Hale went to the eye-piece in the machine and started to look inside.
+Unani Assu stepped forward, tapped him on the shoulder, and, fingering
+significantly the dissecting knife which he had picked up, said:
+
+"I am operating the machine. Will you sit over there by Ana and wait? It
+won't be long. And, white stranger, remember this: I am your friend. I
+am turned against none but our common enemy." He pointed significantly
+to the machine.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Two hours passed, long, silent hours for the watchers in the laboratory.
+Ana fell asleep, in a sweet, childish bundle upon the piled cushions,
+her golden hair, still decorated with the red flowers which she always
+wore, crushed and withered now. Several times Hale caught Unani Assu
+gazing at her sadly, and his own look saddened when it rested on the
+Indian's strong, outraged body.
+
+The humming of the machine changed to a whistle. Placing his fingers on
+his lips in a signal of quiet, Unani Assu whispered:
+
+"Let Ana sleep. She mustn't see this."
+
+Opening a door in the machine, his handsome face lighted with a grim
+smile, he whispered exultingly:
+
+"Watch!"
+
+A scuttling sound issued forth and then, half drunkenly, an enormous rat
+tumbled out--one of those horrible rats with the hairless, humanlike
+faces that had so frequently come from the life-machine.
+
+Hale could not crush back the cry that issued from his throat.
+
+"Where is Sir Basil?" he gasped.
+
+"There!" cried the Indian, pointing to the kicking rat, which was fast
+gaining strength.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hale staggered back. "No! You don't mean it, do you?"
+
+Unani Assu turned the rat over with a contemptuous toe. "Yes, I mean it.
+Behold Aimu, the man who thought himself creator and destroyer--the man
+who said that a human being was no higher than a rat! Perhaps he was
+right, for see this thing that was once a man!"
+
+Hale buried his face in his hands. "Kill it, Unani Assu! Kill it!"
+
+Unani Assu's low laugh was metallic. "You kill it."
+
+Hale uncovered his face. "Open the disintegrator." Gingerly he reached
+for the rat's tail.
+
+But his hand never touched the animal. The hairless face turned for a
+second, and the little, beady eyes blinked up at Hale with an expression
+that his fevered imagination thought almost human. Then, like a dark
+shadow, the rat dashed away. Once around the room it scampered, hunting
+for an exit. Hale started in pursuit. He was almost upon the animal
+again, when, leaping up from his grasp, it landed on a low shelf where
+chemicals were stored. Several bottles fell, filling the room with
+fumes.
+
+Another bottle fell, and, suddenly, amid a thunderous roar, the ceiling
+and walls began falling. Some highly explosive chemical had been stored
+in one of the bottles.
+
+Hale was thrown violently against the couch. His hand touched Ana's
+body. One last shred of consciousness enabled him to pick her up and
+drag her out. In the open, he fell, aware, before blackness descended,
+that flames leaped high over the laboratory building and that Unani Assu
+lay dead within.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Hale and Ana, leaning over the deck-rail of a small steam launch, gazed
+into the dark waters of the Amazon.
+
+"We ought to reach Para by morning," said Hale, "and then, dearest,
+we're off for New York!"
+
+Ana, wearing one of the first civilized dresses she had ever donned, and
+looking as smart as any debutante, slipped her little hand into her
+husband's.
+
+"Isn't it a shame, Hale," she moaned, "that the fire burned all the
+animals and insects, the machinery, and even your notes?" Her beautiful
+face saddened. "Just one or two specimens might have been proof enough
+for your What-You-Call-It Club!"
+
+"The Nescience Club, darling. No, I can't expect to win the Woolman
+prize, but I've won a prize worth far more." He squeezed her little hand
+and looked devotedly into her blue eyes. "And, Ana, I've reasoned out
+something concerning mind-electrons which even Sir Basil overlooked."
+
+"What is it, Hale?"
+
+"He maintained that matter seeks always to enslave mind-electrons, but I
+am convinced that mind-electrons seek to enslave matter. Understand?
+It's creation, Ana! Had Sir Basil succeeded in broadcasting death
+throughout the world, the freed mind-electrons, as in the beginning,
+would have started again to vitalize inorganic atoms. And, in a few
+million years, which is no time to the Mind, the world would be humming
+with a new civilization. Large thought, eh, sweetheart?"
+
+
+
+
+A SIGNAL TO THE MOON
+
+The idea of a radio signal to the moon may sound fantastic, but is
+easily within the range of possibility, says Dr. A. Hoyt Taylor, Chief
+of the Radio Division of the United States Naval Research Laboratories
+at Washington, who plans such an attempt in the near future.
+
+"We have reason to expect a good chance of getting the signal back in a
+time interval of slightly less than three seconds," said Dr. Taylor.
+
+To be exact, a radio signal should be reflected back to earth in a time
+interval of 2.8 seconds, this being the necessary elapsed time for it to
+carry the 250,000 miles to the moon and return at its speed of 300,000
+kilometers, or 186,000 miles per second.
+
+The signal would be very weak, Dr. Taylor points out, but not impossible
+of detection with the present refinement of receiving instruments,
+provided no great absorption took place in interstellar space.
+
+A high frequency wave will be used, as such a wave penetrates readily
+the earth's atmosphere and probably goes far beyond. The frequency of
+the wave will range between 20,000 and 30,000 kilocycles. Twenty
+kilowats of power will be used, enough to furnish current for about
+forty flatirons.
+
+The value of a radio signal to the moon lies in the confirmation of
+whether there is or not heavy absorption of waves in the upper levels of
+our own atmosphere. If successful it would indicate a reasonably good
+reflection coefficient at the surface of the moon--the power of the
+moon's surface to act as a joint agent in the perfection of the signal.
+
+The signal might have some bearing also on whether the moon has an
+atmosphere--something pretty much settled already by astronomical
+observation. It would also lead to the possibility of fairly accurate
+determination of wave velocity in free space, all of interest to
+science, either confirming existing theories or establishing new ones.
+
+
+
+
+The Pirate Planet
+
+PART TWO OF A FOUR-PART NOVEL
+
+_By Charles W. Diffin_
+
+ It is war. Interplanetary war. And on far distant Venus two
+ fighting Earthlings stand up against a whole planet run amuck.
+
+
+WHAT HAS GONE BEFORE
+
+A flash of light on Venus!--and at Maricopa Flying Field Lieutenant
+McGuire and Captain Blake laugh at its possible meaning until the
+radio's weird call and the sight of a giant ship in the night sky prove
+their wildest thoughts are facts. "Big as an ocean liner," it hangs in
+midair, then turns and shoots upward at incredible speed until it
+disappears entirely, in space!
+
+McGuire goes to Mount Lawson observatory, and there he sees the flash on
+Venus repeated. Professor Sykes, who had observed the first flash,
+confirms it and sees still more. He sees the enveloping clouds of Venus
+torn asunder, and beneath them an identifying mark, a continent shaped
+like the letter "L."
+
+And then the great ship comes again. It hovers above the observatory and
+settles slowly down.
+
+[Illustration: "Hold them off as long as you can!"]
+
+Back at Maricopa Field, Captain Blake has tested a new plane for
+altitude, and is now prepared to interview the stranger in the higher
+levels. McGuire's frantic phone call sends him out into the night with
+the 91st Squadron of planes in support. It is their last flight, for all
+but Blake. The invader smothers them in a great sphere of gas, but
+Blake, with his oxygen flasks, flies through to crash beside the
+observatory. Only Blake survives to see the enemy land, while strange
+man-shapes loot the buildings and carry off McGuire and Sykes.
+
+A bombardment with giant shells dispels the last doubt of the earth
+being under attack. The flashes from Venus at regular intervals spout
+death and destruction upon the earth; a mammoth gun, sunk into the
+planet itself, bears once upon the earth at every revolution, until the
+changing position of the globes take the target out of range.
+
+In less than a year and a half the planets must meet again. It is war to
+the death; a united world against an enemy unknown--an enemy who has
+conquered space. And there is less than a year and a half in which to
+prepare!
+
+Far out in the blackness of space McGuire and Sykes are captives in the
+giant ship. Their stupor leaves them; they find themselves immersed in
+clouds. The clouds part; their ship drops through; and below them is a
+strange continent shaped like the letter "L." Captives of inhuman but
+man-shaped things, they are landing upon a strange globe--upon the
+planet Venus itself!
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+Miles underneath the great ship, from which Lieutenant McGuire and
+Professor Sykes were now watching through a floor-window of thick glass,
+was a glittering expanse of water--a great ocean. The flickering gold
+expanse that reflected back the color of the sunlit clouds passed to one
+side as the ship took its station above the island, a continent in size,
+that had shown by its shape like a sharply formed "L" an identifying
+mark to the astronomer.
+
+They were high in the air; the thick clouds that surrounded this new
+world were miles from its surface, and the things of the world that
+awaited were tiny and blurred.
+
+Airships passed and repassed far below. Large, some of them--as bulky
+as the transport they were on; others were small flashing cylinders, but
+all went swiftly on their way.
+
+It must have come--some ethereal vibration to warn others from the
+path--for layer after layer of craft were cleared for the descent. A
+brilliant light flashed into view, a dazzling pin-point on the shore
+below, and the great ship fell suddenly beneath them. Swiftly it dropped
+down the pathway of light; on even keel it fell down and still down,
+till McGuire, despite his experience in the air, was sick and giddy.
+
+The light blinked out at their approach. It was some minutes before the
+watching eyes recovered from the brilliance to see what mysteries might
+await, and then the surface was close and the range of vision small.
+
+A vast open space--a great court paved with blocks of black and white--a
+landing field, perhaps, for about it in regular spacing other huge
+cylinders were moored. Directly beneath in a clear space was a giant
+cradle of curved arms; it was a mammoth structure, and the men knew at a
+glance that this was the bed where their great ship would lie.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The smooth pavement seemed slowly rising to meet them as their ship
+settled close. Now the cradle was below, its arms curved and waiting.
+The ship entered their grasp, and the arms widened, then closed to draw
+the monster to its rest. Their motion ceased. They were finally, beyond
+the last faint doubt, at anchor on a distant world.
+
+A shrill cackle of sound recalled them from the thrill of this
+adventure, and the attenuated and lanky figure, with its ashen,
+blotchy face that glared at them from the doorway, reminded them that
+this excursion into space was none of their desire. They were
+prisoners--captives from a foreign land.
+
+A long hand moved its sinuous fingers to motion them to follow, and
+McGuire regarded his companion with a hopeless look and a despondent
+shrug of his shoulders.
+
+"No use putting up a fight," he said; "I guess we'd better be good."
+
+He followed where the figure was stepping through a doorway into a
+corridor beyond. They moved, silent and depressed, along the dimly
+lighted way; the touch of cold metal walls was as chilling to their
+spirits as to their flesh.
+
+But the mood could not last: the first ray of light from the outside
+world sent shivers of anticipation along their spines. They were
+landing, in very fact, upon a new world; their feet were to walk where
+never man had stood; their eyes would see what mortal eyes had never
+visioned.
+
+Fears were forgotten, and the men clung to each other not for the human
+touch but because of an ecstasy of intoxicating, soul-filling joy in the
+sheer thrill of adventure.
+
+They were gripping each other's hand, round-eyed as a couple of
+children, as they stepped forward into the light.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Before them was a scene whose blazing beauty of color struck them to
+frozen silence; their exclamations of wonder died unspoken on their
+lips. They were in a city of the stars, and to their eyes it seemed as
+if all the brilliance of the heavens had been gathered for its
+building.
+
+The spacious, open court itself stood high in the air among the masses
+of masonry, and beyond were countless structures. Some towered skyward;
+others were lower; and all were topped with bulbous towers and graceful
+minarets that made a forest of gleaming opal light. Opalescence
+everywhere!--it flashed in red and gold and delicate blues from every
+wall and cornice and roof.
+
+"Quartz?" marveled Sykes after one long drawn breath. "Quartz or
+glass?--what are they made of? It is fairyland!"
+
+A jewelled city! Garish, it might have been, and tawdry, in the full
+light of the sun. But on these weirdly unreal structures the sun's rays
+never shone; they were illumined only by the soft golden glow that
+diffused across this world from the cloud masses far above.
+
+McGuire looked up at that uniform, glowing, golden mass that paled
+toward the horizon and faded to the gray of banked clouds. His eyes came
+slowly back to the ramp that led downward to the checkered black and
+white of the court. Beyond an open portion the pavement was solidly
+massed with people.
+
+"People!--we might as well call them that," McGuire had told Sykes;
+"they are people of a sort, I suppose. We'll have to give them credit
+for brains: they've beaten us a hundred years in their inventions."
+
+He was trying to see everything, understand everything, at once. There
+was not time to single out the new impressions that were crowding upon
+him. The air--it was warm to the point of discomfort; it explained the
+loose, light garments of the people; it came to the two men laden with
+strange scents and stranger sounds.
+
+McGuire's eyes held with hungry curiosity upon the dwellers in this
+other world; he stared at the gaping throng from which came a bedlam of
+shrill cries. Lean colorless hands gesticulated wildly and pointed with
+long fingers at the two men.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The din ceased abruptly at a sharp, whistled order from their captor. He
+stood aside with a guard that had followed from the ship, and he
+motioned the two before him down the gangway. It was the same scarlet
+one who had faced them before, the one whom McGuire had attacked in a
+frenzy of furious fighting, only to go down to blackness and defeat
+before the slim cylinder of steel and its hissing gas. And the slanting
+eyes stared wickedly in cold triumph as he ordered them to go before
+him in his march of victory.
+
+McGuire passed down toward the masses of color that were the ones who
+waited. There were many in the dull red of the ship's crew; others in
+sky-blue, in gold and pink and combinations of brilliance that blended
+their loose garments to kaleidoscopic hues. But the figures were similar
+in one unvarying respect: they were repulsive and ghastly, and their
+faces showed bright blotches of blood vessels and blue markings of veins
+through their parchment-gray skins.
+
+The crowd parted to a narrow, living lane, and lean fingers clutched
+writhingly to touch them as they passed between the solid ranks.
+
+McGuire had only a vague impression of a great building beyond, of lower
+stories decorated in barbaric colors, of towers above in strange forms
+of the crystal, colorful beauty they had seen. He walked toward it
+unseeing; his thoughts were only of the creatures round about.
+
+"What damned beasts!" he said. Then, like his companion, he set his
+teeth to restrain all show of feeling as they made their way through the
+lane of incredible living things.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+They followed their captor through a doorway into an empty room--empty
+save for one blue-clad individual who stood beside an instrument board
+let into the wall. Beyond was a long wall, where circular openings
+yawned huge and black.
+
+The one at the instrument panel received a curt order: the weird voice
+of the man in red repeated a word that stood out above his curious,
+wordless tone. "Torg," he said, and again McGuire heard him repeat the
+syllable.
+
+The operator touched here and there among his instruments, and tiny
+lights flashed; he threw a switch, and from one of the black openings
+like a deep cave came a rushing roar of sound. It dropped to silence as
+the end of a cylindrical car protruded into the room. A door in the
+metal car opened, and their guard hustled them roughly inside. The one
+in red followed while behind him the door clanged shut.
+
+Inside the car was light, a diffused radiance from no apparent source,
+the whole air was glowing about them. And beneath their feet the car
+moved slowly but with a constant acceleration that built up to
+tremendous speed. Then that slackened, and Sykes and McGuire clung to
+each other for support while the car that had been shot like a
+projectile came to rest.
+
+"Whew!" breathed the lieutenant; "that was quick delivery." Sykes made
+no reply, and McGuire, too, fell silent to study the tremendous room
+into which they were led. Here, seemingly, was the stage for their next
+experience.
+
+A vast open hall with a floor of glass that was like obsidion, empty but
+for carved benches about the walls; there was room here for a mighty
+concourse of people. The walls, like those they had seen, were decorated
+crudely in glaring colors, and embellished with grotesque designs that
+proclaimed loudly the inexpert touch of the draughtsman. Yet, above
+them, the ceiling sprang lightly into vaulted, sweeping curves.
+McGuire's training had held little of architecture, yet even he felt the
+beauty of line and airy gracefulness of treatment in the structure
+itself.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The contrast between the flaunting colors and the finished artistry that
+lay beneath must have struck a discordant note to the scientist. He
+leaned closer to whisper.
+
+"It is all wrong some way--the whole world! Beauty and refinement--then
+crude vulgarity, as incongruous as the people themselves--they do not
+belong here."
+
+"Neither do we," was McGuire's reply; "it looks like a tough spot that
+we're in."
+
+He was watching toward a high, arched entrance across the room. A
+platform before it was raised some six feet above the floor, and on
+this were seats--ornate chairs, done in sweeping scrolls of scarlet and
+gold. A massive seat in the center was like the fantastic throne of a
+child's fairy tale. From the corridor beyond that entrance came a stir
+and rustling that rivetted the man's attention.
+
+A trumpet peal, vibrant and peculiar, blared forth from the ceiling
+overhead, and the red figures of the guards stood at rigid attention
+with lean arms held stiffly before them. The one in scarlet took the
+same attitude, then dropped his hands to motion the two men to give the
+same salute.
+
+"You go to hell," said Lieutenant McGuire in his gentlest tones. And the
+scarlet figure's thin lips were snarling as he turned to whip his arms
+up to their position. The first of a procession of figures was entering
+through the arch.
+
+Sykes, the scientist, was paying little attention. "It isn't true," he
+was muttering aloud; "it can't be true. Venus! Twenty-six million miles
+at inferior conjunction!"
+
+He seemed lost in silent communion with his own thoughts; then: "But
+I said there was every probability of life; I pointed out the
+similarities--"
+
+"Hush!" warned McGuire. The eyes of the scarlet man were sending wicked
+looks in their direction. Tall forms were advancing through the arch.
+They, too, were robed in scarlet, and behind them others followed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The trumpet peal from the dome above held now on a long-drawn, single
+note, while the scarlet men strode in silence across the dais and parted
+to form two lines. An inverted "V" that faced the entrance--they were an
+assembly of rigid, blazing statues whose arms were extended like those
+on the floor below.
+
+The vibrant tone from on high changed to a crashing blare that shrieked
+discordantly to send quivering protest through every nerve of the
+waiting men. Those about them were shouting, and again the name of Torg
+was heard, as, in the high arch, another character appeared to play his
+part in a strange drama.
+
+Thin like his companions, yet even taller than them, he wore the same
+brilliant robes and, an additional mark of distinction, a head-dress of
+polished gold. He acknowledged the salute with a quick raising of his
+own arms, then came swiftly forward and took his place upon the massive
+throne.
+
+Not till he was seated did the others on the platform relax their rigid
+pose and seat themselves in the semicircle of chairs. And not till then
+did they so much as glance at the men waiting there before them--the two
+Earth-men, standing in silent, impassive contemplation of the brilliant
+scene and with their arms held quiet at their sides. Then every eye
+turned full upon the captives, and if McGuire had seen deadly
+malevolence in the face of their captor he found it a hundred-fold in
+the inhuman faces that looked down upon them now.
+
+The inquiring mind of Professor Sykes did not fail to note the
+character of their reception. "But why," he asked in whispers of his
+fellow-prisoner, "--why this open hatred of us? What possible animus
+can they have against the earth or its people?"
+
+The figure on the throne voiced a curt order; the one who had brought
+them stepped forward. His voice was raised in the same discordant,
+singing tone that leaped and wandered from note to note. It conveyed
+ideas--that was apparent; it was a language that he spoke. And the
+central figure above nodded a brief assent as he finished.
+
+Their captor took an arm of each in his long fingers and pushed them
+roughly forward to stand alone before the battery of hard eyes.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now the crowned figure addressed them directly. His voice quavered
+sharply in what seemed an interrogation. The men looked blankly at each
+other.
+
+Again the voice questioned them impatiently. Sykes and McGuire were
+silent. Then the young flyer took an involuntary step forward and looked
+squarely at the owner of the harsh voice.
+
+"We don't know what you are saying," he began, "and I suppose that our
+lingo makes no sense to you--" He paused in helpless wonderment as to
+what he could say. Then--
+
+"But what the devil is it all about?" he demanded explosively. "Why all
+the dirty looks? You've got us here as prisoners--now what do you expect
+us to do? Whatever it is, you'll have to quit singing it and talk
+something we can understand."
+
+He knew his words were useless, but this reception was getting on his
+nerves--and his arm still tingled where the scarlet one had gripped
+him.
+
+It seemed, though, that his meaning was not entirely lost. His words
+meant nothing to them, but his tone must have carried its own message.
+There were sharp exclamations from the seated circle. The one who had
+brought them sprang forward with outstretched, clutching hands; his face
+was a blood-red blotch. McGuire was waiting in crouching tenseness that
+made the red one pause.
+
+"You touch me again," said the waiting man, "and I'll knock you into an
+outside loop."
+
+The attacker's indecision was ended by a loud order from above. McGuire
+turned as if he had been spoken to by the leader on the throne. The thin
+figure was leaning far forward; his eye were boring into those of the
+lieutenant, and he held the motionless pose for many minutes. To the
+angry man, staring back and upward, there came a peculiar optical
+illusion.
+
+The evil face was vanishing in a shifting cloud that dissolved and
+reformed, as he watched, into pictures. He knew it was not there, the
+thing he saw; he knew he was regarding something as intangible as
+thought; but he got the significance of every detail.
+
+He saw himself and Professor Sykes; they were being crushed like ants
+beneath a tremendous heel; he knew that the foot that could grind out
+their lives was that of the one on the throne.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The cloud-stuff melted to new forms that grew clearer to show him the
+earth. A distorted Earth--and he knew the distortion came from the mind
+of the being before him who had never seen the earth at first hand; yet
+he knew it for his own world. It was turning in space; he saw oceans and
+continents; and before his mental gaze he saw the land swarming with
+these creatures of Venus. The one before him was in command; he was
+seated on an enormous throne; there were Earth people like Sykes and
+himself who crept humbly before him, while fleets of great Venusian
+ships hovered overhead.
+
+The message was plain--plain as if written in words of fire in the brain
+of the man. McGuire knew that these creatures intended that the vision
+should be true--they meant to conquer the earth. The slim, khaki-clad
+figure of Lieutenant McGuire quivered with the strength of his refusal
+to accept the truth of what he saw. He shook his head to clear it of
+these thought wraiths.
+
+"Not--in--a--million--years!" he said, and he put behind his words all
+the mental force at his command. "Try that, old top, and they'll give
+you the fight of your life--" He checked his words as he saw plainly
+that the thin cruel face that stared and stared was getting nothing from
+his reply.
+
+"Now what do you think about that?" he demanded of Professor Sykes. "He
+got an idea across to me--some form of telepathy. I saw his mind, or I
+saw what he wanted me to see of it. It's taps, he says, for us, and then
+they think they're going across and annex the world."
+
+He glanced upward again and laughed loudly for the benefit of those who
+were watching him so closely. "Fine chance!" he said; "a fat chance!"
+But in the deeper recesses of his mind he was shaken.
+
+For themselves there was no hope. Well, that was all in a lifetime. But
+the other--the conquest of the earth--he had to try with all his power
+of will to keep from his mind the pictures of destruction these beastly
+things could bring about.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The chief of this strange council made a gesture of contempt with the
+grotesque hands that were so translucent yet ashy-pale against his
+scarlet robe, and the down-drawn thin lips reflected the thoughts that
+prompted it. The open opposition of Lieutenant McGuire failed to impress
+him, it seemed. At a word the one who had brought them sprang forward.
+
+He addressed himself to the circle of men, and he harangued them
+mightily in harsh discordance. He pointed one lean hand at the two
+captives, then beat it upon his own chest. "They are mine," he was
+saying, as the men knew plainly. And they realized as if the weird talk
+came like words to their ears that this monster was demanding that the
+captives be given him.
+
+An exchange of dismayed glances, and "Not so good!" said McGuire under
+his breath; "Simon Legree is asking for his slaves. Mean, ugly devil,
+that boy!"
+
+The lean figures on the platform were bending forward, an expression of
+mirth--distorted, animal smiles--upon their flabby lips. They
+represented to the humans, so helpless before them, a race of thinking
+things in whom no last vestige of kindness or decency remained. But was
+there an exception? One of the circle was standing; the one beside them
+was sullenly silent as the other on the platform addressed their ruler.
+
+He spoke at some length, not with the fire and vehemence of the one who
+had claimed them, but more quietly and dispassionately, and his cold
+eyes, when they rested on those of McGuire and Sykes, seemed more
+crafty than actively ablaze with malevolent ill-will. Plainly it was the
+councilor now, addressing his superior. His inhuman voice was silenced
+by a reply from the one on the throne.
+
+He motioned--this gold-crowned figure of personified evil--toward the
+two men, and his hand swept on toward the one who had spoken. He intoned
+a command in harsh gutturals that ended in a sibilant shriek. And the
+two standing silent and hopeless exchanged looks of despair.
+
+They were being delivered to this other--that much was plain--but that
+it boded anything but captivity and torment they could not believe. That
+last phrase was too eloquent of hissing hate.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The creature rose, tall and ungainly, from his throne; amid the
+salutations of his followers he turned and vanished through the arch.
+The others of his council followed, all but the one. He motioned to the
+two men to come with him, and the sullen one who had demanded the men
+for himself obeyed an order from this councilor who was his superior.
+
+He snapped an order, and four of his men ranged themselves about the
+captives as a guard. Thin metal cords were whipped about the wrists of
+each; their hands were tied. The wire cut like a knife-edge if they
+strained against it.
+
+The new director of their destinies was vanishing through an exit at one
+side of the great hall; their guard hustled them after. A corridor
+opened before them to end in a gold-lit portal; it was daylight out
+beyond where a street was filled with hurrying figures in many colors.
+With quavering shrieks they scattered like frightened fowls as an
+airship descended between the tall buildings that reflected its passing
+in opalescent hues.
+
+It was a small craft compared with the one that had brought them, and
+it swept down to settle lightly upon the street with no least regard
+for those who might be crushed by its descent. Consideration for their
+fellows did not appear as a marked characteristic of this strange
+people, McGuire observed thoughtfully. They swarmed in endless droves,
+these multicolored beings who made of the thoroughfare an ever-changing
+kaleidoscope--and what was a life or two, more or less, among so many?
+He found no comfort for themselves in the thought.
+
+Shoulder to shoulder, the two followed where the scarlet figure of the
+councilor moved toward the waiting ship. Only the professor paid further
+heed to their surroundings; he marveled aloud at the numbers of the
+people.
+
+"Hundreds of them," he said; "thousands! They are swarming everywhere
+like rats. Horrible!" His eyes passed on to the buildings in their glory
+of delicate hues, as he added, "And the contrast they make with their
+surroundings! It is all wrong some way; I wish I knew--"
+
+They were in the ship when McGuire replied. "I hope we live long enough
+to satisfy your curiosity," he said grimly.
+
+The ship was rising beneath them; the opal and quartz of the city's
+walls were flashing swiftly down.
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+They were in a cabin at the very nose of the ship, seated on metal
+chairs, their hands unshackled and free. Their scarlet guardian reclined
+at ease somewhat to one side, but despite his apparent disregard his
+cold eyes seldom left the faces of the two men.
+
+Windows closed them in; windows on each side, in front, above them, and
+even in the floor beneath. It was a room for observation whose
+metal-latticed walls served only as a framework for the glass. And there
+was much to be observed.
+
+The golden radiance of sunlit clouds was warm above. They rose toward
+it, until, high over the buildings' tallest spires, there spread on
+every hand the bewildering beauty of that forest of minarets and sloping
+roofs and towers, whose many facets made glorious blendings of soft
+color. Aircraft at many levels swept in uniform directions throughout
+the sky. The ship they were in hung quiet for a time, then rose to a
+higher level to join the current of transportation that flowed into the
+south.
+
+"We will call it south," said Professor Sykes. "The sun-glow, you will
+observe, is not directly overhead; the sun is sinking; it is past their
+noon. What is the length of their day? Ah, this interesting--interesting!"
+The certain fate they had foreseen was forgotten; it is not often given to
+an astronomer to check at first hand his own indefinite observations.
+
+"Look!" McGuire exclaimed. "Open country! The city is ending!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ahead and below them the buildings were smaller and scattered. Their new
+master was watching with closest scrutiny the excitement of the men; he
+whispered an order into a nearby tube, and the ship slowly slanted
+toward the ground. He was studying these new specimens, as McGuire
+observed, but the lieutenant paid little attention; his eyes were too
+thoroughly occupied in resolving into recognizable units the picture
+that flowed past them so quickly. He was accustomed, this pilot of the
+army air service, to reading clearly the map that spreads beneath a
+plane, but now he was looking at an unfamiliar chart.
+
+"Fields," he said, and pointed to squared areas of pale reds and blues;
+"though what it is, heaven knows. And the trees!--if that's what they
+are." The ship went downward where an area of tropical denseness made a
+tangled mass of color and shadow.
+
+"Trees!" Lieutenant McGuire had exclaimed, but these forests were of
+tree-forms in weirdest shapes and hues. They grew to towering heights,
+and their branches and leaves that swayed and dipped in the slow-moving
+air were of delicate pastel shades.
+
+"No sunlight," said the Professor excitedly; "they have no direct rays
+of the sun. The clouds act as a screen and filter out actinic rays."
+
+McGuire did not reply. He was watching the countless dots of color that
+were people--people who swarmed here as they had in the city; people
+working at these great groves, crouching lower in the fields as the ship
+swept close; people everywhere in teeming thousands. And like the
+vegetation about them, they, too, were tall and thin, attenuated of form
+and with skin like blood-stained ash.
+
+"They need the sun," Sykes was repeating; "both vegetable and animal
+life. The plants are deficient in chlorophyl--see the pale green of the
+leaves!--and the people need vitamins. Yet they evidently have electric
+power in abundance. I could tell them of lamps--"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+His comments ceased as McGuire lurched heavily against him. The flyer
+had taken note of the tense, attentive attitude of the one in scarlet;
+the man was leaning forward, his eyes focused directly upon the
+scientist's face; he seemed absorbing both words and emotions.
+
+How much could he comprehend? What power had he to vision the
+idea-pictures in the other's mind? McGuire could not know. But "Sorry!"
+he told Sykes; "that was clumsy of me." And he added in a whisper, "Keep
+your thoughts to yourself; I think this bird is getting them."
+
+Buildings flashed under them, not massed solidly as in the city, yet
+spaced close to one another as if every foot of ground not devoted to
+their incredible agriculture were needed to house the inhabitants. The
+ground about them was alive with an equally incredible humanity that
+swarmed over all this world in appalling profusion.
+
+Their horrid flesh! Their hideous features! And their number! McGuire
+had a sudden, sickening thought. They were larvae, these crawling
+hordes--vile worm-things that infested a beautiful world--that bred here
+in millions, their numbers limited only by the space for their bodies
+and the food for their stomachs. And he, McGuire, a _man_--he and this
+other man with his clear-thinking scientific brain were prisoners to
+this horde; captives, to be used or butchered by those vile, crawling
+things!
+
+And again it was this world of contrast that drove home the conviction
+with its sickening certainty. A world of beauty, of delicate colors, of
+sweeping oceans and gleaming shores and towering cities with their grace
+and beauty and elfin splendor yet a world that shuddered beneath this
+devouring plague of grublike men.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+They swept past cities and towns and over many miles of open land before
+their craft swung eastward toward the dark horizon. The master gave
+another order into the speaking tube and their ship shot forward, faster
+and yet faster, with a speed that pressed them heavily into their seats.
+Behind them was the glory of the sunlit clouds; ahead the gloomy
+gray-black masses that must make a stygian night sky over this lonely
+world--a world cut off by that vaporous shell from all communion with
+the stars.
+
+They were over the water; before them a dark ocean reached out in
+forbidding emptiness to a darker horizon. Ahead, the only broken line in
+the vast level expanse was a mountain rising abruptly from the sea. It
+was a volcanic cone surmounting an island; the sunlight's glow reflected
+from behind them against the sombre mass that lifted toward the clouds.
+Their ship was high enough to clear it, but instead it swung, as McGuire
+watched, toward the south.
+
+The island drifted past, and again they were on their course. But to
+the flyer there were significant facts that could not pass unobserved.
+Their own ship had swung in a great circle to avoid this mountain. And
+all through the skies were others that did the same. The air above and
+about the grim sentinel peak was devoid of flying shapes.
+
+McGuire caught the eyes of the councilor, their keeper. "What is that?"
+he asked, though he knew the words were lost on the other. He nodded his
+head toward the distant peak, and his question was plainly in regard to
+the island. And for the first time since their coming to this wild
+world, he saw, flashing across the features of one of these men, a trace
+of emotion that could only be construed as fear.
+
+The slitted cat eyes lost their look of complacent superiority. They
+widened involuntarily, and the face was drained of its blotched color.
+There was fear, terror unmistakable, though it showed for but an
+instant. He had control of his features almost at once, but the flyer
+had read their story.
+
+Here was something that gave pause to this race of conquering vermin; a
+place in the expanse of this vast sea that brought panic to their
+hearts. And there came to him, as he stowed the remembrance away in his
+mind, the first glow of hope. These things could fear a mountain; it
+might be that they could be brought to fear a man.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The sky was clearing rapidly of traffic and the mountain of his
+speculations was lost astern, when another island came slanting swiftly
+up to meet them as their ship swept down from the heights. It was a tiny
+speck in the ocean's expanse, a speck that resolved itself into the
+squared fields of colored growth, orchards whose brilliant, strange
+fruits glowed crimson in the last light of day, and enormous trees,
+beyond which appeared a house.
+
+A palace, McGuire concluded, when he saw clearly the many-storied pile.
+Like the buildings they had seen, this also constructed of opalescent
+quartz. There were windows that glowed warmly in the dusk. A sudden wave
+of loneliness, almost unbearable, swept over the man.
+
+Windows and gleaming lights, the good sounds of Earth; home!... And his
+ears, as he stepped out into the cool air, were assailed with the
+strange cackle and calling of weird folk; the air brought him scents,
+from the open ground beyond, of fruits and vegetation like none he had
+ever known; and the earth, the homeland of his vain imaginings, was
+millions of empty miles away....
+
+The leader stopped, and McGuire looked dispiritedly at the unfamiliar
+landscape under dusky lowering skies. Trees towered high in the
+air--trees grotesque and weird by all Earth standards--whose limbs were
+pale green shadows in the last light of day. The foliage, too, seemed
+bleached and drained of color, but among the leaves were flashes of
+brilliance where night-blooming flowers burst open like star-shells to
+fill the air with heavy scents.
+
+Between the men and the forest growth was a row of denser vegetation,
+great ferns twenty feet and more in height, and among them at regular
+intervals stood plants of another growth--each a tremendous pod held in
+air on a thick stalk. Tendrils coiled themselves like giant springs
+beside each pod, tendrils as thick as a man's wrist. The great pods were
+ranged in a line that extended as far as McGuire could see in the dim
+light.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+His shoulders drooped as the guard herded him and his companion toward
+the building beyond. He must not be cast down--he would not! Who knew
+how much of such feeling was read by these keen-eyed observers? And the
+only thought with which he could fill his mind, the one forlorn ghost of
+a hope that he could cling to, was that of an island, a volcanic peak
+that rose from dark waters to point upward toward the heights.
+
+The guard of four was clustered about; the figures were waiting now in
+the gathering dark--waiting, while the one in scarlet listened and spoke
+alternately into a jeweled instrument that hung by a slender chain about
+his neck. He raised one lean hand to motion the stirring guards to
+silence, listened again intently into the instrument, then pointed that
+hand toward the cloud-filled sky, while he craned his thin neck to look
+above him.
+
+The men's eyes followed the pointing hand to see only the sullen black
+of unlit clouds. The last distant aircraft had vanished from the skies;
+not a ship was in the air--only the enveloping blanket of high-flung
+vapor that blocked out all traces of the heavens. And then!--
+
+The cloud banks high in the skies flashed suddenly to dazzling, rolling
+flame. The ground under their feet was shaken as by a distant
+earthquake, while, above, the terrible fire spread, a swift, flashing
+conflagration that ate up the masses of clouds.
+
+"What in thunder--" McGuire began; then stopped as he caught, in the
+light from above, the reflection of fierce exultation in the eyes of the
+scarlet one. The evil, gloating message of those eyes needed no words to
+explain its meaning. That this cataclysm was self-made by these beings,
+McGuire knew, and he knew that in some way it meant menace to him and
+his.
+
+Yet he groped in thought for some definite meaning. No menace could this
+be to himself personally, for he and Sykes stood there safe in the
+company of the councilor himself. Then the threat of this flaming blast
+must be directed toward the earth!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The fire vanished, and once more, as Professor Sykes had seen on that
+night so long ago, the blanket of clouds was broken. McGuire followed
+the gaze of the scientist whose keen eyes were probing in these brief
+moments into the depths of star-lit space.
+
+"There--there!" Sykes exclaimed in awe-struck tones. His hand was
+pointing outward through the space where flames had cleared the sky. A
+star was shining in the heavens with a glory that surpassed all others.
+It outshone all neighboring stars, and it sent its light down through
+the vast empty reaches of space, a silent message to two humans,
+despondent and heartsick, who stared with aching eyes.
+
+Lieutenant McGuire did not hear his friend's whispered words. No need to
+name that distant world--it was Earth! Earth!... And it was calling to
+its own....
+
+There was a flying-field--so plain before his mental eyes; men in khaki
+and leather who moved and talked and spoke of familiar things ... and
+the thunder of motors ... and roaring planes....
+
+Some far recess within his deeper self responded strangely. What now of
+threats and these brute-things that threatened?--he was one with this
+picture he had visioned. He was himself; he was a man of that distant
+world of men; they would show these vile things how men could meet
+menace--or death.... His shoulders were back and unconsciously he stood
+erect.
+
+The scarlet figure was close beside them in the dusk, his voice vibrant
+with a quality which should have struck fear to his captives' hearts as
+he ordered them on. But the look in his crafty eyes changed to one of
+puzzled wonder at sight of the men.
+
+Hands on each other's shoulders, they stood there in the gathering dark,
+where grotesque trees arched twistingly overhead. Their moment of
+depression had passed; Earth had called, and they had heard it, each
+after his own fashion. But to each the call had been one of clear
+courage. No longer cast off and forlorn, they were one with their own
+world.
+
+"Down," said Professor Sykes with a whimsical smile; "down, but not
+out!" And the lieutenant responded in kind.
+
+"Are we down-hearted?" he demanded loudly. And the two turned as one man
+to grin at the scarlet one as they thundered. "N-o-o!"
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+Two men grinned in derision at the horrible, man-shaped thing that held
+their destinies in his lean, inhuman hands!--but they turned abruptly
+away to look again above them where that bright star still shone through
+an opening in the clouds.
+
+"The earth! Home!" It seemed as if they could never tear their eyes away
+from the sight.
+
+Their captor whistled an order, and the guard of four tugged vainly at
+the two, who resisted that they might gaze upon their own world until
+the closing clouds should blot it from sight. A cry from one of the red
+guards roused them.
+
+The dark was closing in fast, and their surroundings were dim. Vaguely,
+McGuire felt more than saw one of the red figures whirled into the air.
+He sensed a movement in the jungle darkness where were groves of weird
+trees and the tangle of huge vegetable growths. What it was he could not
+say, but he felt the guard who clutched at him quiver in terror.
+
+Their leader snatched at the instrument that hung about his neck and put
+it to his lips; he whistled an order, sharp and shrill. Blazing light
+that seemed to flame in the air was the response; the air was aglow with
+an all-pervading brilliance like that in the car that had whirled them
+from the landing field. The light was everywhere, and the building
+before them was surrounded by a dazzling envelope of luminosity.
+
+Whatever of motion or menace there had been ceased abruptly. Their
+guard, three now in number instead of four, seized them roughly and
+hustled them toward an open door. No time, as they passed, for more than
+fleeting impressions: a hall of warm, glowing light--a passage that
+branched off--and, at the end, a room into which they were thrown, while
+a metal door clanged behind them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+These were no gentle hands that hurled the men staggering through the
+doorway, and Professor Sykes fell headlong upon the glassy floor. He
+sprang to his feet, his face aflame with anger. "The miserable beasts!"
+he shouted.
+
+"Take it easy," admonished the flyer. "We're in the hoose-gow; no use of
+getting all fussed up if they don't behave like perfect gentlemen.
+
+"There's a bunk in the corner," he said, and pointed to a woven hammock
+that was covered with soft cloths; "and here's another that I can sling.
+Twin beds! What more do you want?"
+
+He opened a door and the splash of falling water came to them. A
+fountain cascaded to the ceiling to fall splashing upon a floor of
+inlaid, glassy tile. McGuire whistled.
+
+"Room and bath," he said. "And you complained of the service!"
+
+"I have an idea," he told the scientist, "that our scarlet friend who
+owns this place intends to treat us decently, even though his helpers
+are a bit rough. My hunch is that he wants to get some information out
+of us. That old bird back there in the council chamber told me as plain
+as day that they think they are going to conquer the earth. Maybe that's
+why we are here--as exhibits A and B, for them to study and learn how to
+lick us."
+
+"You are talking what I would have termed nonsense a month ago,"
+replied Sykes, "but now--well, I am afraid you are right. And," he said
+slowly, "I fear that they are equally correct. They have conquered
+space; they have ships propelled by some unknown power; they have gas
+weapons, as you and I have reason to know. And they have all the
+beastly ferocity to carry such a plan through to success. But I wonder
+what that sky-splitting blast meant."
+
+"Bombardment," the flyer told him; "bombardment of the earth as sure as
+you're alive."
+
+"More nonsense," said Sykes; "and probably correct.... Well, what are we
+to do?--sit tight and give them as little information as we can? or--"
+His question ended unfinished; the alternative, it seemed, was not plain
+to him.
+
+"There's only one answer," said McGuire. "We must get away; escape
+somehow."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Professor Sykes' eyes showed his appreciation of a spirit that could
+still dare to hope, but he asked dejectedly: "Escape? Good idea. But
+where to?"
+
+"I have an idea," the flyer said slowly. "An idea about an island." He
+told the professor what he had observed--the fact that there was one
+spot of land on this globe from which the traffic of these monsters of
+Venus steered clear. This, he explained, must have some significance.
+
+"Whatever is there, God only knows," he admitted, "but it is something
+these devils don't like a little bit. It might be interesting to learn
+more. We'll make a break for it; find a boat. No, we probably can't do
+it, but we can make a try. Now what is our first step, I wonder."
+
+"Our first step," said Professor Sykes, measuring his words as if he
+might be working out some astronomical calculation, "is into the
+inverted shower-bath, if you feel as hot as I do. And our next step,
+when all is quiet for the night, is through the window I see beyond. I
+can see the branches of one of those undernourished trees from here."
+
+"Last one in is a lop-eared Venusian!" said McGuire, throwing off his
+jacket. And in that strange room in a strange world, under the shadow of
+death and of tortures unknown, the two men stripped with all the
+care-free abandon of a couple of schoolboys racing to be first in the
+old swimming hole.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was some time later when the door opened and a long red hand pushed a
+tray of food into the room. The tray was of unbreakable crystal--he
+rattled it heedlessly upon the floor--and it held crystal dishes of
+unknown foods.
+
+They were sampling them all when Sykes remarked plaintively, "I would
+like to know what under heaven I am eating."
+
+"I've wished to know that in lots of restaurants," McGuire replied. "I
+remember a place down on--" He stopped abruptly, then chewed in silence
+upon a fruit like a striped pepper that stung his mouth and tongue while
+he scarcely felt it. References to Earth things plainly were to be
+avoided: the visions they brought before one's eyes were unnerving.
+
+They made a pretence of sleeping in case they were being observed, and
+it was some hours later when the two stood quietly beside the open
+window. As Sykes had seen, there were branches of a pale, twisted
+tree-growth close outside. McGuire tried his weight upon them, then
+swung himself out, hand over hand, upon the branch that bent low beneath
+him. Sykes was close behind when he clambered to the ground to stand for
+some minutes, listening silently in the dark.
+
+"Too easy!" the lieutenant whispered. "They are too foxy to leave
+a gateway like that--but here we are. The shore is off in this
+direction."
+
+The dark of a night unrelieved by a single star was about them as they
+moved noiselessly away. They followed open ground at first. The building
+that had been their brief prison was upon their right; beyond and at the
+left was where the ship landed--it was gone now--and beyond that the
+wall of vegetation.
+
+And again, in the dark, McGuire had an uncanny sense of motion. Soft
+bodies were slipping quietly one upon another; something that lived was
+there beyond them in the night. No sound or sign of life came from the
+house; no guard had been posted; and McGuire stopped again, before
+plunging into the tangled growth, to whisper, "Too easy, Sykes! There's
+something about this--"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He had pushed aside the fronds of a giant fern; a cautious step
+beyond his hands touched a slippery, pliant vine. And his whisper
+ended as he felt the thing turn and twist beneath his hand. It was
+alive!--writhing!--cold as the body of a monster snake, and just as
+vicious and savage in the way that it whipped down and about him in
+the gloom of the starless night.
+
+The thing was alive! It threw its coils around his body in an embrace
+that left him breathless; a slender tendril was tightening about his
+neck; his hands and arms were bound.
+
+His ankle was grasped as he was whirled aloft--a human hand that gripped
+him this time--and Sykes, forgetting discretion and the need for
+silence, was shouting in the darkness that gave no clue to their
+opponent. "Hang on!" he yelled. "I've got you, Mac!"
+
+His shouts were cut short by another serpent shape that thrashed him and
+smashed the softer growing things to earth that it might wrap this man,
+too, in its deadly coils.
+
+McGuire felt his companion's hold loosen as he was lifted from the
+ground; there were other arms flailing about him--living, coiling things
+that seemed to fight one with another for this prize. Abruptly,
+blindingly, the scene was vividly etched before him: the strange trees,
+the ferns, the writhing and darting serpent-arms! They were illumined in
+a dazzling, white light!
+
+He was in the air, clutched strangely in constricting arms; an odor of
+rotted flesh was in his nostrils, sickening, suffocating! Beyond and
+almost beneath him a cauldron of green gaped open, and he saw within it
+a pool of thick liquid that eddied and steamed to give off the stench
+of putrescence.
+
+All this in an instant of vision--and in that instant he knew the death
+they courted. It was a giant pod that held that pool--one of the growths
+he had seen ranged out like a line of sentinels. But the terrible
+tendrils that had been coiled and at rest were wrapped about him now,
+drawing him to that reeking pool of death and the waiting thick lips
+that would close above him. Sykes, too! The tendrils that had clutched
+him were whisking his helpless body where another gaping mouth was
+open--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And then, in the blazing light that was more brilliant than any light of
+day in this world, the hold about McGuire relaxed. He saw, as he fell,
+the thick, green lips snap shut; and the arms that had held him pulled
+back into harmless, tight-wound coils.
+
+Their bodies crashed to earth where a great fern bent beneath them to
+cushion their fall. And the men lay silent and gasping for great choking
+breaths, while from the building beyond came the cackle and shrieking of
+man-things in manifest enjoyment of the frustrated plans.
+
+It was the laughter that determined McGuire.
+
+"Damn the plants!" he said between hoarse breaths. "Man-eating
+plants--but they're--better--than--those devils! And there's only--one
+line of them: I saw them here before. Shall we go on?--make a break for
+it?"
+
+Sykes rolled to the shelter of an arching frond and, without a word,
+went crawling away. McGuire was behind him, and the two, as they came to
+open ground, sprang to their feet and ran on through the weird orchard
+where tree trunks made dim, twisting lines. They ran blindly and
+helplessly toward the outer dark that promised temporary shelter.
+
+A hopeless attempt: both men, knew the futility of it, while they
+stumbled onward through the dark. Behind them the night was hideous
+with noise as the great palace gave forth an eruption of shrieking,
+inhuman forms that scattered with whistling and wailing calls in all
+directions.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A mile or more of groping, hopeless flight, till a yellow gleam shone
+among the trees to guide them. A building, beyond a clearing, gave a
+bright illumination to the black night.
+
+"We've run in a circle," choked McGuire, his voice weak and uncertain
+with exhaustion. "Like a couple of fools!--"
+
+He waited until the heavy breathing that shook his body might be
+controlled, then corrected himself. "No--this is another--a new one--see
+the towers! And listen--it's a radio station!"
+
+The slender frameworks that towered high in air glowed like flame--a
+warning to the ships whose lights showed now and then far overhead. And,
+clear and distinct, there came to the listening men the steady,
+crackling hiss of an uninterrupted signal.
+
+Against the lighted building moving figures showed momentarily, and
+McGuire pulled his friend into the safe concealment of a tangle of
+growth, while the group of yelling things sped past.
+
+"Come on," he told Sykes; "we can't get away--not a chance! Let's have a
+look at this place, and perhaps--well, I have an idea!" He slipped
+silently, cautiously on, where a forest of jungle ferns gave promise of
+safe passage.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Some warning had been sounded; the occupants of the building were
+scattered to aid in the man-hunt. Only one was left in the room where
+two Earth-men peeped in at the door.
+
+The figure was seated upon an insulated platform, and his long hands
+manipulated keys and levers on a table before him. McGuire and Sykes
+stared amazedly at this broadcasting station whose air was filled with a
+pandemonium of crashing sound from some distant room, but McGuire was
+concerned mainly with the motion of a lean, blood-red hand that swung
+an object like a pointer in free-running sweeps above a dial on the
+table. And he detected a variation in the din from beyond as the pointer
+moved swiftly.
+
+Here was the control board for those messages he had heard; this was the
+instrument that varied the sending mechanism to produce the wailing
+wireless cries that made words in some far-distant ears. McGuire, as he
+slipped into the room and crept within leaping distance of the grotesque
+thing so like yet unlike a man, was as silent as the nameless, writhing
+horror that had seized them in the dark. He sprang, and the two came
+crashing to the floor.
+
+Lean arms came quickly about him to clutch and tear at his face, but the
+flyer had an arm free, and one blow ended the battle. The man of Venus
+relaxed to a huddle of purple and yellow cloth from which a ghastly face
+protruded. McGuire leaped to his feet and sprang to the place where the
+other had been.
+
+"Hold them off as long as you can!" he shouted to Sykes, and his hand
+closed upon the pointer.
+
+Did this station send where he was hoping? Was this the station that had
+communicated with the ship that had hovered above their flying field in
+that far-off land? He did not know, but it was a powerful station, and
+there was a chance--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He moved the pointer frantically here and there, swung it to one side
+and another; then found at last a point on the outside of the strange
+design beneath his hand where the pointer could rest while the crashing
+crackle of sound was stilled.
+
+And now he swung the pointer--upon the plate--anywhere!--and the noise
+from beyond told instantly of the current's passage. He held it an
+instant, then pushed it back to the silent spot--a dash! A quick return
+that flashed back again to bring silence--a dot! More dashes and dots
+... and McGuire thanked a kindly heaven that had permitted him to learn
+the language of the air, while he cursed his slowness in sending.
+
+Would it reach? Would there be anyone to hear? No certainty; he could
+only flash the wild Morse symbols out into the night. He must try to get
+word to them--warn them! And "Blake," he called, and spelled out the
+name of their field, "warning--Venus--"
+
+"Hold them!" he yelled to Sykes at the sound of rushing feet. "Keep them
+off as long as you can!"
+
+"... Prepare--for invasion. Blake, this is McGuire...." Over and over,
+he worked the swinging pointer into symbols that might in some way, by
+some fortunate chance, help that helpless people to resist the horror
+that lay ahead.
+
+And while heavy bodies crashed against the door that Sykes was holding,
+there came from some deep-hidden well of memory an inspiration. There
+was a man he had once met--a man who had confided wondrous things; and
+now, with the knowledge of these others who had conquered space, he
+could believe wholly what he had laughed and joked about before. That
+man, too, had claimed to have travelled far from the earth; he had
+invented a machine; his name--
+
+The pointer was swinging in frenzied haste to spell over and over the
+name of a man, and the name, too, of a forgotten place in the mountains
+of Nevada. It was repeating the message; then finished in one long
+crashing wail as a cloud of vapor shot about McGuire and his hand upon
+the pointer went suddenly limp.
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+Captain Blake's game of solitaire had become an obsession. He drove
+himself to the utmost in the line of duty, and, through the day, the
+demands of the flying field filled his mind to forgetfulness. And for
+the rest, he forced his mind to concentrate upon the turn of the cards.
+He could not read--and he must not think!--so he sat through long
+evenings trying vainly to forget.
+
+He looked up with an expressionless face as Colonel Boynton entered the
+room. The colonel saw the cards and nodded.
+
+"Does that help?" he asked, and added without waiting for an answer, "I
+don't like cards, but I find my mathematics works well.... My old
+problems--I can concentrate on them, and stop this eternal, damnable
+thinking, thinking--"
+
+There was something of the same look forming about the eyes of
+both--that look that told of men who struggled gamely under the sentence
+of death, refusing to think or to fear, and waiting, waiting,
+impotently. Blake looked at the colonel with a carefully emotionless
+gaze. "It's hell in the big towns, I hear."
+
+The Colonel nodded. "Can't blame them much, if that's what appeals to
+them. A year and a half!--and they've got to forget it. Why not crowd
+all the recklessness and excesses they can into the time that is
+left?--poor devils! But for the most part the world is wagging along,
+and people are going through the familiar motions."
+
+"Well," said Blake, "I used to wonder at times how a man might feel if
+he were facing execution. Now we all know. Just going dumbly along,
+feeling as little as we can, thinking of anything, everything--except
+the one thing. They've turned to using dope, a lot of them, I hear.
+Maybe it helps; nobody cares much. Only a year and a half."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He raised his face from which all expression was consciously erased.
+"Any possible hope?" he asked. "Or do we take it when it comes and fight
+with what we've got as long as we can? There was some talk in the papers
+of an invention--Bureau of Standards cooperating with the big General
+Committee to investigate. Anything come of it?"
+
+"A thousand of them," said the colonel, "all futile. No, we can't expect
+much from those things. Though there's a whisper that came to me from
+Washington. General Clinton--you may remember him; he was here when the
+thing first broke--says that some scientist, a real one, not another of
+these half-baked geniuses, has worked out a transformation of some kind.
+It was too deep for me, but it is based upon changing hydrogen into
+helium, I think. Liberates some perfectly tremendous amount of power.
+The general had it all down pat--"
+
+He stopped speaking at the change in Captain Blake's face. The careful
+repression of all emotions was gone; the face was suddenly alive--
+
+"I know," he said sharply; "I remember something of the theory. There is
+a difference in the atoms or their protons--the liberation of an
+electron from each atom--matter actually transformed into energy;
+theoretical, what I have read. But--but--Oh my God, Boynton, do you mean
+that they've got it?--that it will drive us through space?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The colonel drove one fist into the palm of his other hand. "Fool!
+Idiot!" he exclaimed, and it was evident that the epithets were intended
+for himself.
+
+"I had forgotten that you had been trained along that line. The general
+wants a man to work with them, somewhat as a liason officer to link the
+army requirements closely with their developments; we are hoping to work
+out a space ship, of course. You are just the man; I will radio him this
+minute. Be ready to leave--" The slamming of the door marked a hurried
+exit toward the radio room.
+
+And abruptly, stifflingly, Captain Blake dared to hope. "Scientists will
+come through with something, some new method of propulsion. All the
+world is looking to them!" His thoughts were leaping from one
+possibility to another. "Some miracle of power that will drive a fleet
+through space as they have done, to battle with the enemy on his own
+ground--"
+
+Could he help? Was there one little thing that he could do to apply
+their knowledge to practical ends? The thought thrilled him with
+overpowering emotion an hour later as he felt the lift of the plane
+beneath him.
+
+"Report to General Clinton," the colonel's reply had said. "Captain
+Blake will be assigned to special duty." He opened the throttle to his
+ship's best cruising speed, but his spirit was soaring ahead to urge on
+the swift scout ship whose wings drove steadily into the gathering
+dusk.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And then, after long hours, Washington! Brief words with many men--and
+discouragement! The seat of government of the United States was a city
+of despondent men, weary, hopeless, but fighting. There was a look of
+strain on every face; the eyes told a story of sleepless nights and
+futile thinking and planning. Blake's elation was short lived.
+
+He was sent to New York and on into the state, where the laboratories of
+a great electrical company had turned their equipment from commercial
+purposes to those of war. Here, surely, one might find fuel to feed the
+dying embers of hope; the new development must give greater promise than
+General Clinton had intimated.
+
+"Nothing you can do as yet," he was told, when he had stated his
+mission. "It is still experimental, but we have worked out the
+transformation on a small scale, and harnessed the power."
+
+Captain Blake was in no mood for temporizing; he was tired with being
+put off. He stared belligerently at the chief of this department.
+
+"Power--hell!" he said. "We've got power now. How will you apply it? How
+will we use it for travelling through space?"
+
+The great man of science was unmoved by the outburst. "That is
+poppycock," he replied; "the unscientific twaddle of the sensational
+press. We are practical men here; we are working to give you men who do
+the fighting better ships and better arms. But you will use them right
+here on Earth."
+
+The calm assurance of this man who spoke with a voice of such confidence
+and authority left the flyer speechless. His brain sent a chaos of
+profane and violent expletives to the lips that dared not frame them.
+There was no adequate reply.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Blake jammed his hat upon his head and walked blindly from the room.
+Heedless of the protests of those he jostled on the street he went
+raging on, but some subconscious urge directed his steps. He found
+himself at the railway. There was a station, and a grilled window where
+he was asking for a ticket back to Washington. And on the following
+day--
+
+"There is nothing I can do," he told General Clinton. "It is hopeless. I
+ask to be relieved."
+
+"Why?" The general snapped the question at him. What kind of man was
+this that Boynton had sent him?
+
+"They are fools," said Blake bluntly, "pompous, well-meaning fools! They
+are planning better motors, more power"--he laughed harshly--"and they
+think that with them we can attack ships that are independent of the
+air."
+
+"Still," asked General Clinton coldly, "for what purpose do you wish to
+be relieved? What do you intend to do?"
+
+"Return to the field," said Captain Blake, "to work, and put my planes
+and personnel in the best possible condition; then, when the time comes,
+go up and fight like hell."
+
+An unusual phrasing of a request when one is addressing one's commander;
+but the older man threw back his shoulders, that were bending under
+responsibilities too great for one man to bear, and took a long breath
+that relaxed his face and seemed to bring relief.
+
+"You've got the right idea,"--he spoke slowly and thoughtfully--"the
+right philosophy. It is all we have left--to fight like hell when the
+time comes. Give my regards to Colonel Boynton; he sent me a good man
+after all."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Another long flight, westward this time, and, despite the failure of his
+hopes and of his errand, Blake was flying with a mind at peace. "It is
+all we have left," the general had said. Well, it was good to face
+facts, to admit them--and that was that! There was no use of thinking or
+worrying.... He lifted the ship to a higher level and glanced at his
+compass. There were clouds up ahead, and he drove still higher into the
+night, until he was above them.
+
+And again his peace of mind was not to last.
+
+It was night when he swung the ship over his home port and signalled for
+a landing. A flood of light swept out across the field to guide him
+down. He went directly to the colonel's quarters but found him gone.
+
+"In the radio room, I think," an orderly told him.
+
+Colonel Boynton was listening intently in the silent room; he scowled
+with annoyance at the disturbance of Blake's coming; then, seeing who it
+was, he motioned quickly for the captain to listen in.
+
+"Good Lord, Blake," he told the captain in an excited whisper; "I'm glad
+you're here. Another ship had been sighted; she's been all over the
+earth; just scouting and mapping, probably. And there have been signals
+the same as before--the same until just now. Listen!--it's talking
+Morse!--it's been calling for you!"
+
+He thrust a head set into Blake's hands, then reached for some papers.
+"Poor reception, but there's what we've got," he said.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The paper held the merest fragments of messages that the operator had
+deciphered. Blake examined them curiously while he listened at the
+silent receiver.
+
+"Maricopa"--the message, whatever it was, was meant for them, but there
+were only parts of words and disjointed phrases that the man had written
+down--"Venus attacking Earth ... Captain Blake ... Sykes and...."
+
+At the name of Sykes, Blake dropped the paper.
+
+"What does this mean?" he demanded. "Sykes!--why Sykes was the
+astronomer who was captured with McGuire!"
+
+"Listen! Listen!" The colonel's voice was almost shrill with excitement.
+
+The night was whispering faintly the merest echo of a signal from a
+station far away, but it resolved itself into broken fragments of sound
+that were long and short in duration, and the fragments joined to form
+letters in the Morse code.
+
+"See Winslow," it told them, and repeated the message: "See Winslow at
+Sierra...." Some distant storm crashed and rattled for breathless
+minutes. "Blake see Winslow. This is McGuire, Blake. Winslow can
+help--"
+
+The message ended abruptly. One long, wailing note; then again the night
+was voiceless ... and in the radio room at Maricopa Flying Field two men
+stood speechless, unbreathing, to stare at each other with incredulous
+eyes, as might men who had seen a phantom--a ghost that spoke to them
+and called them by name.
+
+"McGuire--is--alive!" stammered Blake. "They've taken him--there!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Colonel Boynton was considering, weighing all the possibilities, and his
+voice, when he answered, had the ring of conviction.
+
+"That was no hoax," he agreed; "that quavering tone could never be
+faked. That message was sent from the same station we heard before. Yes,
+McGuire is alive--or was up to the end of that sending.... But, who the
+devil is Winslow?"
+
+Blake shook his head despairingly. "I don't know," he said. "And it
+seems as if I should--"
+
+It was hours later, far into the night, when he sprang from out of a
+half-conscious doze to find himself in the middle of the floor with the
+voice of McGuire ringing clearly in his ears. A buried memory had
+returned to the level of his conscious mind. He rushed over to the
+colonel's quarters.
+
+"I've got it," he shouted to that officer whose head was projecting from
+an upper window. "I remember! McGuire told me about this Winslow--some
+hermit that he ran across. He has some invention--some machine--said he
+had been to the moon. I always thought Mac half believed him. We'll go
+over Mac's things and find the address."
+
+"Do you think--do you suppose--?" began Colonel Boynton doubtfully.
+
+"I don't dare to think," Blake responded. "God only knows if we dare
+hope; but Mac--Mac's got a level head; he wouldn't send us unless he
+knew! Good Lord, man!" he exclaimed, "Mac radioed us from Venus; is
+there anything impossible after that?"
+
+"Wait there," said Colonel Boynton; "I'll be right down--"
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+Lieutenant McGuire awoke, as he had on other occasions, to the smell of
+sickly-sweet fumes and the stifling pressure of a mask held over his
+nose and mouth. He struggled to free himself, and the mask was removed.
+Another of the man-creatures whom McGuire had not seen before helped him
+to sit up.
+
+A group of the attenuated figures, with their blood-and-ashes faces,
+regarded him curiously. The one who had helped him arise forced the
+others to stand back, and he gave McGuire a drink of yellow fluid from a
+crystal goblet. The dazed man gulped it down to feel a following surge
+of warmth and life that pulsed through his paralyzed body. The figures
+before him came sharply from the haze that had enveloped them. A window
+high above admitted a golden light that meant another day, but it
+brought no cheer or encouragement to the flyer. McGuire felt crushed and
+hopeless in the knowledge that his life must still go on.
+
+If only that sleep could have continued--carried him out to the deeper
+sleep of death! What hope for them here? Not a chance! And then he
+remembered Sykes; he mustn't desert Sykes. He looked about him to see
+the same prison room from which he and Sykes had escaped. The body of
+the scientist was motionless on the hammock-bed across the room; an
+occasional deep-drawn breath showed that the man still lived.
+
+No, he must not leave Sykes, even if he had the means of death. They
+would fight it through together, and perhaps--perhaps--they might yet be
+of service, might find some way to avert the catastrophe that threatened
+their world. Hopeless? Beyond doubt. But he must hope--and fight!
+
+The leader had watched the light of understanding as it returned to the
+flyer's eyes. He motioned now to the others, and McGuire was picked up
+bodily by four of them and carried from the room.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+McGuire's mind was alert once more; he was eager to learn what he could
+of this place that was to be their prison, but he saw little. A glory of
+blending colors beyond, where the golden light from without shone
+through opal walls--then he found himself upon a narrow table where
+straps of metal were thrown quickly about to bind him fast. He was tied
+hand and foot to the table that moved forward on smooth rollers to a
+waiting lift.
+
+What next? he questioned. Not death, for they had been too careful to
+keep him alive, these repulsive things that stared at him with such cold
+malevolence. Then what? And McGuire found himself with unpleasant
+recollections of others he had seen strapped in similar fashion to an
+operating table.
+
+The lift that he had thought would rise fell smoothly, instead, to stop
+at some point far below ground where the table with its helpless burden
+was rolled into a great room.
+
+He could move his head, and McGuire turned and twisted to look at the
+maze of instruments that filled the room--a super-laboratory for
+experiments of which he dared not think.
+
+"Whoever says I'm not scared to death is a liar," he whispered to
+himself, but he continued to look and wonder as he was wheeled before a
+gleaming machine of many coils and shining, metal parts. A smooth sheet
+of metal stood vertically beyond him; painted a grayish-white, he saw;
+but he could not imagine its use. A throng of people, seated in the
+room, turned blood-red faces toward the bound man and the metal sheet.
+
+"Looks as if we were about to put on a show of some kind," he told
+himself, "and I am cast for a leading role." He watched as best he could
+from his bound position while a tall figure in robes of lustreless black
+appeared to stand beside him.
+
+The newcomer regarded him with a face that was devoid of all emotion.
+McGuire felt the lack of the customary expression of hatred; there was
+not even that; and he knew he was nothing more than a strange animal,
+bound, and helpless, ready for this weird creature's experiments. The
+one in black held a pencil whose tip was a tiny, brilliant light.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Abruptly the room plunged to darkness, where the only visible thing was
+this one point of light. Ceaselessly it waved back and forth before his
+eyes; he followed it in a pattern of strange design; it approached and
+receded. Again and again the motion was repeated, until McGuire felt
+himself sinking--sinking--into a passive state of lethargy. His muscles
+relaxed; his mind was at rest; there seemed nothing in the entire
+universe of being but the single point of light that drew him on and on
+... till something whispered from the far reaches of black space....
+
+It came to him, an insistent call. It was asking about the earth--his
+own world. _What of Earth's armies and their means of defense?_ Vaguely
+he sensed the demand, and without conscious volition he responded. He
+pictured the world he had known; how plainly he saw the wide field at
+Maricopa, and the sweeping flight of a squadron of planes! _Yes--yes!
+How high could they ascend?_ From one of the planes he saw the world
+below; the ships were near their ceiling; this was the limit of their
+climb. _And did they fight with gas? What of their deadliness?_ And
+again he was seated in a plane, and he was firing tiny bullets from a
+tiny gun. No. They did not use gas. _But on the ground below--what
+fortifications? What means of defense?_
+
+McGuire's mind was no longer his own; he could only respond to that
+invisible questioner, that insistent demand from out of the depths where
+he was floating. And yet there was something within him that protested,
+that clamored at his mind and brain.
+
+Fortifications! They must know about fortifications--anti-aircraft
+guns--means for combatting aerial attack. Yes, he knew, and he must
+explain--and the thing within him pounded in the back of his brain to
+draw him back to himself.
+
+He saw a battery of anti-aircraft guns in operation; the guns were
+firing; shells were bursting in little plumes of smoke high in the air.
+And that self within him was shouting now, hammering at him; "You are
+seeing it," it told him; "it is there before you on the screen. Stop!
+Stop!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And for an instant McGuire had the strange experience of witnessing his
+own thoughts. Memories, mental records of past experience, were flashing
+through his mind; mock battles, and the batteries were firing! And,
+before him, on the metal screen, there glowed a vivid picture of the
+same thing. Men were serving the guns with sure swiftness; the bursts
+were high in the air--in a flash of understanding Lieutenant McGuire
+knew that he was giving his country's secrets to the enemy. And in that
+same instant he felt himself swept upward from the depths of that
+darkness where he had drifted. He was himself again, bound and helpless
+before an infernal contrivance of these devil-creatures. They had read
+his thoughts; the machine beside him had projected them upon the screen
+for all to see; a steady clicking might mean their reproduction in
+motion pictures for later study! He, Lieutenant McGuire, was a traitor
+against his will!
+
+The screen was blank, and the lights of the room came on to show the
+thin lips that smiled complacently in a cruel and evil face.
+
+McGuire glared back into that face, and he tried with all the mental
+force that he could concentrate to get across to the exultant one the
+fact that they had not wholly conquered him. This much they had got--but
+no more!
+
+The thin-lipped one had an instrument in his hand, and McGuire felt the
+prick of a needle plunged into his arm. He tried to move his head and
+found himself powerless. And now, in the darkness of the room where all
+lights were again extinguished, the helpless man was fighting the most
+horrible of battles, and the battleground was within his own mind. He
+was two selves, and he fought and struggled with all his consciousness
+to keep those memories from flooding him.
+
+With one part of himself he knew what it meant: a sure knowledge given
+these invaders of what they must prepare to meet; he was betraying his
+country; the whole of humanity! And that raging, raving self was
+powerless to check the flow of memory pictures that went endlessly
+through his mind and out upon the screen beyond....
+
+He had no sense of time; he was limp and exhausted with his fruitless
+struggle when he felt himself released from the bondage of the metal
+straps and placed again in the hammock in his room. And he could only
+look wanly and hopelessly after the figure of Professor Sykes, carried
+by barbarous figures to the same ordeal.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sleep, through the long night, restored both McGuire and his companion
+to normal strength. The flyer was seated with his head bowed low in his
+cupped hands. His words seemed wrung from an agony of spirit. "So that's
+what they brought us here for," he said harshly; "that's why they're
+keeping us alive!"
+
+Professor Sykes walked back and forth in their bare room while he shook
+his impotent fists in the air.
+
+"I told them everything," he exploded; "everything!" Their astronomical
+knowledge must be limited; under this blanket of clouds they can see
+nothing, and from their ships they could make approximations only.
+
+"And I have told them--the earth, and its days and seasons--its orbital
+velocity and motion--its relation to the orbit of this accursed planet.
+They had documents from the observatory and I explained them; I
+corrected their time of firing their big gun on its equatorial position.
+Oh, there is little I left untold--damn them!"
+
+"I wish to heaven," said the flyer savagely, "that we had known; we
+would have jumped out of their beastly ship somehow ten thousand feet
+up, and we would have taken our information with us."
+
+Sykes nodded agreement. "Well," he asked, "how about to-morrow, and the
+next day, and the next? They will want more facts; they will pump the
+last drop of information from us. Are we going to allow it?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+McGuire's tone was dry. "You know the answer to that as well as I do. We
+have just two alternatives; either we get out of here--find some place
+to hide in, then find some way to put a crimp in their plans; or we get
+out of here for good. It's twenty feet, not twenty thousand, from that
+window to the ground, but I think a head-first dive would do it."
+
+Sykes did not reply at once; he seemed to be weighing some problem in
+his mind.
+
+"I would prefer the water," he said at last. "If we _can_ get away and
+reach the shore, and if there is not a possibility of escape--which I
+must admit I consider highly improbable--well, we can always swim out as
+far as we can go, and the result will be certain.
+
+"This other is so messy." The man had stopped his ceaseless pacing, and
+he even managed a cheerful smile at the lieutenant. "And, remember, it
+might only cripple us and leave us helpless in their hands."
+
+"Sounds all right to me," McGuire agreed, and there was a tone of
+finality in his voice as he added: "They've made us do that traitor act
+for the last time, anyway."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Daylight comes slowly through cloud-filled skies; the window of the
+room where the fountain sprayed ceaselessly was showing the first hint
+of gold in the eastern sky. Above was the utter darkness of the
+cloud-wrapped night as the two men swung noiselessly out into the
+grotesque branches of a tree to make their way into the gloom below.
+There, under the cover of great leaves, they crouched in silence, while
+the darkness about them faded and a sound of subdued whistling noises
+came to them from the night.
+
+A wheel creaked, and in the dim light two figures appeared tugging at a
+cart upon which was a cage of woven wire. Beyond them, against the
+darker background of denser growth, tentacles coiled and twisted above
+the row of guardian plants that surrounded the house.
+
+One of the ghostly forms reached within the cage and brought forth a
+struggling object that whimpered in fear. The low whine came distinctly
+to the hidden men. They saw a vague black thing tossed through the air
+and toward the deadly plants; they heard the swishing of pliant
+tentacles and the yelping cry of a frightened animal. And the cry rose
+to a shriek that ended with the gulping splash of thick liquid.
+
+The giant pod next in line was open--they could see it dimly--and its
+tentacles were writhing convulsively, hungrily, across the ground.
+Another animal was taken from the cage and thrown to the waiting,
+serpent forms that closed about and whirled it high in air. Another--and
+another! The yelps of terror grew faint in the distance as the monsters
+passed on in their gruesome work. And the two men, palpitant with
+memories of their own experience, were limp and sick with horror.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the growing light they saw more plainly the fleshy, pliant arms that
+whipped through the air or felt searchingly along the ground. No hope
+there for bird or beast that passed by in the night; nor for men, as
+they knew too well. But now, as the golden light increased, the arms
+drew back to form again the tight-wound coils that flattened themselves
+beside the monstrous pods whose lips were closing. Locked within them
+were the pools of liquid that could dissolve a living body into food for
+these vampires of the vegetable world.
+
+"Damnable!" breathed Sykes in a savage whisper. "Utterly damnable! And
+this world is peopled with such monsters!"
+
+The last deadly arm was tightly coiled when the men stole off through
+the lush growth that reached even above their heads. McGuire remembered
+the outlines he had seen from the air and led the way where, if no
+better concealment could be found, the ocean waited with promise of rest
+and release from their inhuman captors.
+
+They counted on an hour's start--it would be that long before their
+jailer would come with their morning meal and give the alarm--and now
+they went swiftly and silently through the stillness of a strange world.
+The air that flicked misty-wet across their faces was heavy and heady
+with the perfume of night-blooming plants. Crimson blossoms flung wide
+their odorous petals, and the first golden light was filtered through
+tremendous tree-growths of pale lavenders and grays to show as unreal
+colors in the vegetation close about them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+They found no guards; the isolation of this island made the land itself
+their prison, and the men ran at full speed through every open space,
+knowing as they ran that there was no refuge for them--only the ocean
+waiting at the last. But their flight was not unobserved.
+
+A great bird rose screaming from a tangle of vines; its heavy, flapping
+wings flashed red against the pale trees. A pandemonium of shrieking
+cries echoed its alarm as other birds took flight; the forest about them
+was in an uproar of harsh cries. And faintly, from far in the rear, came
+a babel of shrill calls--weird, inhuman!--the voices of the men-things
+of Venus.
+
+"It's all off," said McGuire sharply; "they'll be on our trail now!" He
+plunged through where the trees were more open, and Sykes was beside him
+as they ran with a burst of speed toward a hilltop beyond.
+
+They paused, panting, upon the crest. A wide expanse of foliage in
+delicate shadings swept out before them to wave gently in a sea of color
+under the morning breeze, and beyond was another sea that beckoned with
+white breakers on a rocky shore.
+
+"The ocean!" gasped Sykes, and pointed a trembling hand toward their
+goal. "But--I had no idea--that suicide--was--such hard work!"
+
+The tall figure of Lieutenant McGuire turned to the shorter, breathless
+man, and he gripped hard at one of his hands.
+
+"Sykes," he said, "I'll never get another chance to say it--but you're
+one good scout!... Come on!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+McGuire fought to force his way through jungle growth, while screaming
+birds marked where they went. The sounds of their pursuers were close
+behind them when the two tore their way through the last snarled tangle
+of pale vine to stand on a sheer bluff, where, below, deep waters
+crashed against a rocky wall. They staggered with weariness and gulped
+sobbingly of the morning air. McGuire could have sworn he was exhausted
+beyond any further effort, yet from somewhere he summoned energy to
+spring savagely upon a tall, blood-red figure whose purpling face rose
+suddenly to confront them.
+
+One hand closed upon the metal tube that the other hand raised, and,
+with his final reserve of strength, the flyer wrapped an arm about the
+tall body and rushed it stumblingly toward the cliff. To be balked
+now!--to be brought back to that intolerable prison and the unthinkable
+role of traitor! The khaki-clad figure wrenched furiously at the deadly
+tube as they struggled and swayed on the edge of the cliff.
+
+He freed his arm quickly, and, regardless of the clawing thing that tore
+at his face and eyes, he launched one long swing for the horrible face
+above him. He saw the awkward fall of a lean body, and he swayed
+helplessly out to follow when the grip of Sykes' hand pulled him back
+and up to momentary safety.
+
+McGuire's mind held only the desire to kill, and he would have begun a
+staggering rush toward the shrieking mob that broke from the cover
+behind them, had not Sykes held him fast. At sight of the weapon, their
+own gas projector, still clutched in the flyer's hand, the pursuers
+halted. Their long arms pointed and their shrill calls joined in a
+chorus that quavered and fell uncertainly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One, braver than the rest, dashed forward and discharged his weapon. The
+spurting gas failed to reach its intended victims; it blew gently back
+toward the others who fled quickly to either side. Above the trees a
+giant ship nosed swiftly down, and McGuire pointed to it grimly and in
+silence. The men before them were massed now for a rush.
+
+"This is the end," said the flyer softly. "I wonder how this devilish
+thing works; there's a trigger here. I will give them a shot with the
+wind helping, then we'll jump for it."
+
+The ship was above them as the slim figure of Lieutenant McGuire threw
+itself a score of paces toward the waiting group. From the metal tube
+there shot a stream of pale vapor that swept downward upon the others
+who ran in panic from its touch.
+
+Then back--and a grip of a hand!--and two Earth-men who threw themselves
+out and downward from a sheer rock wall to the cool embrace of deep
+water.
+
+They came to the top, battered from their fall, but able to dive under a
+wave and emerge again near one another.
+
+"Swim!" urged Sykes. "Swim out! They may get us here--recover our
+bodies--resuscitate us. And that wouldn't do!"
+
+Another wave, and the two men were swimming beyond it; swimming feebly
+but steadily out from shore, while above them a great cylinder of
+shining metal swept past in a circling flight. They kept on while their
+eyes, from the wave tops, saw it turn and come slowly back in a long
+smooth descent.
+
+It was a hundred feet above the water a short way out at sea, and the
+two men made feeble motions with arms and legs, while their eyes
+exchanged glances of dismay.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A door had opened in the round under-surface, and a figure, whose
+gas-suit made it a bloated caricature of a man, was lowered from beneath
+in a sling. From the stern of the ship gaseous vapor belched downward to
+spread upon the surface of the water. The wind was bringing the misty
+cloud toward them. "The gas!" said McGuire despairingly. "It will knock
+us out, and then that devil will get us! They'll take us back! Our last
+chance--gone!"
+
+"God help us!" said Sykes weakly. "We can't--even--die--" His feeble
+strokes stopped, and he sank beneath the water. McGuire's last picture
+as he too sank and the waters closed over his head, was the shining ship
+hovering beyond.
+
+He wondered only vaguely at the sudden whirling of water around him. A
+solid something was rising beneath his dragging feet; a firm, solid
+support that raised him again to the surface. He realized dimly the air
+about him, the sodden form of Professor Sykes some few feet distant. His
+numbed brain was trying to comprehend what else the eyes beheld.
+
+A metal surface beneath them rose higher, shining wet, above the water;
+a metal tube raised suddenly from its shield, to swing in quick aim upon
+the enemy ship approaching from above.
+
+His eyes moved to the ship, and to the man-thing below in the sling. Its
+clothes were a mass of flame, and the figure itself was falling headlong
+through the air. Above the blazing body was the metal of the ship
+itself, and it sagged and melted to a liquid fire that poured, splashing
+and hissing, to the waters beneath. In the wild panic the great shape
+threw itself into the air; it swept out and up in curving flight to
+plunge headlong into the depths....
+
+The gas was drifting close, as McGuire saw an opening in the structure
+beside him. The voice of a man, human, kindly, befriending, said
+something of "hurry" and "gas," and "lift them carefully but make
+haste." The white faces of men were blurred and indistinct as McGuire
+felt himself lowered into a cool room and laid, with the unconscious
+form of Sykes, upon a floor.
+
+He tried to remember. He had gone down in the water--Sykes had drowned,
+and he himself--he was tired--tired. "And this,"--the thought seemed a
+certainty in his mind--"this is death. How--very--peculiar--" He was
+trying to twist his lips to a weak laugh as the lighted ports in the
+wall beside him changed from gold to green, then black--and a rushing of
+torn waters was in his ears....
+
+(_To be continued_)
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ ASTOUNDING STORIES
+ _Appears on Newsstands_
+ THE FIRST THURSDAY IN EACH MONTH
+
+
+
+
+The Sea Terror
+
+_By Captain S. P. Meek_
+
+ The trail of mystery gold leads Carnes and Dr. Bird to a
+ tremendous monster of the deep.
+
+[Illustration: "_The mass hung over the ship._"]
+
+
+"I beg your pardon, sir. I'm looking for Dr. Bird."
+
+The famous Bureau of Standards scientist appraised the speaker rapidly.
+Keen blue eyes stared questioningly at him from a mahogany brown face,
+criss-crossed with a thousand tiny wrinkles. The tattooed anchor on his
+hand and the ill-fitting blue serge suit smacked of the sea while the
+squareness of his shoulders and the direct gaze of his eye spoke
+eloquently of authority.
+
+"I'm Dr. Bird, Captain. What can I do for you?"
+
+"Thank you, Doctor, but I'm not a captain. My name is Mitchell and I am,
+or was, the first mate of the _Arethusa_."
+
+"The _Arethusa_!" Operative Carnes of the United States Secret Service
+sprang to his feet. "You said the _Arethusa_? There _were_ no
+survivors!"
+
+"I believe that I am the only one."
+
+"Where have you been hiding and why haven't you reported the fact of
+your rescue to the proper authorities? Tell the truth; I'm a federal
+officer!"
+
+Carnes flashed the gold badge of the Secret Service and an expression of
+anger crossed Mitchell's face.
+
+"If I had wished to talk to an officer I could have found plenty in New
+York," he said shortly. "I came to Washington in order to tell my story
+to Dr. Bird."
+
+The seaman and the detective glared at one another for a moment and then
+Dr. Bird intervened.
+
+"Pipe down, Carnes," he said softly. "Mr. Mitchell undoubtedly has
+reasons, excellent reasons, for his actions. Sit down, Mr. Mitchell, and
+have a cigar."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mitchell accepted the cigar which the doctor proferred and took a chair.
+He lighted the weed and after another glance of hostility toward the
+detective he pointedly ignored him and addressed his remarks to Dr.
+Bird.
+
+"I have no objection to telling you why I haven't spoken earlier,
+Doctor," he said. "When the _Arethusa_ sank, I must have hit my head on
+something, for the next thing I knew, I was in the Marine Hospital in
+New York. I had been picked up unconscious by a fishing boat and brought
+in, and I lay there a week before I knew anything. When I knew what I
+was doing I heard about the loss of my ship and was told that there were
+no survivors, and I didn't know what to do. The story I had to tell was
+so weird and improbable that I hesitated to speak to anyone about it. I
+was not sure at first that it was not a trick of a disordered brain, but
+since my head has cleared I am convinced of the truth of it ... and yet
+I know that it _can't_ be so. I have read about you and some of the
+things you have done, and so as soon as I was able to travel I came
+here to tell you about it. You will be better able to judge than I,
+whether what I tell you really happened or was only a vision."
+
+Dr. Bird leaned back in his chair and put the tips of his fingers
+together. Long, tapering fingers they were, sensitive and well shaped,
+though sadly marred by acid stains. It was in his hands alone that Dr.
+Bird showed the genius in his make-up, the artistry which inspired him
+to produce those miracles of experimentation which had made his name a
+household word in the realm of science. Aside from those hands he more
+resembled a pugilist than a scientist. A heavy shock of unruly black
+hair surmounted a face with beetling black brows and a prognathous jaw.
+His enormous head, with a breadth and height of forehead which were
+amazing, rose from a pillar-like neck which sprang from a pair of
+massive shoulders and the arching chest of the trained athlete. Dr. Bird
+stood six feet two inches in his socks, and weighed over two hundred
+stripped. As he leaned back a curious glitter, which Carnes had learned
+to associate with keen interest, showed for an instant in his eyes.
+
+"I will be glad to hear your story, Mr. Mitchell," he said softly. "Tell
+it in your own way and try not to omit any detail, no matter how trivial
+it may be."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The seaman nodded and sat silent for a moment as though marshaling his
+thoughts.
+
+"The story really starts the afternoon of May 12th," he said, "although
+I didn't realize the importance of the first incident at the time. We
+were steaming along at good speed, hoping to make New York before too
+late for quarantine, when a hail came from the forward lookout. I was on
+watch and I went forward to see what was the matter. The lookout was
+Louis Green, an able bodied seaman and a good one, but a confirmed
+drunkard. I asked him what the trouble was and he turned toward me a
+face that was haggard with terror.
+
+"'I've seen a sea serpent, Mr. Mitchell,' he said.
+
+"'Nonsense!' I replied sharply. 'You've been drinking again.'
+
+"He swore that he hadn't and I asked him to describe what he had seen.
+His teeth were chattering so that he could hardly speak, but he gasped
+out a story about seeing a monstrous head, a half mile across, he said,
+with a long snake body stretching out over the sea until the end of it
+was lost on the horizon. I turned my glass in the direction he pointed
+and of course there was nothing to be seen. The man's condition was such
+as to make him worse than useless as a lookout, so I relieved him and
+ordered him below. I took it for a touch of delirium tremens.
+
+"We were bucking a head wind, although not a very stiff one, and we
+didn't make port until after dark, so we anchored at quarantine, just
+off Staten Island, in forty fathoms of water, and Captain Murphy radioed
+for a Coast Guard boat to come out and lay by us for the night. As you
+have probably heard, we were carrying four millions in bar gold
+consigned to the Federal Reserve Bank of New York from the Bank of
+England."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dr. Bird and Carnes nodded. The inexplicable loss of the _Arethusa_ had
+occupied much space in the papers ten days earlier.
+
+"The cutter came out, signalled, and dropped anchor about three hundred
+yards away. So far, everything was exactly as it should be. I walked to
+the stern of the boat and looked out across the Atlantic and then I
+realized that Green wasn't the only one who could see things. The wind
+had fallen and it was getting pretty dark, but not too dark to see
+things a pretty good distance away. As I looked I saw, or thought I saw,
+a huge black leathery mass come to the surface a mile or so away. There
+were two things on it that looked like eyes, and I had a feeling as
+though some malignant thing was staring at me. I rubbed my eyes and
+looked again, but the vision persisted, and I went forward to get a
+glass. When I came back the thing, whatever it was, had disappeared, but
+the water where it had been was boiling as though there were a great
+spring or something of the sort under the surface.
+
+"I trained my glass on the disturbed area, and I will take my oath
+that I saw a huge body like a snake emerge from the water. It lay in
+long undulations on the waves, and moved with them as though it were
+floating. It was quite a bit nearer than the first thing had been and
+I could see it plainly with the glass. I would judge it to be fifteen
+or twenty feet thick, and it actually seemed to disappear in the
+distance as Green had described it. The sight of the thing sent shivers
+up and down my spine, and I gave a hoarse shout. The lookout hurried
+to my side and asked me what the trouble was. I pointed and handed
+him the glass. He looked through it and handed it back to me with a
+curious expression.
+
+"'I can't see nothing, sir,' he said.
+
+"I took the glass from him and tried to level it but my hands were
+trembling so that I was forced to rest it on the rail. The lookout was
+right. There was absolutely nothing to be seen and the peculiar
+appearance of the sea had subsided to normal. The lookout was staring at
+me rather curiously and I knew that he was thinking the same thing about
+me as I had thought about Green in the afternoon. I made some kind of an
+excuse and went below to pull myself together. I caught a glimpse of
+myself in the glass. I was as white as a sheet, and the sweat was
+running off my face in drops.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I shook myself together after a fashion and managed to persuade myself
+that the whole thing was just a trick of my mind, inspired by Green's
+vivid description of his delirious vision of the afternoon. Eight bells
+struck, and when Mr. Fulton, the junior officer, relieved me, I laid
+down and tried to quiet myself. I didn't have much luck. Just before I
+took the deck again at midnight I slipped down to the forecastle to see
+how Green was coming along. He was lying in his bunk, wide awake, with
+staring eyes.
+
+"'How are you feeling now, Green?' I asked.
+
+"He looked up at me with an expression of a man who has looked death in
+the face.
+
+"'Ain't there no chance of dockin' to-night, Mr. Mitchell?' he asked.
+
+"'Of course not,' I said rather sharply. 'What's the matter with you?
+Are you afraid your sea serpent will get us?'
+
+"'He'll get us if we stay out here to-night, sir,' he replied with an
+air of conviction. 'I saw the horrible mouth on him, large enough to
+bite this ship in half; and it had a beak like a bird, like a bloody
+parrot, sir. I saw its horrible body, too, with great black ulcers on
+the under side of it where the sharks had been after it. For all the
+shark takes a man now and then, he's the seaman's friend, sir, because
+he kills off the sea serpents who would take ship and all.'
+
+"'Nonsense, Green!' I said sharply. 'Don't talk any more such
+foolishness or I'll have you ironed. You've been drinking so much that
+you are seeing things, and I won't have the crew disturbed by your crazy
+talk.'
+
+"'You won't think it's talk when those big eyes stare into yours
+to-night, Mr. Mitchell, and that body twists around you and squeezes the
+life out of you. I don't care whether you iron me or not; I know that
+I'm doomed and so is everyone else; but I won't talk about it, sir. The
+crew might as well rest easy while they can, for there's no escape if we
+have to stay out here to-night.'
+
+"'Well, be sure you keep a tight mouth then,' I said, and left rather
+hurriedly. I was in a cold sweat, for his air of conviction, together
+with what I had seen, had shaken me pretty badly. I heard the watch
+changing up above, and knew there would be men in the forecastle in a
+minute. I didn't want to face them right then.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Mr. Fulton reported everything quiet when I went on deck to relieve
+him, and although I surveyed the water through a night glass for as far
+as I could see, there was nothing out of the way. The Coast Guard's
+lights were shining less than a quarter of a mile away, and things
+looked peaceful enough. The wind had gone down with the sun; the sea was
+almost glassy, and there was a bright moon.
+
+"After going around the ship, I relieved all of the watch except two men
+for lookouts, and sent them below to get a good night's sleep. If I
+hadn't done that, some of them might be alive now.
+
+"I paced the deck for an hour trying to quiet my nerves, but really
+getting more nervous every minute. Three bells struck and I walked
+forward and leaned on the rail to watch the water. I saw a peculiar
+swirl as though some large body were coming to the surface from below,
+and then I saw--it.
+
+"Dr. Bird, I take a drink once in a while when I am on shore, but never
+at sea and never in excess, and I know it wasn't a vision of drink
+delirium. I felt perfectly normal aside from my nervousness, and I don't
+think it was fever. Either I saw it or I am insane, for it is as vivid
+to me as though I were standing on the _Arethusa's_ deck and that
+monstrous horror was rising once more before my eyes."
+
+The seaman's face had become drawn and white as he talked, and drops of
+sweat were trickling from his chin. Carnes sat forward absorbed in his
+narrative while Dr. Bird sat back with a glitter in his black eyes and
+an expression of great attention on his face.
+
+"Go on, Mr. Mitchell," the doctor said soothingly. "Tell me just what
+you saw."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mitchell shuddered and glanced quickly around the laboratory as though
+to assure himself that he was safe within four walls.
+
+"From the surface of the sea," he went on, "rose a massive body, black,
+and of the appearance of wet leather. It must have been a couple of
+hundred yards across, although the size of objects is often magnified by
+moonlight and my terror may have added to its size. In the midst of it
+were two great discs, thirty feet across, which glowed red with the
+reflected moonlight. It stared for a moment and then rose higher until
+it towered above the ship; and then I saw, or thought I saw, a huge
+gaping beak like a parrot's. It was as Green had described it, large
+enough to bite the _Arethusa_ in half, and she was a ship of three
+thousand tons.
+
+"I was frozen with horror and couldn't move or cry out. As I watched, I
+saw the long snake-like body emerge from the water, and the estimate I
+had made of the size in the afternoon seemed pitifully inadequate.
+Presently a second and a third snake arose from the water, and then
+more, until the whole sea and the air above it seemed a writhing mass of
+huge snakes. I remember wondering why the watch of the Coast Guard
+cutter didn't sound an alarm, and then I realized that the thing had
+arisen on our port side and the cutter was on the starboard.
+
+"The mass of snakes writhed backward and forward, and then two of them
+rose in the air and hung over the ship. I could see the under side and I
+saw what Green had called the scars where the sharks had attacked. They
+were great cup-shaped depressions with vile white edges, and they did
+resemble huge sores or ulcers. They wavered over the ship for an
+instant, and then both of them dropped down on the deck.
+
+"I found my voice and I think that I gave a yell, but even as I opened
+my mouth, I realized the futility of it. The _Arethusa_ was sucked down
+into the sea as though it had been a tiny chip. I saw the water rising
+to the rail, and I think I cried out again. The ship tilted and I felt
+myself falling. The next thing I knew was when I was in the hospital and
+was told that I had been raving for a week. I was afraid to tell my
+story for fear I would be put in an asylum, so I kept a tight tongue in
+my head until I was discharged."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dr. Bird mused for a moment as the seaman's voice stopped.
+
+"You cried out all right, Mr. Mitchell," he said. "You gave two distinct
+shouts, both of which were heard by the watch on the _Wren_, the Coast
+Guard cutter. They reported that at 1:30, the _Arethusa_ sank without
+warning. As soon as he heard your shouts, the watch gave the alarm and
+the crew piled on deck. The _Arethusa_ was gone completely and the
+_Wren_ was tossing about like 'a chip in a whirlpool' as they
+graphically described it. The _Wren_ had steam up and they fought the
+waves and steamed over your anchoring ground looking for survivors, but
+they found none. The sea gradually subsided and they did the only thing
+they could do--dropped a buoy, to guide the salvage people, and radioed
+for assistance. The _Robin_ came out and joined them, and both cutters
+stood by until daylight, but nothing unusual was seen. The insurance
+people are trying to salvage the wreck now, but so far they have made
+little headway."
+
+"That brings me to the rest of the story, the part that made me decide
+to come to you, Doctor," said the seaman. "Did you see what happened to
+the divers yesterday?"
+
+Dr. Bird nodded.
+
+"I saw a brief account of it," he said. "It seems that two of them were
+lost through their lines getting fouled and their air connections
+severed in some way. I don't believe the bodies have been recovered
+yet."
+
+"They never will be recovered, Doctor. I was discharged from the
+hospital yesterday and the papers were just out with an account of it. I
+went down to the dock where the _John MacLean_, the salvage ship, ties
+up, and I talked to Captain Starley who commands it. I have known him
+casually for some years, although not intimately, and he gave me a few
+more details than the press got. He didn't connect me up at first with
+the Mitchell who was reported lost on the _Arethusa_.
+
+"The first man to go down from the _MacLean_ was Charley Melrose, an
+expert diver. He went down in a pressure outfit to the bottom and
+started to work. Everything was going along fine until the telephone
+suddenly rang and the man who answered it heard him say, 'Raise me, for
+God's sake! Hurry!' The signal for raising was given, but they hadn't
+got him more than thirty feet from the bottom before there came a tug on
+the line and he was gone! The air line, the lifting cable and the
+telephone cord floated free and were reeled in. Melrose had been plucked
+off the end of that line as you or I would pluck off a grape."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dr. Bird leaned forward with the curious glitter again in his eye.
+
+"Go on," he said tersely.
+
+"Blake, the other diver, donned a suit and insisted on being lowered at
+once. Starley tried to dissuade him but he insisted on going down. They
+lowered him over the side with a twelve-foot steel-shod pike in his
+hand. He never got to the bottom. He had not been lowered more than a
+hundred feet when a scream came over the telephone, and again there was
+a jerk on the lines which threatened to wreck the reel--and the line
+came aboard with no diver on the end of it. At the same time, Starley
+told me, the sea boiled and churned as though the whole bottom were
+coming up, and his ship was tossed about as though it were in a violent
+storm, although it was calm enough for forty fathom salvage work and
+that is pretty quiet, you know. Half the time his screws were out of
+water and he had a hard time to keep from being capsized. He fought his
+way out of the disturbed area, and as soon as he did, it started to
+quiet down, and in ten minutes it was calm again.
+
+"Starley was pretty badly shaken and besides he had lost both of his
+divers, so he came in and I saw him at the dock. When I heard his yarn,
+I took him into my confidence and told him what I had seen and that I
+proposed coming to you and asking your advice. I was afraid until I
+heard his story that it was merely a vision that I had had, but it
+certainly was no vision that plucked those two divers off their lines."
+
+"Has Captain Starley told that story to anyone else yet?"
+
+"No, Doctor, he hasn't. He promised not to talk until after I had seen
+you. I'll vouch for him; he'll keep his word through anything; and he is
+keeping his whole crew on board until he hears from me."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dr. Bird sprang to his feet.
+
+"Mr. Mitchell," he said energetically, "you have shown excellent
+judgment. Wire Captain Starley that you have seen me and that he is to
+hold his crew on board and to talk to no one until I get there. Carnes,
+telephone the Chief of Naval Operations and ask him to receive me in
+conference at once. Have him get the Secretary of the Navy in, too, if
+he is available. When you have finished that, telephone Bolton that you
+will be away from Washington indefinitely."
+
+"I'll telephone Admiral Buck for you, Doctor, but I don't dare telephone
+any such message to Bolton; he'd take my head off. He has been running
+the whole service ragged lately, and this is my first afternoon off duty
+in a fortnight."
+
+"What's the trouble, a flood of new counterfeits?"
+
+"No, the counterfeit division is getting along all right. In point of
+fact, they have lent us a dozen men. The trouble is a sudden big
+increase in Communist activity throughout the country, with the Young
+Labor party behind it. Bolton has been pretty jumpy since that Stokowski
+affair last August and he is afraid of another attempt of some sort on
+the President."
+
+"The Young Labor party? I thought that gang was bankrupt and out of
+business, since the Coast Guard broke up their alien smuggling scheme."
+
+"They were down and out for a while, but they are in funds again--and
+how! They must have three or four millions at least."
+
+"Where did they get it?"
+
+"That's what we have been trying to find out. The leaders have presented
+bars of gold to a dozen banks throughout the country and demanded
+specie. The banks shipped the gold to the mint and it was good gold,
+nine hundred and twenty-five fine. What we are trying to find out is how
+that gold got into the United States."
+
+"A shipment of that size should be easy to trace."
+
+"It would seem so, but it hasn't been. We have accounted for every pound
+of every shipment that has come in through a port of entry, and we have
+checked almost that close on the output of every mine in the United
+States. If the gold came from Russia, it would have had to cross Europe,
+and we can't get any trace of it from abroad. It looks as though they
+were _making_ it."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dr. Bird rubbed his head thoughtfully.
+
+"Possible, but hardly probable," he said. "How much did you say they
+had?"
+
+"Over three millions in thirty-pound bars. Each bar shows signs of
+having a mint mark chiselled off, but that don't help much for they have
+done too good a job. It has us pretty well bluffed."
+
+Again Dr. Bird rubbed his head.
+
+"Telephone Admiral Buck, and then phone Bolton and tell him exactly what
+I told you to: that you will be away indefinitely. When he gets through
+exploding, tell him that you are going with me and that possibly, just
+barely possibly, we might be on the trail of that gold shipment."
+
+"On the trail of the gold!" gasped Carnes. "Surely, Doctor, you don't
+think--"
+
+"Once in a while, old dear," replied the Doctor with a chuckle, "which
+is more than anyone in the Secret Service does. You might tell Bolton
+that I said that, but hang up quickly if you do. I don't want the wires
+of my telephone melted off. No, Carnesy, I have no miraculous
+inspiration as to where that gold is coming from; I just have a plain
+old-fashioned hunch, and that hunch is that we are going to have lots of
+fun and more than our share of danger before we see Washington again.
+After you get through bearding Bolton in his den, you might call the
+Chief of the Air Corps and ask him to have a bomber held at Langley
+Field subject to my orders. If he squawks any, I'll talk to him."
+
+He turned to a telephone which stood on his desk and lifted the
+receiver.
+
+"Get Mr. Lambertson on the wire," he said. "He is the chief technician
+of the Pyrex Glass Works at Corning, New Jersey."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The _U.S.S. Minneconsin_ steamed out of New York harbor and headed down
+toward the lower bay. On her forward deck rested a huge globe. The
+bottom quarter of the sphere was made of some dark opaque substance but
+the upper portion was transparent as crystal. Through the walls could be
+seen a quantity of apparatus resting on the opaque bottom portion. Two
+mechanics from the Bureau of Standards were making final adjustments of
+one of the pieces of apparatus, which resembled a tank fitted with a
+piston geared to an electric motor. From the tank, tubes ran to four
+hollow pipes, an inch and a half in diameter, which ran through the skin
+and extended thirty inches from the outer skin of the twenty-foot
+sphere. Dr. Bird stood near talking with the executive officer of the
+ship and from time to time giving a brief word of direction to the
+mechanics.
+
+"It's safer than you might think, Commander," he said. "In the first
+place, that globe is not made of ordinary glass; it is made of
+vitrilene, a new semi-malleable glass which was developed at the Bureau
+and which is being made on an experimental scale for us by the Pyrex
+people. It is much stronger than ordinary glass, and is not sensitive to
+shock. It is also perfectly transparent to ultra-violet light, being
+superior even to rock crystal or fused quartz in that respect. The
+walls, as you have noticed, are four inches thick, and I have calculated
+that the ball will stand a uniform external pressure of thirty-five
+hundred atmospheres, the pressure which would be encountered at a depth
+of about twenty miles. I believe that it will stand a squeeze of six
+thousand tons without buckling, and it is impossible to fracture it by
+shock. It could be dropped from the top of the Woolworth Building, and
+it would just bounce."
+
+"It seems incredible that it could stand such a pressure as you have
+named."
+
+"My figures are conservative ones. Lambertson calculated them even
+higher, but we allowed for the fact that this is the first large mass of
+the material to be cast, and lowered them."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"But suppose your lifting cable should break?" objected the naval
+officer. "The outfit weighs a good many tons."
+
+"You notice that the lower quarter is made of lead. The specific gravity
+of the entire globe when sealed up tight with two men in it is only a
+little more than unity. In the water its weight is so little that a
+three-inch manilla hawser would raise it, let alone a steel cable. I
+have another safety device. Granted that the cable should snap, I can
+detach the lead from it and it would shoot to the surface like a
+rocket."
+
+"How long can you remain under water in it?"
+
+"A week, if necessary. I have an oxygen tank and a carbon dioxide
+removing apparatus which will keep the air in good condition. The globe
+is electrically lighted, and can be heated if necessary. Should my
+telephone line become fouled and broken, I have a radio set which will
+enable me to communicate with you. I can't see that it is especially
+dangerous; not nearly as much so as a submarine."
+
+"What is your object in going down, if I may ask?"
+
+"To take pictures and to explore the wreck if we can. The globe is
+equipped with huge floodlights and excellent cameras. The salvage people
+are having a little trouble and we are trying to help them out."
+
+"You mentioned exploring. Can you leave the globe while it is under
+water?"
+
+"Yes. There is a locking device for doing so. A man in a diving suit can
+enter the lock and fill it with water. Once the external pressure is
+released he can open the outer door and step out. Coming back, he seals
+the outer door and the man inside blows out the lock and compressed air
+and then the inner door can be opened. It is the same principle as a
+torpedo tube."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A jangle of bells interrupted them and the _Minneconsin_ slowed down.
+Commander Lawrence stepped to the rail and gave a sharp order to the
+navigating officer on the bridge. The bells jangled again and the ship's
+engines stopped.
+
+"We are almost over the buoy, Doctor," he said.
+
+Dr. Bird nodded and spoke to the two mechanics. With a few final
+touches to the apparatus they emerged from the globe and Dr. Bird
+entered.
+
+"Come on, Carnes," he called. "No backing out at the last minute."
+
+Carnes stepped forward with a sickly smile and joined the Doctor in the
+huge sphere.
+
+"All right, boys; close her up."
+
+The mechanics swung the outer door into place with a crane. Both the
+edge of the door and the surface against which it fitted had been ground
+flat and were in addition faced with soft rubber. Bolts were fastened in
+the door which passed through holes in the main sphere, and Dr. Bird
+spun nuts onto them and tightened them with a heavy wrench. He and
+Carnes lifted the smaller inner door into place and bolted it tight. Dr.
+Bird stepped to the telephone.
+
+"Lower away," he directed.
+
+From a boom attached to the _Minneconsin's_ forward fighting top, a huge
+steel cable swung down, and the latch at the end of the cable was closed
+over a vitrilene ring which was fastened to the top of the sphere. The
+cable tightened and the globe with the two men in it was lifted over the
+side of the battleship and lowered gently into the water. Carnes
+involuntarily ducked and threw up his hand as the waters closed over
+them. Dr. Bird laughed.
+
+"Look up, Carnes," he said.
+
+Carnes gasped as he looked up and saw the surface of the water above
+him. Dr. Bird laughed again and turned to the telephone.
+
+"Lower away," he said. "Everything is tight."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The globe descended into the depths of the sea. Darker and darker it
+grew until only a faint twilight glow filled the sphere. A dark bulk
+loomed before them. Dr. Bird snapped on one of his huge floodlights and
+pointed.
+
+"The _Arethusa_," he said.
+
+The ill-fated vessel lay on her side with a huge jagged hole torn in her
+fabric amidships.
+
+"That's where her boilers burst," explained the Doctor. "Luckily we have
+a hard bottom to deal with. Let's see if we can locate any of Mitchell's
+sea serpents."
+
+He turned on other flood lights and swept the bottom of the sea with
+them. The huge beams bored out into the water for a quarter of a mile,
+but nothing unusual was to be seen. Dr. Bird turned his attention again
+to the wreck.
+
+"Things look normal from this side," he said after a prolonged scrutiny.
+"I'll have the _Minneconsin_ steam around it while we look it over."
+
+In response to his telephone orders the ship above them swung around the
+wreck in a circle, and Carnes and the Doctor viewed each side in turn.
+But nothing of a suspicious nature made its appearance. The sphere
+stopped opposite the hole in the side and Dr. Bird turned to Carnes.
+
+"I'm going to put on a diving suit and explore that wreck," he said. "If
+there ever was any danger, it isn't apparent now; and I can't find out
+anything until I get inside."
+
+"Don't do it, Doctor!" cried Carnes. "Remember what happened to the
+other divers!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"We don't know what happened to them, Carnes. No matter what it was,
+there is no danger apparent right now, and I've got to get into that
+ship before I can get any real information. We could have lowered an
+under-sea camera and learned as much as we have so far."
+
+"Let me go instead of you, Doctor."
+
+"I'm sorry to refuse you, old dear, but frankly, I wouldn't trust your
+judgment as to what you had seen if you went alone; and we can't both
+go."
+
+"Why not?"
+
+"If we both went, who would work the air to let us back in? No, this is
+a one-man job and I'm the one to do it. While I am gone, keep a sharp
+lookout, and if you see anything unusual call me at once."
+
+"How can I call you?"
+
+"On this small radio phone. A pair of receivers tuned to the right
+wave-length are in my diving helmet, and I will be able to hear you
+although I can't reply. I won't be gone long: I have only a small air
+tank, large enough to keep me going for thirty minutes. Now help me into
+my suit and keep a sharp watch. A timely warning may save my life if
+anything happens."
+
+With Carnes' assistance, Dr. Bird donned a deep-sea diving outfit and
+screwed down the helmet. He crawled through the inner door into the lock
+and lifted the inner door into place. Carnes fastened the door with nuts
+and the Doctor opened a pair of valves in the outer door and filled the
+lock with water. He removed the outer door; and, taking in one hand a
+steel-shod twelve-foot pike with a hook on the end, and in the other a
+waterproof flashlight, he sallied forth. As he left the shell he paused
+for a moment, and then returned and picked up the heavy wrench with
+which he had removed the nuts holding the outer door into place. He
+fastened the tool to the belt of his suit. Then, with a wave of his hand
+toward the detective, he approached the hulk.
+
+The hole in the side was too high for him to reach, but he hooked the
+end of his pike in one of the joints of the _Arethusa's_ plates and
+climbed slowly and painfully up the side of the vessel. As he
+disappeared into the hull, Carnes realized with a sudden start that he
+had been watching his friend and neglecting the duty imposed on him of
+keeping a sharp watch. He turned quickly to the floodlights and searched
+the sea bottom.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Nothing appeared, and the minutes moved as slowly as hours should.
+Carnes felt that he had been submerged alone for weeks, and his nerves
+grew so tense that he felt that he would scream in another instant. A
+sudden thought sobered him like a dash of cold water. If he screamed,
+Dr. Bird would take it for an alarm signal and possibly be afraid to
+emerge from the vessel. His watch showed him that the Doctor had been
+gone for twenty-five minutes and he moved slowly to the radio
+transmitter.
+
+"Dr. Bird," he said slowly and distinctly, "you have been gone nearly
+thirty minutes. Nothing alarming has appeared but I will feel better
+when I see you coming back."
+
+He glued his eyes on the opening in the ship's side and waited. Five
+minutes passed, and then ten, with no signs of the Doctor. Carnes moved
+again to the receiver.
+
+"It has been over half an hour. Doctor," he cried in a pleading voice.
+"If you are all right, for God's sake show yourself. I am frantic with
+worry."
+
+Another five minutes passed, and the sweat dripped in a steady stream
+from the detective's chin. Suddenly he gave a sob of relief and sank
+back against the side of the globe. A bulky figure showed at the edge of
+the hole, and Dr. Bird climbed slowly and heavily out of the hold and
+dropped to the sea bottom. He lay prone for a moment before he rose and
+made his way with evident effort toward the sphere. He entered the
+compartment and with a heroic effort lifted the outer door into place,
+and feebly and with fumbling fingers placed nuts on the bolts. His hands
+wandered uncertainly toward the valves and closed the upper one. He
+waved his hand toward Carnes and sank in a heap on the floor of the
+lock.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+With trembling hands Carnes connected the air and opened the valve. Air
+flowed into the lock and the water was gradually forced out. When the
+lock was empty, he waited for Dr. Bird to close the outer valve but the
+Doctor did not move. Carnes tore at the bolts which held the inner door
+and threw his weight against it. It held against his assault, and he
+thought frantically. An inspiration came to him, and he disconnected
+the air valve. With a whistling rush, the air from the lock rushed into
+the sphere and he forced open the inner door. A stream of sea water
+drove against his feet through the open valve, and he reached for the
+valve to close it. The force of the water held it open for a moment, but
+he threw every ounce of his strength into the effort. The valve slowly
+closed.
+
+It was beyond his strength to haul the heavy Doctor with his pressure
+diving suit through the restricted confines of the inner door, so Carnes
+wormed his way into the lock and with trembling fingers unscrewed the
+helmet of the Doctor's diving suit. The helmet clanged to the floor and
+Carnes scooped up his hands full of water and dashed it into the
+Doctor's face. There was no response and he was at his wit's end. He
+sprang for the radio to order the sphere hauled up when his glance fell
+on the oxygen tank. It took him only a moment to connect a rubber hose
+to the tank, and in a few seconds a blast of the life-giving gas was
+blowing into the scientist's face. Dr. Bird gave a convulsive gasp or
+two and opened his eyes.
+
+"Shut off the juice, Carnes," he said faintly. "Too much of that's
+bad."
+
+Carnes shut off the oxygen and Dr. Bird struggled to a sitting position
+and inhaled deep breaths.
+
+"That was a narrow squeak, old dear," he said faintly. "Give me a hand
+and I'll climb in."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+With the detective's aid he climbed into the sphere and Carnes fastened
+the inner door. Slowly the Doctor rid himself of the diving suit and lay
+prone on the floor, his breath still coming in gasps.
+
+"Thanks for your warning about the time, Carnes," he said. "I knew that
+my air supply was running short but I was caught down there and couldn't
+readily free myself. I thought for a while that my time had come, but it
+wasn't so written. By the looks of things, I freed myself just in
+time."
+
+"Did you find out anything?" asked the detective eagerly.
+
+"I did," replied Dr. Bird grimly. "For one thing, the gold is no longer
+in the hold of the _Arethusa_."
+
+"It's gone?"
+
+"Clean as a whistle, every bar of it. A hole has been cut in the vault
+around the combination, and the bars slid back and the door opened. The
+gold has been stolen."
+
+"Might it not have been stolen before the vessel sank?"
+
+"The idea occurred to me of course, and I examined things pretty
+carefully. I know that the theft occurred after the vessel sank."
+
+"How could you tell?"
+
+"For one thing, the hole was cut with an under-water cutting torch. For
+the second, look here."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Doctor rolled up his trousers and showed the detective his leg.
+Carnes cried out as he saw huge purple welts on it.
+
+"What caused that?" he cried.
+
+"As I entered the vault, I stepped full into a steel bear trap which was
+set there for the purpose of catching and holding anyone who entered.
+Someone has visited the _Arethusa_, since she sank, and looted her, and
+also arranged so that any diver who got as far as the vault would never
+return to the surface to tell of it. Luckily for myself, I carried a
+heavy wrench and was able to free myself. Most divers don't carry such a
+thing."
+
+"But who could have done it?"
+
+"That's what we have got to find out, and we aren't going to do it down
+here. Give the word to have us hauled up; and, Carnes, don't mention
+anything about the looting of the vessel. Allow it to be understood that
+I couldn't get into the hold. We'll head back for New York at once. I
+want to have a few small changes made in this sphere before we use it
+again. While I am doing that, I want you to get hold of the Coast Guard
+or the Immigration Service or whoever it is that has the complete
+records in that case of alien smuggling, by the Young Labor party. When
+you get the information, report to me and we'll go over it. You might
+also drop a hint to Captain Starley that will stop all further attempts
+at salvage operations for a few days. Tell him that I'll arrange to have
+a Coast Guard cutter guard the locality of the wreck."
+
+"Won't that be rather risky for the cutter?"
+
+"I think not. The gold is gone and there is no reason to apprehend any
+further danger in that locality, at least for the present."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At nine o'clock next morning Carnes and Dr. Bird sat in the office of
+Lieutenant Commander Minden of the United States Coast Guard, listening
+intently to the history of the alien smuggling case. Commander Minden
+was saying:
+
+"Their boats would load up and clear ostensibly for Rio de Janeiro or
+some other South American port, but once they were in the Atlantic, they
+would alter their course and head from the Massachusetts coast. Of
+course, we had no right to interfere with them on the high seas, and
+they never came closer than fifty miles of our coast line. When they got
+that close, they would cruise slowly back and forth for a few days and
+then steam away south to the port they had cleared for. When they got
+there, of course there were no passengers on board.
+
+"We patrolled the coast carefully while they were around but we never
+got any indication of any landing of aliens and yet we knew they were
+being landed in some way. We drew lines so close that a cork couldn't
+get by without being seen and we even had the air patrolled, but with no
+results. Eventually the air patrol was the thing that gave them away.
+
+"They had been operating so successfully that they evidently got
+careless and started a load off late in the night so they didn't reach
+the coast by dawn. A Navy plane was flying along the coast-line about
+twelve miles off when they spotted a submarine running parallel with the
+coast, headed north. It didn't look like an American craft and they went
+on and radioed Washington and found that we had no under-sea craft in
+that neighborhood. They returned to their patrol and followed the sub
+for a matter of thirty or forty miles up the coast, and then it turned
+in right toward the shore. The shore line there is rocky, and, at the
+point where the sub was heading, it falls sheer about two hundred
+fathoms. The sub ran right at the cliff and disappeared from view."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Lieutenant Commander Minden paused impressively. Carnes and Dr. Bird set
+forward in their chairs, for it was evident that the crux of the story
+was at hand.
+
+"When the plane reported what they had seen, we knew how those aliens
+were being landed. The point where the sub went in gave us a good idea
+of the location of their base and we threw a cordon of men around and
+searched. A Navy sub was sent to the scene and they reported that there
+was a tunnel opening into the rock, about a hundred fathoms under water,
+running for they had no idea how far under the land. They stayed to
+guard the hole while we combed the land. It took us a week to locate the
+place, but we traced some truck loads of food and finally found it. This
+tunnel ran under the land for a mile and then ended in a large cave
+underground. The Young Labor party had established a regular receiving
+depot there, and took the aliens from the sub and kept them for a day or
+two until they had a chance to load them into trucks and run them into
+Boston or some other town in the night.
+
+"Once we had the place spotted, we sent a gang in and captured the whole
+works without any trouble. The underground cavern had no natural opening
+to the surface, but one had been made by blasting. We captured the
+whole lot and then sealed the end of the hole with rock and concrete.
+That was the end of the affair."
+
+"Thank you, Commander; you have given us a very graphic description of
+it. I suppose you could find the entrance which was sealed up?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"Easily. I led the raiding party. I forgot to mention one blunder we
+made. Evidently some word of our plans leaked out, for the sub which was
+guarding the outer end of the tunnel was called away by a radio message
+supposed to be from the Navy Department. It had gone only a short
+distance, however, when the commander smelled a rat and made his way
+back. He was too late. He was just in time to see the sub emerge from
+the hole and head into the open sea. He gave chase, but the other sub
+was faster than the Navy boat and it got clear away. The leader of the
+gang must have been on it, for we didn't get him."
+
+"Who was the leader?"
+
+"From some records we captured, his name was Ivan Saranoff. I never saw
+him."
+
+"Saranoff?" said Dr. Bird thoughtfully. "The name seems familiar. Where
+have I--Thunder! I know now. He was at one time a member of the faculty
+of St. Petersburg. He was one of the leading biologists of his time.
+Carnes, we've found our man."
+
+"If you are thinking of Saranoff, I am afraid you are mistaken, Doctor,"
+said Commander Minden. "Neither he nor his submarine have ever been
+heard of since and it has been generally conceded that they were lost at
+sea. We had some pretty rough weather just after that affair."
+
+"Rough weather doesn't mean much to a sub, Commander. I expect that he's
+our man. At any rate, the place we want to go is the end of that
+tunnel."
+
+"I'm at your service, Doctor."
+
+"Carnes, get the location of that tunnel entrance from Commander Minden
+and order the _Minneconsin_ to proceed north along the coast to that
+vicinity and stand by for radio orders. I am going to telephone Mitchell
+Field and get a plane. We have no time to lose."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The plane from Mitchell Field roared down to a landing, and Carnes, Dr.
+Bird and Commander Minden dismounted from the rear cockpit and looked
+around. They had landed in a smooth field at the base of a rise almost
+rugged enough to be called a mountain. A group of three men were
+standing near them as they got out of the plane. One of the men
+approached.
+
+"Dr. Bird?" asked the newcomer. "I am Tom Harron, United States Marshal.
+These two men are deputies. I understand that I am to report to you for
+orders."
+
+"I'm glad to know you, Mr. Harron. This is Operative Carnes of the
+Secret Service and Commander Minden of the Coast Guard. We are going to
+explore an underground cavern that is located in this vicinity."
+
+"Do you mean the one where they used to smuggle aliens? That is closed
+up. I was in charge of that work and we closed it tight as a drum two
+years ago."
+
+"Can you find the entrance?"
+
+"Sure. It isn't over a mile from here."
+
+"Lead the way, then. We want to take a look at it."
+
+The marshal led the way toward the eminence and took a path which led up
+a gully in its side. He paused for a moment to take his bearings and
+then turned sharply to his left and climbed part way up the side of the
+ravine.
+
+"Here it is," he announced. An expression of astonishment crossed his
+face and he examined the ground closely. "By Golly, Doc," he went on as
+he straightened up, "this place has been opened since I left it!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Dr. Bird hurried forward and joined him. The heavy stone and concrete
+with which the entrance to the cavern had been sealed were undisturbed,
+but in the side of the hill was set a steel door beside the concrete.
+There was no sign of a keyhole or other means of entering it.
+
+"Was this steel door part of your work?" asked Carnes.
+
+"No, sir, it wasn't. We sealed it solid. That door has been put there
+since."
+
+Dr. Bird closely examined the structure. He tapped it and went around
+the edges and then straightened up and took a small pocket compass from
+his pocket and opened the case. The needle swung crazily for a moment
+and then pointed straight toward the door.
+
+"A magnetic lock," he exclaimed. "If we could find the power line it
+would be easy to force, but finding that line might take us a week. At
+any rate, we have found out what we were after. This is their base from
+which they are operating. Mr. Harron, I want you to station a guard
+armed with rifles at this door day and night until I personally relieve
+you. Remember, until I relieve you, in person. Verbal or written orders
+don't go. Capture or kill anyone who tries to enter or leave the cavern
+through this entrance. Just now we'll find that cavern more vulnerable
+from the sea end, and that is where I mean to attack. We'll force that
+door and explore from this end later. Commander Minden, you may stay
+here with Mr. Harron, if you like, or you may come with Carnes and me.
+We are going on board the _Minneconsin_."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The Mitchell Field plane roared to a take-off and bore south along the
+coast. Half an hour of flying brought them in view of the battleship
+steaming at full speed up the coast. Dr. Bird radioed instructions to
+the ship, and an hour later a launch picked them up from the beach and
+took them out. As soon as they were on board they resumed their
+progress, and in two hours the peak that Dr. Bird had marked as a
+landmark was opposite.
+
+"Steam in as close to the shore as you can safely," he said, "and then
+lower us. Once we are down, you will be guided by our telephoned
+instructions. Come on, Carnes, let's go."
+
+The detective followed him into the sphere as the _Minneconsin_ edged up
+toward the shore. The huge ball was lifted from the deck and lowered
+gently into two hundred fathoms of water. It was pitch dark at that
+depth, and Dr. Bird switched on one floodlight and studied the cliff
+which rose a hundred yards from them.
+
+"We have missed the place, Carnes," he said. "We'll have them pull us up
+a few hundred feet and then steam along the coast."
+
+He turned to the telephone and the sphere rose while the battleship
+steamed slowly ahead, the vitrilene ball following in her wake. For a
+quarter of a mile they continued on their way, and then Dr. Bird halted
+the ship.
+
+"What depth are we?" he asked. "Eighty fathoms? All right, lower us,
+please."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The ball sank until it rested on the sea bottom, and Dr. Bird turned on
+two additional floodlights and studied the surroundings. The bed of the
+ocean was literally covered with lobster and crab shell, with the bones
+of fish scattered here and there among them. A few bones of land animals
+were mixed with the debris and Carnes gave a gasp as Dr. Bird pointed
+out to him a diving helmet.
+
+"We are on the right track," said the scientist grimly. He stepped to
+the telephone and ordered the sphere raised to one hundred fathoms. The
+ship moved forward along the coast until Dr. Bird again stepped to the
+telephone and halted it. Before them yawned the entrance to the
+underground tunnel. It was about two hundred feet high and three hundred
+across, and their most powerful beams would not penetrate to the end of
+it. A pile of debris could be seen on the floor of the tunnel and
+Carnes fancied that he could see another diving helmet among the litter.
+Dr. Bird pointed toward the side of the cavern.
+
+"See those floodlights fastened to the cliff so that their beams will
+sweep across the mouth of the tunnel when they are lighted?" he said.
+"Apparently the cave is used as a prison and the light beams are the
+bars. The creature is not at home just now or the bars would be up. My
+God! Look at that, Carnes!"
+
+Carnes stared and echoed the Doctor's cry of surprise. Clinging to a
+shelf of rock which extended out from the wall of the cavern and half
+hidden among the seaweed was a huge marine creature. It looked like a
+huge black slug with rudimentary eyes and mouth. The thing was fifty
+feet in length and fully fifteen feet in diameter. It hung there, moving
+sluggishly as though breathing, and rudimentary tentacles projecting
+from one end moved in the water.
+
+"What is it, Doctor?" asked Carnes in a voice of awe.
+
+"It is a typical trochosphere of the giant octopus, the devil fish of
+Indian Ocean legend, multiplied a thousand times," he replied. "When the
+octopus lays its eggs, they hatch out into the larval form. The free
+swimming larva is known as a trochosphere, and I am positive that that
+is what we see; but look at the size of the thing! Man alive, if that
+ever developed, I can't conceive of its dimensions!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+"I have seen pictures of a huge octopus pulling down a ship," said
+Carnes, "but I always fancied they were imaginary."
+
+"They are. This monstrosity before us is no product of nature. A dozen
+of them would depopulate the seas in a year. It is a hideous parody of
+nature conceived in the brain of a madman and produced by some glandular
+disturbance. Saranoff spent years in glandular experimentation, and no
+doubt he has managed to stimulate the thyroid of a normal octopus and
+produce a giant. I fancy that the immediate parent of the thing before
+us was of normal size, and so, probably, are its brothers and sisters.
+The phenomenon of giantism of this nature occurs in alternate
+generations and then only in rare instances. Its grandparent may not be
+far away, however. I wish it was safe to use a submarine to explore that
+cavern."
+
+"Why isn't it?"
+
+"Any creature powerful enough to pull the _Arethusa_ under water would
+crush a frail submarine without effort. Anyway, a Navy sub isn't built
+for under-water exploration like this ball is. The window space is quite
+limited and they aren't equipped with powerful floodlights. I would like
+to be able to reach that thing and destroy it, but it can wait until
+later. The best thing we can do is to put out our lights and wait."
+
+His hand sought the light switch, and the globe became dark. Only a tiny
+glimmer of light came down to them from the surface, a hundred fathoms
+above. In the darkness they stared into the depths of the sea.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For an hour they waited and then Dr. Bird grasped Carnes by the
+shoulder and pointed. Far in the distance could be seen a tiny point
+of light. It wavered and winked and at times disappeared, but it was
+gradually approaching them. Dr. Bird stepped to the telephone and the
+_Minneconsin_ moved a hundred yards further from the shore. The light
+disappeared again as though hidden by some opaque body. Their eyes
+had become accustomed to the dim light and they could dimly see a long
+snake-like body approach the globe and then suddenly withdraw.
+
+The light appeared again only a few hundred yards away. The water
+swirled and the sphere swayed drunkenly as some gigantic body moved past
+it with express train speed and entered the mouth of the cavern. The
+light turned toward them and they could see the dim outlines of a small
+submarine on which it was mounted. Another rush of water came as the
+object which had entered the cave started to leave it, and the light
+swung around. It bore on a huge black body, and was reflected with a red
+glow from huge eyes, and the creature backed again into the cave. Back
+and forth across the mouth of the cavern the light played, and the
+watchers caught a glimpse of a huge parrot beak which could have
+engulfed a freight car. From the cavern projected twisting tentacles of
+gargantuan dimensions, and red eyes, thirty feet in diameter, glared
+balefully at them. For several minutes the light of the submarine played
+across the mouth of the cave, and then the floodlights on the cliff
+sprang into full glow and bathed the ball and the mouth of the tunnel in
+a flood of light.
+
+Before their horrified gaze was an octopus of a size to make them
+disbelieve their eyes. The submarine had moved up to within a few feet
+of them, and the light from it played full on the ball. The submarine
+maneuvered in the vicinity, keeping the ball full in the beam of its
+light, and then drew back. As it did so, the floodlights on the cliff
+died out and the beam of the submarine's light was directed away from
+them. Dr. Bird jumped to the telephone.
+
+"Head straight out to sea and full speed ahead!" he shouted. "Don't try
+to pull us in; tow us!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The ball swayed as the _Minneconsin's_ mighty engines responded to his
+orders and the cliff wall disappeared.
+
+"As long as they know we're here, we might as well announce our presence
+in good style," said the doctor grimly as he closed a switch and threw
+all of the sphere's huge lights into action. He had turned on the lights
+just in time, for even as he did so a mighty tentacle shot out of the
+darkness and wrapped itself around the ball. For a moment it clung there
+and then was withdrawn.
+
+"The thing can't stand light," remarked the doctor as he threw off the
+switch. "That sub was herding it like a cow by the use of a light beam.
+As long as we are lighted up we are safe from attack."
+
+"Then for God's sake turn on the lights!" cried Carnes.
+
+"I want it to attack us," replied the doctor calmly. "We have no
+offensive weapons and only by meeting an attack can we harm the thing."
+
+As he spoke there came a soft whisper of sound from the vitrilene walls
+and they were thrown from their feet by a sudden jerk. Dr. Bird stumbled
+to the switch and closed it, and the ball was flooded with light. Two
+arms were now on them but they were slowly withdrawn as the lights
+glared forth. The huge outlines of the beast could be seen as it
+followed them toward the surface. Its great eyes glared at them
+hungrily. The submarine was visible only as a speck of light in the
+distance.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The _Minneconsin's_ speed was picking up under the urge of her huge
+steam turbines, and the ball was nearing the surface. The sea was light
+enough now that they could see for quite a distance. The telephone bell
+jangled and Dr. Bird picked the receiver from its hook.
+
+"Hello," he said. "What's that? You can? By all means, fire. Yes,
+indeed, we're well out of danger; we must be thirty or forty feet down.
+Watch the fun now," he went on to Carnes as he replaced the receiver.
+"The beast is showing above the surface and they're going to shell it."
+
+They watched the surface and suddenly there came a flash of light
+followed by a dull boom of sound. The huge octopus suddenly sank below
+them, thrashing its arms about wildly.
+
+"A hit!" shouted Dr. Bird into the telephone. "Get it again if it shows
+up. I want it to get good and mad."
+
+He turned off the lights in the ball and the octopus attacked again. The
+shell had taught it caution and it kept well down, but three huge arms
+came up from the depths of the sea and wrapped themselves about the
+ball. The forward motion stopped for a moment, and then came a jerk that
+threw them down. The ball started to sink.
+
+"Our cable has parted!" cried the doctor. "Turn on the lights!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Carnes closed the switch. The ball was so covered with the huge
+tentacles that they could see nothing, but the light had its usual
+effect and they were released. The ball sank toward the bottom and they
+could see the huge cephalopod lying below watching them. Blood was
+flowing from a wound near one of its eyes where the _Minneconsin's_
+shell had found its mark.
+
+Toward the huge monster they sank until they lay on the bottom of the
+ocean and a few yards from it. In an instant the sea became opaque and
+they could see nothing.
+
+"He has shot his ink!" cried the doctor. "Here comes the real attack.
+Strap yourself to the wall where you can reach one of the motor
+switches."
+
+Through the darkness huge arms came out and wrapped themselves around
+the ball. The heavy vitrilene groaned under the enormous pressure which
+was applied, but it held. The ink was clearing slightly and they could
+see that the sphere was covered by the arms. The mass moved and the huge
+maw opened before them. The pipes projecting from the sides of the ball
+were buried in the creature's flesh.
+
+"Good Lord, he's going to swallow us!" gasped the doctor. "Quick,
+Carnes, the motor switch."
+
+He closed one of them as he spoke, and the powerful little electric
+motors began to hum, forcing forward the piston attached to the tank
+connected to the hollow rods. Steadily the little motors hummed, and the
+tank emptied through the rods into the body of the giant cephalopod.
+
+"I hope the stuff works fast," groaned the doctor as they approached
+closer to the giant maw. "I never tried giving an octopus a hypodermic
+injection of prussic acid before, but it ought to do the business.
+There's enough acid there to kill half New York City."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Carnes blanched as the ball approached the mouth. One by one the arms
+unwound until only one was holding them and the jaws opened wider. They
+were almost in them when the motion stopped. They could feel a shudder
+run through the arm which held them. For a moment the arm alternately
+expanded and contracted, almost releasing them only to clutch them
+again. Another arm came from the depths and whipped about the ball, and
+again the vitrilene groaned at the pressure which was applied. The arms
+were suddenly withdrawn and the ball started to sink.
+
+"Drop the lead, Carnes!" cried the doctor. With the aid of the detective
+he operated the electric catches which held the huge mass of lead to the
+bottom, and the sphere shot up through the water like a rocket. It
+leaped clear of the water and fell back with a splash. A half mile away
+the _Minneconsin_ was swinging in a wide circle to head back toward
+them. They turned their gaze toward the shore.
+
+As they looked a giant arm shot a hundred yards up into the air,
+twisting and writhing frantically. It disappeared, and another, and then
+half a dozen flashed into the air. The arms dipped below the surface. A
+huge black body reared its bulk free from the water for a moment, and
+the sea boiled as though in a violent storm. The body sank and again the
+arms were thrown up, twisting and turning like a half dozen huge snakes.
+The whole creature sank below the waves and the ball tossed back and
+forth, often buried under tons of water and once tossed thirty feet into
+the air by the huge waves.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A momentary lull came in the waves. Carnes gave a cry of astonishment
+and pointed toward the shore. With an effort, Dr. Bird twisted himself
+in his lashing and looked in that direction. The huge body had again
+come to the surface, and three of the arms were towering into the air.
+Grasped in them was a long, black, cigar-shaped object. As they watched
+the object was torn into two parts and the fragments crushed by the
+enormous power of the octopus. Again the arms writhed in torment, and
+then they stiffened out. For a moment they towered in the air and then
+slowly sank below the surface of the sea.
+
+"The cyanide has worked," cried the doctor, "and in its last agonies the
+creature has turned on its creator and destroyed him. It is a shame, for
+Saranoff was a brilliant although perverted genius, and besides, I would
+have liked to have learned his method. However, I may find something
+when we open the land end and raid the cave; and really, he was too
+brilliant a man to hang for murder. Once we open the cave and I get any
+data that is there, my connection with the case will end. Trailing down
+the gold and recovering it is a routine matter for Bolton, and one in
+which he won't need my help."
+
+"What about that creature we saw in the cave, Doctor? Won't it hatch
+into another terror of the sea like the thing that destroyed the ship?"
+
+"The trochosphere? No, I'm not worried there. It won't try to leave the
+cave for some days yet, and by that time we'll have the land end opened
+and the floodlights turned on. They will keep it there and it will
+starve to death. We could send down a sub to feed it a torpedo, but
+there's no need. Nature will dispose of it. Meanwhile, I hope the
+_Minneconsin_ rigs up a jury tackle pretty soon and takes us on board.
+I'm getting seasick."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+_IN THE NEXT ISSUE_
+
+ THE FIFTH-DIMENSION CATAPULT
+
+ _A Novelette of an Extraordinary Interdimensional Rescue_
+ _By_ Murray Leinster
+
+
+ THE GATE TO XORAN
+
+ _A Thrilling Story of a Metal Man's Visit to Earth_
+ _By_ Hal K. Wells
+
+
+ THE EYE OF ALLAH
+
+ _A Story of the Tracking Down of a Mysterious Scientific Killer_
+ _By_ C. D. Willard
+
+
+ THE PIRATE PLANET
+
+ _Part Three of the Outstanding Current Novel_
+ _By_ Charles W. Diffin
+
+
+ ----_AND OTHERS_!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Gray Denim
+
+_By Harl Vincent_
+
+ The blood of the Van Dorn's ran in Karl's veins. He rode the skies
+ like an avenging god.
+
+[Illustration: _There came a stabbing pencil of light from over Karl's
+shoulder._]
+
+
+Beneath the huge central arch in Cooper Square a meeting was in
+progress--a gathering of the gray-clad workers of the lower levels of
+New York. Less than two hundred of their number were in evidence, and
+these huddled in dejected groups around the pedestal from which a
+fiery-tongued orator was addressing them. Lounging negligently at the
+edge of the small crowd were a dozen of the red police.
+
+"I tell you, comrades," the speaker was shouting, "the time has come
+when we must revolt. We must battle to the death with the wearers of the
+purple. Why work out our lives down here so they can live in the lap of
+luxury over our heads? Why labor day after day at the oxygen generators
+to give them the fresh air they breathe?"
+
+The speaker paused uncertainly as a chorus of raucous laughter came to
+his ears. He glared belligerently at a group of newcomers who stood
+aloof from his own gathering. Seven or eight of them there were, and
+they wore the gray with obvious discomfort. Slummers! Well, they'd hear
+something they could carry back with them when they returned to their
+homes!
+
+"Why," he continued in rising tones, "do we sit at the controls of the
+pneumatic tubes which carry thousands of our fellows to tasks equally
+irksome, while they of the purple ride their air yachts to the pleasure
+cities of the sky lanes? Never in the history of mankind have the poor
+been poorer and the rich richer!"
+
+"Yah!" shouted a disrespectful voice from among the newcomers. "You're
+full o' bunk! Nothing but bunk!"
+
+An ominous murmur swelled from the crowd and the red police roused from
+their lethargy. The mounting scream of a siren echoed in the vaulted
+recesses above and re-echoed from the surrounding columns--the call for
+reserves.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+All was confusion in the Square. The little group of newcomers
+immediately became the center of a melee of dangerous proportions. Some
+of the more timid of the wearers of the gray struggled to get out of the
+crowd and away. Others, not in sympathy with the speaker, rushed to the
+support of the besieged visitors. The police were, for the moment,
+overwhelmed.
+
+The orator, mad with resentment and injured pride, hurled himself into
+the group. A knife flashed in his hand; rose and fell. A scream of agony
+shrilled piercingly above the din of the fighting.
+
+Then came the reserves, and the wielder of the knife turned to escape.
+He broke away from the milling combatants and made speedily for the
+shadows that lay beyond the great pillars of the Square. But he never
+reached them, for one of the red guards raised his riot pistol and
+fired. There was a dull _plop_, and a rubbery something struck the
+fleeing man and wrapped powerful tentacles around his body, binding him
+hand and foot in their swift embrace. He fell crashing to the pavement.
+
+A lieutenant of the red police was shouting his orders and the din in
+the Square was deafening. With their numbers greatly augmented, the
+guards were now in control of the situation and their maces struck left
+and right. Groans and curses came from the gray-clad workers, who now
+fought desperately to escape.
+
+Then, with startling suddenness, the artificial sunlight of the
+cavernous Square was gone, leaving the battle to continue in utter
+darkness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Cooper Square, in the year 2108, was the one gathering place in New York
+City where the wearers of the gray denim were permitted to assemble and
+discuss their grievances publicly. Deep in the maze of lower-level ways
+seldom visited by wearers of the purple, the grottolike enclosure bore
+the name of a philanthropist of the late nineteenth century and still
+carried a musty air of certain of the traditions of that period.
+
+In Astor Way, on the lowest level of all, there was a tiny book shop.
+Nestled between two of the great columns that provided foundation
+support for the eighty levels above, it was safely hidden from the gaze
+of curious passersby in the Square. Slumming parties from afar, their
+purple temporarily discarded for the gray, occasionally passed within a
+stone's throw of the little shop, never suspecting the existence of such
+a retreat amidst the dark shadows of the pillars. But to the initiated
+few amongst the wearers of the gray, and to certain of the red police,
+it was well known.
+
+Rudolph Krassin, proprietor of the establishment, was a bent and
+withered ancient. His jacket of gray denim hung loosely from his
+spare frame and his hollow cough bespoke a deep-seated ailment.
+Looking out from behind thick lenses set in his square-rimmed
+spectacles, the watery eyes seemed vacant; uncomprehending. But old
+Rudolph was a scholar--keen-witted--and a gentleman besides. To his
+many friends of the gray-clad multitude he was an anomaly; they
+could not understand his devotion to his well-thumbed volumes. But they
+listened to his words of wisdom and, more frequently than they could
+afford, parted with precious labor tickets in exchange for reading
+matter that was usually of the lighter variety.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When the fighting started in the Square, Rudolph was watching and
+listening from a point of vantage in the shadows near his shop. This
+fellow Leontardo, who was the speaker, was an agitator of the worst
+sort. His arguments always were calculated to arouse the passions of his
+hearers; to inflame them against the wearers of the purple. He had
+nothing constructive to offer. Always he spoke of destruction; war;
+bloodshed. Rudolph marveled at the patience of the red police. To-day,
+these newcomers, obviously a slumming party of youngsters bent on
+whatever mischief they could find, were interfering with the speaker.
+The old man chuckled at the first interruption. But at signs of real
+trouble he scurried into the shadows and vanished in the blackness of
+first-level passages known only to himself. He knew where to find the
+automatic sub-station of the Power Syndicate.
+
+Returning to the darkness he had created in the Square, he was relieved
+to find that the sounds of the fighting had subsided. Apparently most of
+the wearers of the gray had escaped. He skirted the avenue of pillars
+along Astor Way, feeling his way from one to another as he progressed
+toward his little shop. Peering into the blackness of the square he saw
+the feeble beams of several flash-lamps in the hands of the police. They
+were searching for survivors of the fracas, maces and riot pistols held
+ready for use. A sobbing gasp from close by set his pulses throbbing. He
+crept stealthily in the direction from which the sound had come.
+
+"Steady now," came a whispered voice. "My uncle's shop is close by.
+He'll take you in. Here--let me lift you."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+There was a shuffling on the opposite side of the pillar at which
+Rudolph had halted; another grunt of pain.
+
+"Karl!" hissed the old man. It was his nephew.
+
+"Uncle Rudolph?" came the guarded response.
+
+"Yes. Can I help you?"
+
+"Quick--yes--he's fainted."
+
+The old man was around the huge base of the column in an instant. He
+groped in the darkness and his hands encountered human bodies.
+
+"Who is it?" he breathed.
+
+"One of the hecklers, Uncle. A young lad; and of the purple I think.
+He's been knifed."
+
+Together they dragged the inert form into the shelter of the long line
+of pillars. There was a trampling of many men in the square. That would
+be a second detachment of reserves. A ray of light filtered through and
+dancing shadows of the giant columns made grotesque outlines against the
+walls of the Way. A portable searchlight had been brought to the scene.
+They must hurry.
+
+Impeded by the dead weight of their burden, they made sorry progress and
+several times found it necessary to halt in the shadow of a pillar while
+the red police passed by in their search of the Square. It was with a
+sigh of relief that Rudolph opened the door of his shop and with still
+greater satisfaction closed and bolted it securely. His nephew
+shouldered the limp form of the unconscious youth and carried it to his
+own bed in one of the rear rooms.
+
+"Ugh!" exclaimed old Rudolph as he ripped open the young man's shirt,
+"it's a nasty cut. Warm water, Karl."
+
+The gaping wound was washed and bound tightly. Rudolph's experienced
+fingers told him the knife had not reached a vital spot. The youth would
+recover.
+
+"But Karl," he objected, "he wears the purple. Under the gray. See!
+It'll get us in trouble if we keep him."
+
+He was stripping the young man of his clothing to prepare him for bed.
+Suddenly there was revealed on the white skin a triangular mark. Bright
+scarlet it was and just over the right hip. He made a hasty attempt to
+hide it from the watching eyes of Karl.
+
+"Uncle!" snapped his nephew, "--the mark you call cursed! He has it,
+too!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The tall young man in gray was on his knees, tearing the hands of the
+old man away. He saw the mark clearly now. There was no further use of
+attempting to conceal it. Rudolph rose and faced his angered nephew, his
+watery eyes inscrutable.
+
+"You told me, Rudolph, that it was a brand that cursed me. I have seen
+it on him, too. You have lied to me."
+
+The old man's eyes wavered. He trembled violently.
+
+"Why did you lie?" demanded Karl. "Am I not your nephew? Am I not really
+cursed as you've maintained? Tell me--tell me!"
+
+He had the old man by the shoulders, shaking him cruelly.
+
+"Karl--Karl," begged the helpless ancient, "it was for your good. I
+swear it. You were born to the purple. That's what that mark means--not
+that you're degraded to the gray, as I said. But there's a reason. Let
+me explain."
+
+"Bah! A reason! You've kept me in this misery and squalor for a reason!
+Who's my father?"
+
+He flung Rudolph to the floor, where the old man crouched in apprehensive
+misery.
+
+"Please Karl--don't! I can explain. Just give me time. It's a long
+story."
+
+"Time! Time! For twenty-odd years you've lied to me; cheated me. My
+birthright--where is it?"
+
+He menaced his supposed uncle; was about to strike him. Then suddenly he
+was ashamed. He turned on his heel.
+
+"I'm leaving," he said shortly.
+
+"Karl--my boy," begged Rudolph Krassin, struggling to his feet. "You
+can't! That lad in there--he--"
+
+But Karl was too angry to reason.
+
+"To hell with him!" he raged, "and to hell with you! I'm through!"
+
+He stamped from the room and out into the eery shadows of the Way. Karl
+was done with his old life. He'd go to the upper levels and claim his
+rights. Some day, too, he'd punish the man who'd stolen them away. God!
+Born to the purple! To think he'd missed it all! Probably was kidnaped
+by the old rascal he'd been calling uncle. But he'd find out. Rudolph
+didn't have to explain. Fingerprint records would clear his name;
+establish his rightful station in life. He dived into a passage that
+would lead him to one of the express lifts. He'd soon be overhead.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A sergeant of the red police looked up startled from his desk as a tall
+youth in the gray denim of forty levels below appeared before him.
+
+"Well?" he growled. The stalwart young worker had stared belligerently
+and insolently, he thought.
+
+"I want to check my fingerprint record, Sergeant."
+
+"Hm. Pretty cocky, aren't you? The records for such as you are down
+below, where you belong."
+
+"Not mine, I think."
+
+"So? And who the devil are you?"
+
+"That's what I'm here to find out. I've got a triangle branded on my
+right hip."
+
+"A what?"
+
+"Triangle. Here--look!"
+
+The amazing youngster had raised his jacket and was pulling at his
+shirt. The sergeant stared at what was revealed, his eyes bulging as he
+looked.
+
+"Lord!" he gasped, "a Van Dorn--in the gray!"
+
+Quickly he turned to the radiovision and made rapid connection with
+several persons in turn--important ones, by the appearance of the
+features of each in the brilliant disc of the instrument.
+
+Karl was confused by the sudden turn of things. The sergeant talked so
+rapidly he could not catch the sense of his words. And that name, Van
+Dorn, eluded him. He knew he had heard it before, in the little shop
+down there in Astor Way. But he could not place it. He wished fervently
+that he had paid more attention to the desires of old Rudolph; had
+studied more and read the books the old man had begged him to read. His
+new surroundings confused him, too, and he knew that he was the center
+of some great new excitement.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Then they were in the room; two individuals, one in the red uniform of a
+captain of police, the other a pompous, whiskered man in purple. Others
+followed and it seemed to Karl that the room was filled with them,
+strangers all, and they stared at him and chattered incessantly. He
+experienced an overwhelming impulse to run, but mastered it and faced
+them boldly.
+
+A square of plate glass was placed under his outstretched fingers. It
+was smeared with something sticky and he watched the whiskered man as he
+held it up to the light and studied the impressions. Then there was more
+confusion. Everyone talked at once and the pompous one in purple made
+use of the radiovision, holding the square of glass near its disc for
+observation by the person he had called. The identification number was
+repeated aloud, a string of figures and letters that were a meaningless
+jumble to Karl. The room became quiet while the police captain thumbed
+the pages of a huge book he had taken from among many similar ones that
+filled a rack behind the desk.
+
+Karl's blood froze in his veins at the rumbling swish of a car speeding
+through the pneumatic tube beneath their feet. His nerves were on edge.
+Then the captain of police looked up from the book and there was a
+peculiar glint in his eyes as he spoke.
+
+"Peter Van Dorn. Missing since 2085. Wanted by Continental Government.
+Ha!"
+
+The words came to Karl's ears through a growing sensation of unreality.
+It seemed that the speaker was miles away and that his voice and
+features were those of a radiovision likeness. Wanted by the great power
+across the Atlantic! It was unthinkable. Why, he had been but an infant
+in 2085! What possible crime could he have committed? But the red police
+captain was speaking again, this time in a chill voice. And the room of
+the police, thick with the smoke of a dozen cigars, became suddenly
+stifling.
+
+"Where have you been these twenty-three years, Peter Van Dorn?" asked
+the captain. "Who have you lived with, I mean?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Something warned him to protect old Rudolph. And somehow he wished
+he had not treated the old fellow as he did when he left. His
+self-possession returned. A wave of hot resentment swept over him.
+
+"That's my affair," he said defiantly.
+
+The captain shrugged his shoulders. "Oh, well," he said, "you needn't
+answer--now. We'll find out when it's necessary. In the meanwhile we'll
+have to turn you over to the Continental Ambassador."
+
+Two of the red police advanced toward him and the rest drew back.
+
+"You mean I'm under arrest?" asked Karl incredulously.
+
+"Certainly. Of course you're not to be harmed."
+
+One of the guards had him by the arm and he saw the glint of handcuffs.
+They couldn't do this! If it had been for rioting in the Square it
+would be different. But this! It meant he was a prisoner of a foreign
+government, for what reason he could not guess. He lost his head
+completely.
+
+The captain cried out in amazement as one of his huskiest guards went
+sprawling under a well-planted punch. This youngster must be as crazy as
+was his father before him. But he was a whirlwind. Before he could be
+stopped he had tackled the other guard and with a mighty heave flung him
+halfway across the room where he fell with a thud that left him dazed
+and gasping. The pompous little man in the purple crawled under the desk
+as the sergeant leveled a slender tube at the young giant in gray.
+
+Karl ducked instinctively at sight of the weapon, but the spiteful
+crackle of its mechanism was too quick for him. A faintly luminous ray
+struck him full in the breast and stopped him in his tracks. A thrill of
+intense cold chased up his spine and a thunderbolt crashed in his brain.
+The captain caught his stiffened body as he fell.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Karl--refusing to think of himself as Peter Van Dorn--came to his senses
+as from a troubled sleep. His head ached miserably and he turned it
+slowly to view his surroundings. Then, in a flash, he remembered. The
+paralyzing ray of the red police! They never used it in the lower
+levels; but overhead--why, the swine! He sat suddenly erect and glared
+into a pair of green eyes that regarded him curiously.
+
+A quick glance showed him that he was in a small padded compartment like
+that of the pneumatic tube cars. At one end there was an amazing array
+of machinery with glittering levers and handwheels--a control board on
+which numberless tiny lights blinked and flickered in rapid succession.
+At these controls squatted the twisted figure of a dwarf. A second of
+the creatures sat at his side and stared with those horrible green
+eyes.
+
+"Lord!" he muttered. "Am I still asleep?"
+
+"No," smiled the dwarf, "you're awake, Peter Van Dorn." The misshapen
+creature did not seem unfriendly.
+
+"Then where am I, and who are you?"
+
+"You're in one of the Zar's rocket cars, speeding toward Dorn. We are
+but two of the Zar's servants--Moon men."
+
+"Rocket car? Moon men?" Karl was aghast. He wanted to pinch himself. But
+a hollow roar to the rear told him he was in a rapidly moving vessel of
+some sort. Certainly, too, these dwarfs were not figments of his
+imagination.
+
+"You've been kept completely ignorant?" asked the dwarf.
+
+"It--it seems so." Karl was bewildered. "You mean we are out in the
+open--traveling in space--to the Moon perhaps?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The dwarf laughed. "No, I wish we were," he replied. "But we are about
+halfway to the capital of the Continental Empire, greatest of world
+powers. We'll be there in an hour."
+
+"But I don't understand."
+
+"Stupid. Didn't you ever hear of the rocket ships that cross the ocean
+like a projectile, mounting a thousand miles from the surface and making
+the trip in two hours?"
+
+"No!" Karl was aghast. "Are we really in such a contraption?" he
+faltered.
+
+"Say! Are you kidding me?" The dwarf was incredulous. "Do you mean to
+tell me you know so little of your world as that? Have you never read
+anything? The news broadcasts, the thought exchangers--don't you follow
+them at all?"
+
+Karl shook his head in growing wonder. Truly Rudolph had kept him in
+ignorance. Or was it his own fault? He had refused to dig into the
+volumes old Krassin had begged him to read. The broadcasts and the
+thought machines--well, only those of the purple had access to those.
+
+"Hey, Laro!" called the dwarf to his companion, "this mole is as dumb as
+can be. Doesn't know he's alive hardly. And a Van Dorn!"
+
+The two laughed uproariously and Karl raged inwardly. Mole! So that's
+what they called wearers of the gray! He clenched his fists and rose
+unsteadily to his feet.
+
+"Sorry," apologized his tormentor. "Mustn't get sore now. It seems so
+funny to us though. And listen, kid, you'll never have another chance to
+hear it all. So, if you'll sit down and calm yourself a bit I'll give
+you an earful."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Mollified, Karl listened. A marvelous tale it was, of a disgruntled
+scientist of the Eastern Hemisphere who had conquered that portion of
+the world with the aid of the inhabitants he had found on the outer side
+of the Moon; of the scientist who still ruled the East--Zar of the
+Continental Empire. A horrible war--in 2085, the year of his own
+birth--depopulated the countries of Asia, Europe and Africa and reduced
+them to subjection. There was no combatting the destructive rays and
+chemical warfare of the Moon men. The United Americas, still weakened
+from a civil war of their own, remained aloof and, for some strange
+reason, the Zar left them in peace, contenting himself with his conquest
+of practically all of the rest of the world. Now, it seemed, the two
+major powers were as separate as if on different planets, there being no
+traffic between them save by governmental sanction; and that was rarely
+given.
+
+It grew uncomfortably warm in the compartment as the rocket car entered
+the lower atmosphere but Karl listened spellbound to the astounding
+revelations of the Moon man. There came a pause in the discourse of the
+dwarf as a number of relays clicked furiously on the control board and
+the vessel slackened its speed perceptibly.
+
+"But," said Karl, thinking aloud rather than meaning to interrupt,
+"what has all this to do with me? Why does the government of this Zar
+want me?"
+
+The dwarf bent close and eyed him cautiously. "Poor kid!" he whispered,
+"it doesn't seem right that you should suffer for something that
+happened when you were born; something you know nothing about. But the
+Zar knows best. You--"
+
+There came a stabbing pencil of light from over Karl's shoulder and the
+green eyes of the dwarf went wide with horrified surprise. He clutched
+at his breast where the flame had contacted, then slowly collapsed in a
+pitiful, distorted heap. Karl recoiled from the odor of putrefaction
+that immediately filled the compartment. He whirled to face the new
+danger but saw nothing but the padded walls.
+
+Then they were in darkness save for the blinking lights of the control
+board. He was thrown forward violently and the piercing screech of
+compressed air rushing past the vessel told him they had entered the
+receiving tube at their destination and were being retarded in speed for
+the landing. This much he had gathered from the explanations of the now
+silenced dwarf.
+
+Laro, the other Moon man, remained mute at the controls. His companion
+evidently had talked too much.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The vessel had stopped and a section of the padded rear wall of the
+compartment moved back to reveal a second chamber. There were three
+other occupants of the ship and Karl knew now at whose hands the
+talkative Moon man had met his death. One of the three--all wearers of
+the purple--still held the generator of the dazzling ray in his hands.
+He decided wisely that resistance was useless and followed meekly when
+he was led from the ship.
+
+Endlessly they rode upward in a high-speed lift, dismounting finally at
+a pneumatic tube entrance. A special car whisked them roaring into the
+blackness. Then they were shot forth into the open and Karl saw the
+light of the sun for the first time in many years. They were on the
+upper surface of a great city, Dorn, the capital of the Continental
+Empire.
+
+The air was filled with darting ships of all sorts and sizes, most of
+them being pleasure craft of the wearers of the purple. To Karl it was
+the sudden realization of his dreams. He was one of them. He, too,
+should be wearing the purple. Then his heart sank as one of his guards
+prodded him into action. His dream already was shattered for they stood
+at the entrance to a great crystal pyramid that rose from the flat
+expanse of the roofs of Dorn. It was the palace of the Zar.
+
+It seemed then that fairyland had opened its gates to the young man in
+gray denim. He immediately fell under its influence when they traversed
+a long lane between rows of brightly colored growing things which filled
+the air with sweet odors. Feathered creatures fluttered about and
+twittered and caroled in the sheer joy of being alive. It was sweeter
+music than he had ever believed possible or even imagined as existing.
+Again he forgot the menace of the imperial edict which had brought him
+from the other side of the world.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Then rudely, he was brought back to earth. He was in the presence of the
+mighty Zar and his three escorts were bowing themselves from the huge
+room in which the wizened monarch sat enthroned. They had finished their
+duties.
+
+A shriveled face; beady eyes; trembling hands with abnormally large
+knuckles; a cruel and determined mouth--these were the features that
+most impressed Karl as he stared wordlessly at this Zar of the Eastern
+Hemisphere. The magnificence of the royal robe was lost on the young
+wearer of the gray.
+
+"Well, well, so this is Peter Van Dorn, my beloved nephew." The Zar was
+speaking and the chilly sarcasm in which the words were uttered belied
+the friendliness they otherwise might have implied.
+
+"That's what I'm told," replied Karl, "though I didn't know I'm supposed
+to be the nephew of so great a figure as yourself."
+
+Not bad that, for an humble wearer of the gray.
+
+"Oh, yes, yes, indeed. Why else should I have sent for you?"
+
+"I have wondered why--and still wonder."
+
+"Oh, you wonder, eh?" The Zar inspected him carefully and then broke
+into a cackle of horrible laughter. "A Van Dorn in gray denim!" he
+chortled. "A mole of the Americas! And to think that even the Zar has
+been unable to find him in all these years!"
+
+"Stop!" bellowed Karl. "I'll not have your ridicule. Come to the point
+now and have it over with. Kill me if you will, but tell me the story!"
+He had seen the slender tube in the Zar's hand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+An expression of surprise, almost of admiration, flickered in the beady
+eyes of the Zar and was gone. He spoke coldly.
+
+"Very well, I shall explain. You, Peter, are actually my nephew. Your
+father, Derek Van Dorn, was my brother; he a king of Belravia and I a
+poor but experienced scientist. He scorned me and he paid, for I learned
+of the ancient race of the other side of the Moon, the side we can not
+see from the earth. I went to them and enlisted their aid in warring
+upon my brother. When we returned to carry on this war I learned that I
+had a son. So, too, did Derek. But my son was born in obscurity and
+Derek's son--you, Peter--in the lap of luxury. The war was short and, to
+me, sweet. Belravia was first to fall, and I had your father removed
+from this life by the vibrating death."
+
+"You monster!" cried Karl. But the slender rod menaced him.
+
+"A moment, my hot-headed nephew. I vowed I'd have your life, Peter, but
+your father had a few friends and one of these spirited you away. So
+temporarily you escaped. But now I have you where I can keep that vow.
+You, too, shall die. By the vibration. But first--ha! ha!--I'll give you
+a taste of the purple. Just so the going will be harder."
+
+Karl kept his temper as best he could. He thought, conscience-stricken,
+of old Rudolph, that good friend of his father. Then he thought of that
+youth he had taken from the Square.
+
+"Your son?" he asked gently. "Has he the triangular brand?"
+
+The Zar was taken aback. "He has, yes. Why?" he asked.
+
+"I have seen him in the Americas. He now lies wounded and in peril of
+his life. What do you think of that?"
+
+Karl was triumphant as the Zar paled.
+
+"You lie, Peter Van Dorn!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But the beady eyes saw that the young man was truthful. Sudden fury
+assailed the monarch of the East. A bell pealed its mellow summons and
+three Moon men entered the Presence.
+
+"Quick, Taru--the radiovision! Our ambassador in the Americas!" The Zar
+was on his feet, his hard features terrible in fear and anger. "By God!"
+he vowed, "I'll lay waste the Americas if harm has come to my son. And
+you"--turning to Karl--"I'll reserve for you an even more terrible fate
+than the vibrating death!"
+
+The radiovision was wheeled in and in operation. A frightened face
+appeared in its disc: the Zar's ambassador across the sea.
+
+"Moreau--my son!" snapped the Zar. "Where is he?"
+
+"Majesty! Have mercy!" gasped Moreau. "Paul has eluded us. He was
+skylarking--in the lower levels of New York. But our secret agents are
+combing the passages. We'll have him in twenty-four hours. I promise!"
+
+The rage of the Zar was terrible to see. Karl expected momentarily that
+the white flame would lay him low, for the anger of the mad ruler was
+directed first at Moreau, then at himself. But a quick, evil calm
+succeeded the storm.
+
+"You, Peter," he stated, in tones suddenly silky, "shall have that
+twenty-four hours--no more. If Moreau has not produced my son in that
+time you shall be dismembered slowly. A finger; an ear; your tongue; a
+hand--until you reveal the whereabouts of the heir to my throne!"
+
+"Never! You scum!" Karl was on the dais in a single bound. He had the
+Zar by the throat, his fingers twisting in the flabby flesh. Might as
+well have it over at once. "Fratricide--murderer of my father, I'll take
+you with me!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But it was not to be. The throne room was filled with retainers of the
+mad emperor. Strong hands tore him away and he was borne, struggling and
+fighting, to the floor. A sharp pain in his forearm. A deadening of the
+muscles. He was powerless, save for the painful ability to crawl to his
+knees, swaying drunkenly. A delicious languor overcame him. Nothing
+mattered now. He saw that a tall man in the purple had withdrawn the
+needle of the hypodermic and was replacing the instrument in its case.
+Ever so slowly, it seemed.
+
+The Zar was laughing. That horrible cackle. But Karl didn't care. They'd
+have their sport with him. Let 'em! Then it'd be over. Lord! If only he
+had been a little quicker. He'd have torn the old Zar's windpipe from
+its place!
+
+"My word," laughed the Zar. "The sacred word of a Van Dorn. I gave it.
+He'll wear the purple for a day. Take him from my sight!"
+
+Karl was walking, quite willingly now. The effects of the drug were
+altering. His muscular strength returned but his mental state underwent
+a complete change. Always he'd wanted a taste of the purple. For years
+he'd listened to the orators of the Square, to the conflicting
+statements of old Krassin. But now he'd see. He'd know the joys of the
+upper levels; the pleasure cities, perhaps. For one day. But what did it
+matter? He found himself laughing and joking with his companion, a
+heavy-set wearer of the purple. They were in a luxurious apartment.
+Servants! Moon men all of them, but so efficient. They stripped him of
+his gray denim; discarded it contemptuously. Karl kicked the heap into a
+corner and laughed delightedly. His bath was waiting.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Much can happen in a day. Clothed in the purple, Karl--Peter Van Dorn,
+he was, now--expanded. Turgid emotions surged through his new being. He
+was a new man. In his rightful place. He was delighted with the
+companionship of his new friend of the purple, Leon Lemaire. An
+euphonious name! A fine fellow! Fool that the Zar must be, to leave him
+in the care of so amiable a man. Why, Leon couldn't hold him! None of
+them could. He'd escape them all--if he wished. Twenty-four hours,
+indeed!
+
+They were in the midst of a gay company. Wine flowed freely, and Leon
+had attached to their party a pair of beautiful damsels, young, and easy
+to know. There was music and dancing. Lights of marvelous color played
+over the assemblage in the huge hall, swaying their senses at the will
+of some expert manipulator. Peter was a different person now. He was
+exhilarated to the point of intoxication, but not by the wine. Somehow
+he couldn't bear the taste of the amber fluid the others were imbibing
+with such gusto. The effects of the drug had left a coppery taste in his
+mouth. But no matter! Rhoda, his lovely companion at the table leaned
+close. Her breath was hot at his throat. He swept her into his arms.
+Leon and the other girl laughed approvingly.
+
+There were many such places in the upper levels of Dorn and they
+traveled from one to another. Now their party was larger, it having
+been augmented by the appearance of other of Leon's friends. Fine
+companions, these men of the purple, and the women were incomparable.
+Especially Rhoda. They understood one another perfectly now. It was all
+as he had pictured it.
+
+Someone proposed that they visit the intermediate levels. It would be
+such a lark to watch the mechanicals. They made the drop in a lift. A
+laughing, riotous party. And Peter was one of them! He felt that he had
+known them for years. Rhoda clung to his arm, and the languorous glances
+from under her long lashes set the blood racing madly in his veins.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In the levels of the mechanicals they romped boisterously. To them the
+strange robots--creatures of steel and glass and copper--were objects of
+ridicule. Poor, senseless mechanisms that performed the tasks that made
+the wearers of the purple independent of labor. Here they saw the
+preparation of their synthetic food, untouched by human hands. In one
+chamber a group of mechanicals, soulless and brainless, engaged in the
+delicate chemical compounding of raw materials that went into the making
+of their clothing. Here was a nursery, where tiny tots born to the
+purple were reared to adolescence by unfeeling but efficient mechanical
+nurses. The mothers of the purple could not be bothered with their
+offspring until they had reached the age of reason. The whirring
+machinery of a huge power plant provided much amusement for the feminine
+members of the party. It was all so massive; throbbing with energy. But
+dirty! Ugh! Lucky the attendants could be mechanicals.
+
+"We have visited the lower levels," whispered Rhoda in his ear, "but not
+often. It isn't pleasant. Ignorant fools in the gray denim--too many of
+them. I don't know why we permit their existence. Fools who will not
+learn. Education made us as we are, and they won't take it. Sullen
+looks and evil leers are all that they have for us. Hope nobody suggests
+going down there now."
+
+"Me, too," said Peter. He had forgotten that once he was Karl Krassin, a
+wearer of the despised gray.
+
+Someone in the party was becoming restless. They must move on.
+
+"Where to?" asked Peter.
+
+"Sans Dolor, sweet boy. A pleasure city within a hundred kilometers of
+Dorn. You'll love it, Peter."
+
+A pleasure city! Fondest dream of the wearers of the gray! In the dim
+past, when he was Karl, he had dreamed it often. Now he was to visit
+one!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+They were atop the city now and the crystal palace of the Zar shimmered
+in the sunlight off there across the flat upper surface of Dorn. But it
+seemed so far away that Peter did not give it a second thought. He was
+living in the present.
+
+A swift aero took them into the skies and they roared out above the
+wilderness that was everywhere between the great cities of earth. Funny
+nobody thought of leaving the cities and exploring the jungles of the
+outside. But, of course, it wasn't necessary. They had everything they
+needed within the cities. All of their wants were supplied by the
+mechanicals and by the few toilers in the gray who still persisted in
+ignorance and in some perverse ideas that they must work in order to
+live. Besides, the jungle was dangerous.
+
+Sans Dolor loomed into view, a great island floating in the air a
+thousand meters above the tossing waters of the ocean. Peter gave not a
+thought to the forces that kept it suspended. Dimly he recalled certain
+words of old Rudolph, words regarding the artificial emanations that had
+been discovered as capable of counteracting the force of gravity. But
+his mind was intent on the pleasures to come.
+
+They were over the city. Carefully tended foliage lined its streets and
+a smooth lagoon glistened in its center. Its towers and spires were
+decorated with gay colors. The streets were filled with wearers of the
+purple and the nude bodies of bathers in the lagoon gleamed white in the
+strong sunlight.
+
+He sensed anew the nearness of Rhoda. Her soft warm hand nestled in his
+and she responded instantly to his sudden embrace.
+
+There came a shock and the party was stilled in dismay. The aero
+careened violently and the pilot struggled with controls that were dead.
+Sans Dolor dropped rapidly away beneath them. They were shooting
+skyward, drawn by some inexplicable and invisible energy from above.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Rhoda screamed and held him close, trembling violently. All of the women
+screamed and the men cursed. Leon arose to his feet and stared at Peter.
+The friendliness was gone from his features and he spat forth an
+accusation. A glistening mechanism appeared in his hand as if by magic.
+A ray generator! He had been appointed by the Zar to guard this upstart
+and, whatever happened, he'd not let him escape with his life. The girl
+shuddered at sight of the weapon and extricated herself from his arms.
+Her affection too had been a pose.
+
+Peter's mind was clearing from the effects of the drug. He had not the
+slightest idea of what might have caused the quick change in the
+situation but he resolved he would die fighting, if die he must. Leon
+fumbled with the catch of the generator. It refused to operate. The
+force that was drawing them upward had paralyzed all mechanisms aboard
+the little aero. Flinging it from him in disgust he sprang for Peter.
+
+Their minds befuddled, the rest of the men watched dully. The women
+huddled together in a corner, whimpering. They were a sorry lot after
+all, thought Karl. He was no longer Peter Van Dorn, and he thrilled to
+the joy of battle.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Leon Lemaire was no mean antagonist. His flailing arms were everywhere
+and a huge fist caught Karl on the side of his head and sent him
+reeling. But this only served to clear his mind further and to fill him
+with a cold rage. He bored in unmercifully and Lemaire soon was on the
+defensive. A blow to his midsection had him puffing and Karl hammered in
+rights and lefts to the now sinister face that rocked his opponent to
+his heels. But the minion of the Zar was crafty. He slid to the floor as
+if groggy, then with catlike agility, dove for Karl's knees, bringing
+him down with a crash.
+
+The air whistled by them as the ship was drawn upward with ever-increasing
+speed. The other passengers cowered in fright as the two men rolled over
+and over on the floor, banging at each other indiscriminately. Both
+were hurt. Karl's lip was split, and bleeding profusely. One eye was
+closing. But now he was on top and he pummeled his opponent to a pulp.
+Long after he ceased resisting them, the blows continued until the
+features of Leon Lemaire were unrecognizable. The infuriated Karl did not
+see that one of the members of the party was creeping up on him from
+behind. Neither was he aware that the upward motion of the aero had
+ceased and that they now hung motionless in space. A terrific blow at
+the base of his skull sent him sprawling. Must have been struck by a
+rocket, one of those funny ships that crossed the ocean so quickly. A
+million lights danced before his aching eyeballs.
+
+Lying prone across the inert body of his foe, dimly conscious and
+fingers clutching weakly, he knew that the cabin was filled with people.
+Alien voices bellowed commands. There was the screaming of women; the
+sound of blows; curses ... then all was silence and darkness.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was a far cry to the little book shop off Cooper Square, but Karl was
+calling for Rudolph when he next awoke to the realization that he was
+still in the land of the living. His head was bandaged and his tongue
+furry. A terrible hangover. Then he heard voices and they were
+discussing Peter Van Dorn. He opened one eye as an experiment. The other
+refused to open. But it might have been worse. At least he was alive; he
+could see well enough with the one good optic.
+
+"Sh-h!" whispered one of the voices. "He's recovering!"
+
+He looked solemnly into the eyes of an old man; a pair of wise and
+gentle eyes that reminded him somehow of Rudolph's.
+
+"Quiet now, Peter," said the old man. "You'll be all right in a few
+minutes. Banged up a bit, you are, but nothing serious."
+
+"Don't call me Peter," objected Karl. He loathed the sound of the name;
+loathed himself for his recent thoughts and actions. "I am Karl
+Krassin," he continued, "and as such will remain until I die."
+
+There were others in the room and he saw glances of satisfaction pass
+between them. This was a strange situation. These men were not of the
+purple. Neither were they of the gray. Their garments shone with the
+whiteness of pure silver. And that's what they were; of finely woven
+metallic cloth. Was he in another world?
+
+"Very well, Karl." The kind old man was speaking once more. "I merely
+want you to know that you are among friends--your father's friends."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Surprised into complete wakefulness, Karl struggled to a seated position
+and surveyed the group that faced him. They were a fine looking lot,
+mostly older men, but there was a refreshing wholesomeness about them.
+
+"My father?" he faltered. "He's not alive."
+
+"No, my poor boy. Derek Van Dorn left this life at the hands of your
+uncle, Zar Boris. But we, his friends, are here to avenge him and to
+restore to you his throne."
+
+"But--but--I still do not understand."
+
+"Of course not, because we've kept ourselves hidden from the world for
+more than twenty-two years, waiting for this very moment. There are
+forty-one of us, including Rudolph, my brother. We have lived in the
+jungle since Boris conquered the Eastern Hemisphere. But amongst our
+numbers were several scientists, two greater than was Boris, even in his
+heyday. They have done wonderful things and we are now prepared to take
+back what was taken from Derek--and more. His life we can not
+restore--Heaven rest him--but his kingdom we can. And to his son it
+shall be returned.
+
+"You were given into Rudolph's care when little more than a babe in arms
+and he has cared for you well. We've watched, you know, in the
+detectoscopes--long range radiovision mechanisms that can penetrate
+solid walls, the earth itself, to bring to us the images and voices of
+persons who may be on the other side of the world. We've followed your
+every move, my boy, and the first time we feared for you was yesterday
+when the drug of the Zar's physician stole away your sense of right and
+wrong. But we were in time to save you, and now we are ready to kneel at
+your feet and proclaim you our king. First there is the Zar to be dealt
+with and then we shall set up the new regime. Are you with us?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Karl gazed at the speaker in wonder. He a king? Always to live amongst
+the wearers of the purple? To be responsible for the welfare of half the
+world? It was unthinkable! But Zar Boris, the murderer of his own
+father--he must be punished, and at the hands of the son!
+
+"I'll do it," he said simply. "That is, I'll do whatever you have
+planned in the way of exterminating the Zar. Then we'll talk of the new
+empire. But how is the Zar to be overcome? I thought he was invincible,
+with his Moon men and terrible weapons."
+
+"Ah! That, my boy, is where our scientists have triumphed. True, his
+rays were terrible. They could not be combatted when he first returned.
+The strange chemicals and gases of the Moon men defied analysis or
+duplication. His citadel atop the city of Dorn is proof against them
+all; proof against explosives and rays of all kinds known to him. The
+disintegration and decomposition rays have no effect on the crystal of
+its walls. It is hermetically sealed from the outer air so can not be
+gassed. The vibration impulses have no effect upon its reinforced
+structure. But there is a ray, a powerful destructive agent, against
+which it is not proof. And our scientists have developed this agency.
+You shall have the privilege of pressing the release of the energy that
+destroys the arch-fiend in his lair. His dominance over, the empire will
+fall. We shall take it--for you."
+
+A strange exaltation shone from the faces of those in the room, and Karl
+found that it was contagious. His bosom swelled and he itched to handle
+the controls of this wonderful ray.
+
+"This ray," continued the brother of old Rudolph, "carries the longest
+vibrations ever measured, the vibrations of infra-red, the heat-ray. We
+have succeeded in concentrating a terrific amount of power in its
+production, and with it are able to produce temperatures in excess of
+that of the interior of the earth, where all substances are molten or
+gaseous. The Zar's crystal palace cannot withstand it for a second. He
+cannot escape!"
+
+"How'll you know he's there at the time?" Karl was greatly excited, but
+he was curious too.
+
+"Come with me, my boy. I'll show you." The old man led him from the room
+and the others followed respectfully.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+They stopped at a circular port and Karl saw that they were high above
+the earth in a vessel that hovered motionless, quivering with what
+seemed like human eagerness to be off.
+
+"This vessel?" he asked.
+
+"It's a huge sphere; the base of our operations. To it we drew the aero
+on which you were fighting. A magnetic force discovered by our
+scientists and differing only slightly from that used in counteracting
+gravity. We let the rest of them go; foolishly I think. But it's done
+now and we have no fear. From this larger vessel we shall send forth
+smaller ones, armed with the heat-ray. The flagship of the fleet is to
+be yours and you'll lead the attack on Dorn. Here--I'll show you the
+Zar."
+
+They had reached the room of the detectoscopes--a mass of mechanisms
+that reminded Karl of nothing so much as the vitals of the intermediate
+levels which he had visited with Leon--and Rhoda. He knew that he
+flushed when he thought of her. What a fool he had been!
+
+A disc glowed as one of the silver-robed strangers manipulated the
+controls. The upper surface of Dorn swung into view. Rapidly the image
+drew nearer and they were looking at the crystal pyramid that was the
+Zar's palace. Down, down to its very tip they passed. Karl recoiled from
+the image as it seemed they were falling to its glistening sides. The
+sensation passed. They were through, penetrating solid crystal, masonry,
+steel and duralumin girders. Room after room was opened to their view.
+It was magic--the magic of the upper levels.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now they were in the throne room. A group of purple-clad men and women
+stood before the dais. Leon, Rhoda--all of his wild companions were
+there, facing the dais. The Zar was raging and the words of his speech
+came raucously to their ears through the sound-producing mechanism.
+
+"You've failed miserably, all of you," he screamed. "He's gotten away
+and you know the penalty. Taru--the vibrating ray!"
+
+The Moon man already was fussing with a gleaming machine, a machine with
+bristling appendages having metallic spheres on their ends, a machine in
+which dozens of vacuum tubes glowed suddenly.
+
+Rhoda screamed. It was a familiar sound to Karl. He noted with
+satisfaction that Leon could hardly stand on his feet and that his face
+was covered with plasters. Then, startled, he saw that Leon was
+shivering as with the ague. His outline on the screen grew dim and
+indistinct as the rate of vibration increased. Then the body bloated and
+became misty. He could see through it. The vibrating death! His father
+had gone the same way!
+
+Karl groaned at the thought. The whine of the distant machine rose in
+pitch until it passed the limit of audibility. Tiny pin-points of
+incandescence glowed here and there from the Zar's victims as periods of
+vibration were reached that coincided with the natural periods of
+certain of the molecules of their structure. They were no longer
+recognizable as human beings. Shimmering auras surrounded them. Suddenly
+they were torches of cold fire, weaving, oscillating with inconceivable
+rapidity. Then they were gone; vanished utterly.
+
+The Zar laughed--that horrible cackle again.
+
+"Great God!" exclaimed Karl, "let's go! The fiend must not live a moment
+longer than necessary. Are you ready?"
+
+Rudolph's brother smiled. "We're ready Karl," he said.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The great vessel hummed with activity. The five torpedo-shaped aeros of
+the battle fleet were ready to take off from the cavities in the hull.
+In the flagship Karl was stationed at the control of the heat-ray. His
+instructions in its operation had been simple. A telescopic sight with
+crosshairs for the centering of the object to be attacked; a small
+lever. That was all. He burned with impatience.
+
+Then they were dropping; falling clear of the mother ship. The pilot
+pressed a button and the electronic motors started. A burst of roaring
+energy streamed from the tapered stern of their vessel and the earth
+lurched violently to meet them. Down, down they dived until the rocking
+surface of Dorn was just beneath them. Then they flattened out and
+circled the vast upper surface. From the corner of his eye Karl saw that
+the other four vessels of his fleet were just behind. There was a flurry
+among the wasplike clouds of pleasure craft over the city. They scurried
+for cover. Something was amiss!
+
+"Hurry!" shouted Karl. "The warning is out! There is no time to lose!"
+
+He pressed his face to the eye-piece of his sight, his finger on the
+release lever of the ray. The crystal pyramid crossed his view and was
+gone. Again it crossed, more slowly this time. And now his sight was
+dead on it, the gleaming wall rushing toward him. Pressure on the tiny
+button. They'd crash into the palace in another second! But no, a
+brilliant flash obscured his vision, a blinding light that made the sun
+seem dark by comparison. They roared on and upward. He took his eye from
+the telescope and stared ahead, down. The city was dropping away, and,
+where the crystal palace had stood, there was a spreading blob of molten
+material from which searing vapors were drifting. The roofs of the city
+were sagging all around and great streams of the sparkling, sputtering
+liquid dripped into the openings that suddenly appeared. Derek Van Dorn
+was avenged.
+
+"Destroy! Destroy!" yelled Karl madly. A microphone hung before him and
+his words rang through every vessel of his convoy.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The lust of battle was upon him. A fleet of the Zar's aeros had risen
+from below; twenty of them at least. These would be manned by Moon
+creatures, he knew, and would carry all of the dreadful weapons which
+had originated on that strange body. But he did not know that his own
+ships were insulated against most of the rays used by the Zar's forces.
+He knew only that he must fight; fight and kill; exterminate every last
+one of the Zar's adherents or be exterminated in the attempt.
+
+Kill! Kill! The madness was contagious. His pilot was a marvel and drove
+his ship straight for the massed ships of the foe. The air was vivid
+with light-streamers. A ray from an enemy vessel struck the thick glass
+of the port through which he looked and the outer surface was shattered
+and pock-marked. But a cloud of vapor and a dripping stream of fiery
+liquid told him his own ray had taken effect on a vessel of the enemy.
+One! They wheeled about and spiraled, coming up under another of the
+Zar's aeros. It vanished in a puff of steam and they narrowly missed
+being covered by the falling remnants of incandescent liquid. Two!
+Karl's aim was good and he gloated in the fact. Three! They climbed and
+turned over, dropping again into the fray. Four!
+
+The air grew stifling, for the expended energy of the enemies' rays must
+needs be absorbed. It could not disintegrate them nor decompose their
+bodies, but the contacts were many and the liberation of heat enormous.
+They were suffocating! But Karl would not desist. They drove on, now
+beneath, now above an enemy ship. He lost count.
+
+One of his own vessels was in trouble. The report came to him from the
+little speaker at his ear. He looked around in alarm. A glowing object
+reeled uncertainly over there between two of the aeros of the Zar. The
+concentration of beams of vibrations was too much for the sturdy craft.
+It was red hot and its occupants burned alive where they sat. Suddenly
+it slipped into a spin and went slithering down into the city, leaving a
+gaping opening where it fell. This sobered him somewhat, but he went
+into the battle with renewed fury.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+How many had they brought down? Fifteen? Sixteen? He tore his purple
+jacket from his body. The perspiration rolled from his pores. His own
+ship would be next. But what did it matter? Kill! Kill! He shouted once
+more into the microphone, then dived into battle. Another and another!
+In Heaven's name, how many were there? It was maddening. If only he
+could breathe. His lungs were seared; his eyes smarting from the heat.
+And then it was over.
+
+Three of the Zar's aeros remained, and these turned tail to run for it.
+No! They were falling, nose down, under full power; diving into the city
+from which they had come. Suicide? Yes. They couldn't face the
+recriminations that must come to them. And anything was better than
+facing that burning death from the strange little fighters which had
+come from out the skies. Dorn was a mass of wreckage.
+
+Karl tore at the fastenings of the ports, searing his fingers on the
+heated metal. His pilot had collapsed, the little aero heading madly
+skyward with no guiding hand. Air! They must have air! He loosened the
+pilot's jacket; slapped frantically at his wrists in the effort to bring
+him to consciousness. Then he was at the controls of the vessel, tugging
+on first one, then the other. The aero circled and spun, executing the
+most dangerous of sideslips and dives. A little voice was speaking to
+him--the voice of the radio--instructing him. In a daze he followed
+instructions as best he could. The whirlings of the earth stabilized
+after a time and he found he was flying the vessel; climbing rapidly.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A sense of power came to him as the little voice of the radio continued
+to instruct. Here were the controls of the electronic motor; there the
+gravity-energy. He was proceeding in the wrong direction. But what did
+it matter? He learned the meaning of the tiny figures of the altimeter;
+the difference between the points of the compass. Still he drove on.
+
+"East! Turn East!" begged the little voice from the radio. "You're
+heading west. Your speed--a thousand kilometers an hour--it's too fast.
+Turn back, Zar Peter!"
+
+He tore the loud speaker of the radio from its fastenings. West! He
+wanted to go west! On and on he sped, becoming more and more familiar
+with the workings of the little vessel as he progressed. A cooling
+breeze whistled from the opened ports, a breeze that smelled of the sea.
+His heart sang with the wonder of it all. He could fly. And fly he did.
+Zar Peter? Never! He knew now where he belonged; knew what he wanted.
+He'd find the coast of North America. Follow it until he located New
+York. A landing would be easy, for had not the voice instructed him in
+the use of the gravity-energy? He'd make his way to the lower levels, to
+the little book shop of Rudolph Krassin. A suit of gray denim awaited
+him there and he'd never discard it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Onward he sped into the night, which was falling fast. He held to his
+westward course like a veteran of the air lanes. The pilot had ceased to
+breathe and Karl was sorry. Game little devil, that pilot. Have to shove
+his body overboard. Too bad.
+
+Rudolph's brother would understand. He'd be watching in the detectoscope.
+And the others--those who had wished to seat him on a throne--they'd
+understand, too. They'd have to!
+
+Rudolph would forgive him, he knew. Paul Van Dorn--his own cousin--the
+secret agents of the Zar would never locate him! Too many friends of
+Rudolph's were of the red police.
+
+He gave himself over to happy thoughts as the little aero sped on in the
+darkness. Home! He was going home! Back to the gray denim, where he
+belonged and where now he would remain content.
+
+
+
+
+The Ape-Men of Xlotli
+
+_By David R. Sparks_
+
+ A beautiful face in the depths of a geyser--and Kirby plunges into
+ a desperate mid-Earth conflict with the dreadful Feathered
+ Serpent.
+
+CHAPTER I
+
+
+Kirby did not know what mountains they were. He did know that the
+Mannlicher bullets of eleven bad Mexicans were whining over his head and
+whizzing past the hoofs of his galloping, stolen horse. The shots were
+mingled with yelps which pretty well curdled his spine. In the
+circumstances, the unknown range of snow mountains towering blue and
+white beyond the arid, windy plateau, offering he could not tell what
+dangers, seemed a paradise. Looking at them, Kirby laughed harshly to
+himself.
+
+As he dug the heels of his aviator's boots into the stallion's flanks,
+the animal galloped even faster than before, and Kirby took hope. Then
+more bullets and more yelps made him think that his advantage might
+prove only temporary. Nevertheless, he laughed again, and as he became
+accustomed to the feel of a stallion under him, he even essayed a few
+pistol shots back at the pack of frantic, swarthy devils he had fooled.
+
+[Illustration: _His head wavered back and forth and his hiss filled the
+night._]
+
+Three hours ago he had been eating a peaceful breakfast with his friend
+and commandant, Colonel Miguel de Castanar, in the sunlit patio of the
+commandant's hacienda. Castanar, chief of the air patrol for the
+district, had waxed enthusiastic over the suppression of last spring's
+revolutionists and the cowed state of up-country bandits. Captain
+Freddie Kirby, American instructor of flying to Mexican pilots in the
+making, had agreed with him and asked for one of the Wasps and three
+days' leave with which to go visiting in Laredo. The simple matter of a
+broken fuel line, a forced landing two hundred kilometres from nowhere,
+and the unlucky proximity of the not-so-cowed horsemen, were the things
+which had changed the day from what it had been to what it was.
+
+The one piece of good fortune which had befallen him since the bandits
+had surrounded the wrecked Wasp, looted it, and taken its lone pilot
+prisoner, was the break he was getting now. During the squadron's first
+halt to feed, he had knocked down his guards and made a bolt for the
+grazing stallion. So far, the attempt was proving worth while.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On and on the stallion lunged toward the white mountains. Kirby's eyes
+became red rimmed now from fatigue and the glare of the sun and the dust
+of the pitilessly bare plateau. A negligible scalp wound under his mop
+of straw-colored hair, slight as it was, did not add to his comfort. But
+still he would not give up, for the horse, as if it sensed what its
+rider needed most, was making directly for a narrow ravine which
+debouched on the plateau from the nearest mountain flank.
+
+It was the promise of cover afforded by the jagged rocks and jungle
+growth of that ravine which kept hope alive in Kirby's throbbing brain.
+
+The stallion was blown and staggering. Foam from the heavily bitted
+mouth flashed back in great yellow flakes against Kirby's dust-caked
+aviator's tunic. But just the same, the five mile gallop had carried
+both horse and rider beyond range of any but the most expert rifle shot.
+And Kirby knew that if his own splendid mount was almost ready to crash,
+the horses of his pursuers must be in worse shape still. So for the
+third time since the fight had begun, he laughed. This time there was no
+harshness, but only relief, in the sound which came from his dry lips.
+
+Ten minutes later, he flung himself out of his saddle. Like the caress
+of a vast, soothing hand, the shadowed coolness of the ravine lay upon
+him. As his feet struck ground, they splashed in the water overflowing
+from a spring at the base of an immense rock. At once Kirby dropped the
+reins on the stallion's neck, giving him his freedom, and as the horse
+lowered his head to drink, Kirby stooped also.
+
+There was cover everywhere. Kirby's first move after pulling both
+himself and the horse away from the spring, was to glance up the long,
+deeply shaded canyon which he had entered--a gash hacked into the breast
+of the steep mountain as by a titanic ax. Then, reassured as to the
+possibilities for a defensive retreat, he glanced back toward the
+dazzling, bare plateau.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was what he saw taking place amongst the sombreroed bandits out there
+which made the grin of satisfaction fade from his broad mouth. His last
+glance backward, before bolting into the canyon mouth, had showed him a
+ragged squadron of men left far behind, yet galloping after him still.
+But now--
+
+Presently a puzzled frown made wrinkles in Freddie Kirby's wide
+sunburned forehead. He relaxed his grip upon the heavy Luger, which, in
+his big hands, looked like a cap pistol, and rubbed his eyes.
+
+But he was not mistaken. The horsemen had halted! Out there on the
+glaring, alkali-arid plateau, they were standing as still as so many
+statues. Looking toward the canyon mouth which had swallowed their
+quarry, they certainly were, but they were halted as completely as men
+struck dead.
+
+"Huh," Kirby grunted, and scratched behind his ear.
+
+The next second he swung around to look at his horse, uncertain what he
+was going to do next, but aware of the fact that right now, with a lot
+of unknown country between himself and Castanar's sunlit patio, the
+stallion was going to be a friend in need.
+
+As he turned, however, prepared to take up the loose reins, something
+else happened. The stallion let out a neigh as shrill as a trumpet
+blast. As Kirby jumped, grabbed for the bridle, his fingers found empty
+air. Like a crazy animal the stallion leaped past him, barely missing
+him. Out toward the plain the horse jumped, out and away from the shaded
+canyon mouth, out toward the spot where other horses waited. And despite
+the animal's blown condition, the speed he put into his retreat left
+Kirby dazed.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+After a helpless, profanity-filled second, Kirby scratched behind his
+ear again. As certain as the fact that almost his sole hope of getting
+back to civilization depended upon the stallion, was the fact that the
+brute did not intend to stop running until he dropped.
+
+"Now what in the hell ever got into his crazy head?" Kirby muttered
+grimly.
+
+Then he turned around to glance up the shadow-filled slash of a canyon,
+and sniffed.
+
+"Huh!"
+
+Faintly in the air had risen an odor the like of which he had never
+encountered in his life. A combination, it was, of the unforgetable
+stench which hangs over a battlefield when the dead are long unburied,
+and of a fragrance more rare, more heady, more poignantly sweet than any
+essence ever concocted by Parisian perfumer.
+
+With the drifting scent came a sound. Faint, carrying from a distance,
+the rumble which Kirby heard was almost certainly that of a geyser.
+
+There was no telling what had brought the troop of horsemen to a halt,
+but after a time Kirby knew that the cause of his horse's sudden
+departure must have been a whiff of the strange perfume.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For a long time he stood still, watching the crazy stallion dwindle in
+size, watching the line of unexpectedly timid bandits. Then, when it
+became apparent that the horsemen were going to stay put either until he
+came out, or showed that he never was coming out, he shrugged, and swung
+on his heel so that he faced up the canyon.
+
+The odor was dying away now, and the geyser rumble was gone. In Kirby's
+heart came a mingled feeling of tense uneasiness and fascinated
+curiosity. Momentarily he was almost glad that his horse _had_ bolted,
+and that his pursuers _were_ blocking any lane of retreat except that
+offered by the canyon. If things had been different, the queer behavior
+of the Mexicans, the unaccountable actions of his horse and the equally
+strange growth of his own uneasiness might have made him uncertain
+whether he would go up the canyon or not. Now it was the only thing to
+do, and Kirby was glad because, fear or no fear, he wanted to go on.
+
+"I wonder," he said out loud as he started, "just what the denizens of
+First Street in Kansas would say to a layout like this!"
+
+
+CHAPTER II
+
+At the end of an hour he was still wondering.
+
+At midday the canyon was chill and dank, lit only by a half light which
+at times dwindled to a deep dusk as the rock walls beetled together
+hundreds of feet above his head. Always when he stumbled through one of
+the darkest passages, he heard and half saw immense gray bats flapping
+above him. In the half-lit reaches, he hardly took a step without seeing
+great rats with gray coats, yellow teeth, and evil pink eyes. But rats
+and bats combined were not as bad as the snakes. They were almost white,
+and nowhere had he seen rattlers of such size. If his caution relaxed
+for a second, they struck at him with fangs as long and sharp as
+needles.
+
+The tortured, twisted cedars, the paloverdi, occatilla, cholla, opunti,
+through which he edged his laborious way, all offered an almost animate,
+armed hostility.
+
+Altogether this journey was the least sweet he had taken anywhere. Yet
+he went on.
+
+Why had eleven Mexican bandits refused to advance even to within decent
+rifle range of the canyon's mouth? What was there about the putrid yet
+gorgeous perfume that had made the stallion go off his nut, so to
+speak?
+
+After a time, Kirby veered away from a fourteen-foot rattler which
+flashed in a loathsome coil on his left hand. Hungry, weakened by all he
+had been through since breakfast time, he plodded doggedly on.
+
+But a moment later he stumbled past a twisted cedar, and then stopped,
+forgetting even the snakes.
+
+At his feet lay the bleached skeleton of a man.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Beside the right hand, in a position which indicated that only the final
+relaxation of death had loosened his grip upon a precious object, lay a
+cylinder, carefully carved, of rich, yellow gold.
+
+Of the science of anthropology Kirby knew enough to make him sure that
+the dolicocephalic skull and characteristically shaped pelvic and thigh
+bones of the skeleton had belonged to a white man.
+
+As for the cylinder--But he was not so sure what that was.
+
+Regardless of the dry swish of a rattler's body on the rocks behind
+him, he lifted the object from the spot in which it had lain for no man
+knew how long. Of much the size and shape of an old-time cylindrical wax
+phonograph record, the softly gleaming thing weighed, he judged, almost
+two pounds.
+
+Two pounds of soft, virgin gold of a quality as fine as any he had seen
+amongst all the treasures brought out of Mexico, Yucatan, and Peru
+combined!
+
+But the gold was not the only thing. If Kirby was human enough to think
+in terms of treasure, he was also enough of an amateur anthropologist to
+hold his breath over the carvings on the yellow surface.
+
+First he recognized the ancient symbols of Sun and Moon. And then a
+representation, semi-realistic, semi-conventionalized, of Quetzalcoatl,
+the Feathered Serpent, known in all the annals of primitive Mexican
+religions.
+
+Good enough.
+
+But the mere symbols by no means told the whole story of the cylinder.
+The workmanship was archaic, older than any Aztec art Kirby knew, older
+than Toltec, older far, he ventured to guess, than even earliest archaic
+Mayan carvings.
+
+God, what a find!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+For a moment it seemed almost impossible that he, Freddie Kirby, native
+of Kansas, unromantic aviator, should have been the one to discover this
+relic of an unknown, lost race. Yet the cylinder of gold was there, in
+his hand.
+
+After a long minute Kirby looked around him, then listened.
+
+From up the canyon came the provocative rumble of the geyser. It was
+closer now, and Kirby, glancing at his watch which had been spared to
+him in the Wasp's crash, noted that just forty-four minutes had passed
+since the last eruption. There was nothing to be done about the bleached
+skeleton. So, tucking the precious cylinder into his tunic, Kirby
+headed on up the gash of a canyon.
+
+Far away indeed seemed the neat, maple-shaded asphalt street, the rows
+of parked cars and farm wagons, the telephone office and drug store and
+bank, of the Kansas town where he had grown up.
+
+Time passed until again he heard the geyser, and again was dizzied by
+the perfume. As the fragrance--close and powerful now--died away, he
+flailed with one arm at a two-foot bat which flapped close to his head.
+
+And then he trudged his dogged way around a deeply shadowed bend, and
+found the chasm not only almost wholly dark, but narrower than it had
+been at any previous point.
+
+"Holy mackerel," Kirby groaned. "Phew! If this keeps up, I--"
+
+He stopped. His jaw dropped.
+
+"Oh, hell!"
+
+The beetling walls narrowed in until the gash was scarcely fifteen feet
+wide. Further progress was barred by a smooth wall which rose sheer in
+front of him.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kirby did not know how many seconds passed before he made out through
+the gloom that the wall was man-made and carved with the same symbols of
+Sun, Moon, and Feathered Serpent, which ornamented the cylinder of gold.
+But when he did realize at last, the shout with which he expressed his
+feeling was anything but a groan.
+
+It simply meant that the skeleton which once had been a man, had almost
+surely found the golden cylinder beyond the wall and not in the canyon.
+And if the dead man had passed that smooth, carved barrier, another man
+could do it!
+
+Kirby jumped forward, began to search in the darkness for some hidden
+entrance.
+
+Minute after minute passed. He gave another cry. He saw a long, upright
+crack in the stone surface, and a quick push of his hands made the
+stones in front of him give almost an inch.
+
+All at once his shoulder was planted, and behind that square shoulder
+was straining all the muscle of his two hundred pound body. The result
+was all that he desired. When he ceased pushing, a slab of rock gaped
+wide before him, giving entrance to a pitch dark tunnel.
+
+For a moment he held the portal back, then, releasing his pressure, he
+stepped into the dark passage. By the time a ponderous grating of rocks
+assured him that the door had swung shut of its own weight, he had
+produced matches and struck a light.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The puny flame showed him a curving passage hewn smoothly through the
+heart of bedrock. Before the flare died he walked twenty feet, and as
+another match burned to his fingers, he found the right hand curve of
+the passage giving way to a left hand twist. After that he dared use no
+more of his precious matches. But just when the darkness was beginning
+to wear badly on his nerves, he uttered a low cry.
+
+As he increased his rapid walk to a run, the faint light he had suddenly
+seen ahead of him grew until it became a circular flare of daylight
+which marked the tunnel's end.
+
+Out of the passage Kirby strode with shoulders square and head up, his
+cool, level, practical blue eyes wide with wonder. Out of the tunnel he
+strode into the valley of the perfumed geyser.
+
+"God above!"
+
+The words were vibrant with hoarse reverence. He saw the sunlight of a
+cliff-surrounded diminutive Garden of Eden. He saw a vale of flowering
+grass, of palms and live oaks, saw patches of lilies so huge as to
+transcend belief, and dizzying clumps of tree cactus almost as tall as
+the palms themselves.
+
+What was more, he saw in the center of this upland, cliff-guarded
+valley, a gaping black orifice which every faculty of judgment told him
+was the mouth of the geyser of perfume. And beside it, outstretched on a
+smooth sheet of rock which glistened as though coated with a layer of
+clear, sparkling glass, he saw--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kirby blinked his eyes rapidly, hardly believing what he saw.
+
+On the glistening rock lay the perfectly preserved figure of a Spanish
+Conquistadore in full armor. Morion and breast-plate were in place, and
+glistened as though they had been burnished this morning. And the
+Spaniard's dark, handsome, bearded face! Kirby saw instantly that no
+decay had touched it, that even the hairs of the beard were perfect. The
+whole armor-clad corpse gleamed softly with a covering of the same
+glassy substance which covered the rock.
+
+Kirby glanced at his watch, saw that twelve minutes must elapse before
+the geyser spouted again. Then his eyes narrowed. He remained standing
+where he was, hard by the mouth of the tunnel, knowing that a wise man
+would conduct cautiously his exploration of this valley of wonders.
+
+Arsenic! Silicon!
+
+The two words stood out sharply in his thought. In Africa existed plenty
+of springs whose waters contained enough arsenic to bring death to those
+who drank. Might not the Spaniard's presence here be explained, then, by
+assuming that the geyser water was charged with a strong arsenic
+content, and, in addition, with some sort of silicon solution which,
+left to dry in the air, hardened to glass?
+
+Lord, what a discovery to take back with him to Kansas! Almost it made
+the discovery of the golden cylinder pale by comparison. Why, the
+commercial uses to which this silicon water might be put were almost
+without limit, and the owner of the concession might confidently expect
+to make millions!
+
+It was while Kirby stood there, breathless and jubilant, waiting for
+the geyser to spout, that he began to feel that _he was being watched_.
+
+Suddenly, with a start, he shot a sweeping glance over the whole grove.
+But that did no good. He saw nothing save sunlight and waving green
+leaves.
+
+Eleven days were to pass before he discovered all that was to be
+involved in that sensation of being gazed at by unseen eyes.
+
+
+CHAPTER III
+
+At the beginning of the eleventh morning in the valley, Kirby had again
+posted himself close to the mouth of the black tunnel, and again felt
+that hidden eyes were observing him.
+
+But this morning differed from the first morning, because now, for the
+first time, he was ready to do something about the watcher or watchers.
+Exploration of the whole valley had not helped. Therefore, there lay at
+his feet a considerable coil of rope, the manufacture of which from
+plaited strands of the tough grass in his Eden had taken him whole days.
+With what patience he could find, he was waiting for the gigantic spout
+of milky-colored, perfumed water which would mean that the geyser had
+gone off and would erupt no more for exactly forty-four minutes.
+
+Eleven days in the valley!
+
+While he waited, Kirby considered them. Who had made the beautiful
+footprints beside him, when he had slept at last after his arrival here?
+Why had so many of the queer, fuzzy topped shrubs with immense
+yam-shaped roots, which grew here been taken away during that first
+sleep, and during all his other periods of sleep? Who had taken them?
+Early in his stay, he had learned that the tuberlike roots were good to
+eat and would sustain life, and he supposed that the unseen people of
+the valley took them for food. But who were these people of the valley?
+
+Who had laid beside him during his first sleep the immense lily with
+perfume like that which came with the milky geyser spray--that spray of
+death and delight mingled? Why had someone scratched a line in the earth
+from him directly to the distant orifice of the geyser? Was this, as he
+believed, a signal to come not only to the edge of the orifice, _but to
+lower himself down into its depths_? And if the line were intended as a
+signal, did the persons who came to the valley while he slept, always
+eluding him, wish him well or mean to do him harm?
+
+Last question of all: had the beautiful girl's face he believed he had
+seen just once, been real or an hallucination? It had been while he was
+kneeling at the very edge of the geyser cone, staring down its many
+colored throat, that the vision had appeared. Misty white amidst the
+green gloom, the face had been turned up to him, smiling, its lips
+forming a kiss, and its great eyes beckoning. Had the face been real or
+a dream?
+
+Eleven days in the valley! Now, with his braided rope ready at last, he
+was going to do something which might help to answer his questions.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kirby reached out and began to run his grass rope, yard by yard, through
+his hands, searching carefully for any flaw. A canyon wren made the air
+sweet above him, while the morning sun began to wink and blink against
+the shadows which still lay against the face of the guardian cliffs.
+Kirby glanced at his watch and got up.
+
+Crossing beyond the mouth of the geyser, he grinned good morning at his
+friend the Conquistadore, and marched on into the shade of the live oak
+which grew nearest the geyser. Here he made one end of his rope fast to
+the gnarled trunk, inspected his pistol, patted his tunic to make sure
+that the cylinder of gold was safe, then stood by to await the geyser.
+
+With the passing of three minutes there came from the still empty
+orifice a sonorous rumbling. Kirby grinned.
+
+From deep in the earth issued a sound of fizzing and bubbling, and
+then, to the accompaniment of subterranean thunder, burst loose the
+milky, upward column which had never ceased to awe the man who watched
+so eagerly this morning. As the titanic jet leaped skyward now, the
+slanting rays of the sun caught it, and turned the water, fanning out,
+into a fire opal, into a sheet of living color.
+
+Kirby, hard headed to the last, drew from the supply in one pocket of
+his tunic, a strip of one of the tuberlike roots, and munched it.
+
+The thunder ceased. The waters receded.
+
+After that Kirby hesitated not a second. Promptly he moved forward,
+flung his coil of line down into the geyser tunnel, and swung on to the
+line. By the time he had swallowed the last bite of his breakfast, the
+world he knew had been left behind, and he was climbing down to a new.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It became at once apparent that the gorgeously colored, glassy-smooth
+throat glowed with tints which were unfamiliar to him. He could perceive
+these new shades of color, yet had no name for them.
+
+As he stopped after fifty feet to breathe, the color phenomenon made him
+wonder if the tuber roots he had been eating had affected his vision;
+then decided they had not. In addition to food value, the roots had some
+power to stimulate courage and a slight mental exhilaration. But the
+drug had proved non-habit forming, and Kirby knew that his powers of
+perception were not now, and never had been, affected.
+
+He swung down further.
+
+Just a moment after he began that progress was when things began to
+happen to him. First he heard what seemed to be the low titter of a
+human voice laughing sweetly. Next came a far off, unutterably lovely
+strumming of music. And then he realized that, at a depth of about a
+hundred feet, he was hanging level with a hole which marked the mouth
+of another tunnel.
+
+This new tunnel sloped down into the earth on his right hand. The floor
+and walls were glassy smooth, and the angle of descent was steep, but by
+no means as steep as the drop of the vertical geyser shaft in which he
+now hung.
+
+Laughter, music, the new tunnel suddenly aroused an excitement which
+made him quiver.
+
+"When I saw _her_," he gasped, "she was standing here, in the mouth of
+this tunnel, looking up at me!"
+
+Violently, Freddie Kirby forgot the maple-shaded street of his Kansas
+town, forgot everything but desire to reach the mouth of the new tunnel,
+where the girl of the exquisite face and beckoning lips had stood.
+Tightening his grip on the rope, he began to swing himself back and
+forth like a pendulum.
+
+It seemed probable that when the geyser water shot up past the
+horizontal tunnel, its force was so great that no water at all entered.
+He redoubled his efforts to widen his swing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Then his feet scraped on the floor, and in a second he had alighted
+there. He still hung stoutly to his line, however, for the tunnel sloped
+down sharply enough, and was slippery enough, to prohibit the
+maintenance of footing unaided.
+
+The music which issued from the depths of that stunningly mysterious
+passage swelled to a crescendo--and stopped. Kirby clung there to his
+precarious perch, his feet slipping on the glass under them with every
+move he made, and feelings stirred in his heart which had never been
+there before.
+
+Then, as silence reigned where the music had been, something prompted
+him to look up. The next instant he stifled a cry.
+
+With widening eyes he saw the flash of a white arm and the gleam of a
+knife hovering over the spot where his taut rope passed out of the
+geyser opening into the sunshine of the outer world. Again he stifled a
+cry. For crying out would do no good. While the suppressed sound was
+still on his lips, the knife flickered.
+
+Then Kirby was shooting downward, the severed line whipping out after
+him. The first plunge flung him off his feet. A long swoop which he took
+on his back dizzied him. But as the fall continued, he was able to slow
+it a little by bracing arms and legs against the tunnel walls.
+
+"Holy Jeehosophat!" he gurgled.
+
+But there seemed to be no particular danger. The slide was as smooth as
+most of the chutes he had ever encountered at summer swimming pools. If
+ever the confounded spiral passage came to an end, he might find that he
+was still all right. As seconds passed and he fell and fell, it seemed
+that he was bound for the center of the earth. It seemed that--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He swished around a multiple bend, and eyes which had been accustomed to
+darkness were blinded by light.
+
+It was light which radiated in all colors--blue, yellow, browns,
+purples, reds, pinks, and then all the new colors for which he had no
+name. Somehow Kirby knew that he had shot out of the tunnel, which
+emerged high up in the face of a cliff, and that he was dropping through
+perfumed, brilliant air resonant with the sound of birds and insects and
+human cries. The funny thing was that the pull of gravity was not right,
+somehow, and he was dropping fairly slowly. From far below, a body of
+what looked like water was sweeping up to meet him. Kirby closed his
+eyes.
+
+When he opened them again, his whole body was stinging with the slap of
+his impact, and he found that it was water which he had struck. The
+proof of it lay in the fact that he was swimming, and was approaching a
+shore.
+
+But such water! It was milky white and perfumed as the geyser flow had
+been, and it seemed luminous as with a radium fire. Had he not realized
+presently that the fluid probably contained enough arsenic to finish a
+thousand like him, he would have thought of himself as bathing in the
+waters of Paradise.
+
+But then he began to forget about the poison which might already be at
+work upon him.
+
+Ahead of him, stretched out in the gorgeous, colored light, ran a beach
+which was backed by heavy jungle. And on the beach stood the lovely
+creatures, all clad in shimmering, glistening garments, whose flutelike
+cries had come to him as he fell.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kirby looked, and became almost powerless to continue his swim. The
+beauty of those frail women was like the reputed beauty of bright
+angels. That paralyzing effect of wonder, however, did not last long.
+
+The girls moved forward to the water's edge, and, laughing amongst
+themselves, beckoned to him with lovely slender hands whose every motion
+was a caress.
+
+"Be not afraid," called one in a curious patois dialect, about
+five-sixths of which seemed made up of Spanish words, distorted but
+recognizable.
+
+"The water would kill you," called another, "as it killed the Spaniard
+in armor. But we are here to save you. I will give you a draught to
+drink which will defeat the poison. Come on to us!"
+
+Kirby's heart was almost literally in his mouth now, because the girl
+who promised him salvation was she whose lips had formed a kiss at him
+from the green-gloomy throat of the geyser.
+
+His feet struck a shale bottom. Panting, he stood up and was conscious
+of the fact that despite his forlornly dripping and dishevelled
+condition, he was tall and straight and big, and that for some reason
+all of the girls on the gleaming sand, and one girl in particular, were
+anxious to receive him here.
+
+The one girl had drawn a small, gleaming flask of gold from the misty
+bodice of her gown, and was holding it out while she laughed with red
+lips and great, dazzling dark eyes.
+
+"_Pronto!_" she called in pure Spanish, and other girls echoed the word.
+"Oh," went on the bright owner of the flask, "we thought you would
+_never_ have done with your work on the rope. It took you so long!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kirby left the smooth lake behind him and stood dripping on the sand.
+The moment the air touched his clothes, he felt that they were
+stiffening slightly. Yet the sensation brought no terror. He could not
+feel terror as he faced the girls.
+
+"Give him the flask, Naida!" someone exclaimed.
+
+"Ah, but the Gods _have_ been kind to us!" echoed another.
+
+The girl with the flask made a gesture for silence.
+
+"Is it Naida you are called?" Kirby put in quickly, and as he spoke the
+Spanish words, the roll of them on his tongue did much to make him know
+that he was sane and awake, and not dreaming, that this was still the
+Twentieth Century, and that he was Freddie Kirby.
+
+Answering his question, Naida nodded, and gave him the flask.
+
+"A single draught will act as antidote to the poison," she said.
+
+"I drink," said Kirby as he raised the flask, "to the many of you who
+have been so gracious as to save me!"
+
+A flashing smile, a blush was his answer. And then he had wetted his
+lips with, and was swallowing, a limpid liquid which tasted of some
+drug.
+
+"Enough!" Naida ordered in a second.
+
+As she reached for the flask, her companions closed in as though a
+ceremony of some sort had been completed.
+
+"Is it time to tell him yet, Naida?" piped one of the girls, younger
+than the rest, whom someone had called Elana.
+
+"Oh, _do_ begin, Naida," chorused two more. "We can't wait _much_ longer
+to find out if he is going to help us!"
+
+Kirby turned to Naida, while a soothing sensation crept through him from
+the draught he had taken.
+
+"Pray tell me what it is that I am to be permitted to do for you. I
+can promise you that the whole of my life and strength, and such
+intelligence as I possess, is yours to command."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Excited small cries and a clapping of hands answered him. As for Naida,
+her face lighted with glowing joy.
+
+"Oh, one who could say that, _must_ be the friend and protector of whom
+we have stood in such bitter need!"
+
+"What," asked Kirby, "is this need which made one of you cut my rope, so
+that I should come here?"
+
+A momentary silence was broken only by the hum of insects in the
+perfumed air, and by the golden thrilling of a bird back in the jungle.
+Then Kirby beheld Naida bowing to him.
+
+"So be it," she said in a voice low and flutelike. "I will speak now
+since you request it. Already you have seen that you are here in our
+world because we conspired amongst ourselves to bring you here. Our
+reason--"
+
+She paused, looked deep into his eyes.
+
+"Amigo," she continued slowly, "we whom you see here are the People of
+the Temple. For more centuries than even our sages can tell, our
+progenitors have dwelt here, where you find us, knowing always of your
+outer world, but remaining always unknown by it. But now the time has
+come when those of us who are left amongst our race need the help of one
+from the outer races we have shunned. Dangers of various orders confront
+us who have waited here for your coming. When we first discovered you in
+the Valley of the Geyser, the idea came to me that we must make you
+understand our troubles, and ask of you--"
+
+But then she stopped.
+
+As Kirby stared at her, the gentleness of her expression was replaced by
+a swift strength which made her majestic.
+
+The next moment bedlam reigned upon the beach.
+
+"_They are after us!_" gasped one of the girls in terror. "Quick, Naida!
+Quick! Quick!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Whatever it was that threatened, Naida did not need to be told that the
+need for action was pressing. She shouted at her companions some order
+which Kirby did not understand. From a pouch at her side, she snatched
+out a greyish, spherical vegetable substance which looked almost like a
+tennis ball. Then she braced herself as if to withstand an assault.
+
+"Stand back!" she cried to Kirby.
+
+He had long ago ceased to wonder at anything that might happen here.
+Disappointed that Naida's story had been interrupted, wondering what was
+wrong, he obeyed Naida's order to keep clear.
+
+As he fell back and stood motionless, there came from behind a dense
+screen of shrubs which would have resembled aloe and prickly pear
+bushes, save that they were as big as oak trees, a ghastly howling. The
+next second, hopped and hurtled across the beach toward the girls, a
+group of hair-covered, shaggy creatures which were neither apes nor men.
+The faces, contorted with lust, were hideously leathery and brown, the
+foreheads small and beetling, and the mouths enormous, with immense
+yellow teeth.
+
+Helpless, Kirby realized that Naida and all the others had clapped over
+their faces curious masks which seemed to be made of some crystalline
+substance, and that now others had armed themselves with the tennis
+balls. And that was the last observation he made before the battle
+opened furiously.
+
+With a cry muffled behind her mask, Naida leaped out in front of her
+squadron and cut loose her queer vegetable ball with whizzing aim and
+force.
+
+Full into the snarling face of one of the ape-men the thing smashed,
+filling the air all about the creature with a yellow, mistlike powder.
+Kirby was half deafened by the yells of rage and terror which went up
+from the entire attacking band. The creature who had been hit fell to
+his knees the while he made agonized tearing movements at his face and
+uttered shrill, jabbering yelps.
+
+Other balls flashed instantly from Naida's ranks, and each brought about
+the same ghastly result as the first. But then Kirby saw that the whole
+jungle seethed with the hairy, awful men.
+
+"Keep back!" Naida shrieked at him through her mask. "We have no mask
+for you. If the powder from our fungi touches you, it will be the end!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+With gaps in the advancing line filled as soon as each screeching ape
+went down, the attackers leaped on until Kirby knew they would be upon
+the girls in a matter of seconds. A sweat broke out on his neck.
+
+But then an idea gripped him, and suddenly, without even a last glance
+at Naida, he leaped away even as she had commanded.
+
+A great boulder lay on the shore fifty yards away. Toward it Kirby
+streaked as though he had become coward. But he had not turned coward.
+
+By the time he reached the shelter which would protect him from the
+fungus mist, a turning point had come in the battle. The ape-men had
+closed in on the girls, were swarming about them, and the mist balls had
+almost ceased to fly. But the thing which gave Kirby hope was that the
+apes were not attempting to harm the girls. They seemed victors, but
+they were not committing atrocities.
+
+It was the sharp intuition that something like this might happen which
+had sent Kirby fleeing from the fight. He believed he might yet prove
+useful.
+
+The thickest group of attackers were jostling about Naida. As the
+screams and sobs of the girls quivered out, mingled with the guttural
+roaring of the men, Naida was shut off by a solid wall of aggressors.
+
+Then Kirby saw her again. But now two of the most powerful of the
+ape-men had caught her up and was carrying her. Her kicking and writhing
+and biting accomplished nothing. The apes were headed directly back to
+the jungle.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now, however, most of the yellow mist had disappeared, and that was all
+Kirby had been waiting for. With a growling shout, he tore out from
+behind his boulder, his Luger ready. Naida's captors were in full
+retreat, and other pairs of men were snatching up other girls and
+hopping after them. Toward Naida Kirby ran madly but not blindly.
+
+"Naida! Naida!" he bellowed.
+
+He got in two strides for every one the apes made.
+
+"Naida!" he shouted, and at last saw her look at him.
+
+Her face was pallid with loathing and terror. As her glimmering dark
+eyes met his, they flashed a plea which made his heart thrash against
+his lungs.
+
+With a final roar of encouragement Kirby closed in on the hair-covered
+men, and fired instantly a shot which caught one full in the heart. The
+creature wavered on its legs, looked at the unexpected enemy with
+dismayed, swinish little red eyes, and relaxing his hold upon Naida,
+dropped without making a sound.
+
+After that--
+
+But suddenly Kirby found himself unable to comprehend fully the other
+terrific results of his intervention. Before the echoes of his shot
+died, there came to him the rumble of what seemed to be tons of falling
+rock. In the bright air a slight mist was precipitated. To all of which
+was added the effect upon the ape-men of fear of a weapon and a type of
+fighter utterly new to them.
+
+Kirby had fired believing that he would have to fight other ape-men
+when the first fell. But not so. Instead of that--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He blinked rapidly as he took in the scene.
+
+Naida had been released. Lying on the sand beside the dead ape-man, she
+was looking up at him in stupefied wonder. And her other captor, instead
+of remaining to fight, had clapped shaggy hands over his ears, and was
+leaping headlong for the protection of the jungle!
+
+Moreover, the soprano cries of the girls and the deep howls of the men
+were rising everywhere, and everywhere the ape-men were dropping their
+captives and plunging away after their leader.
+
+"Huh," Kirby muttered aloud, and wondered what the citizens of Kansas
+would have to say about _this_.
+
+Naida looked at the dead and bleeding ape-man and shuddered, and then at
+the score or so of others brought down by the puff balls. Then she
+looked up at Kirby, raised her arms for his support, and smiled up into
+his brown face.
+
+Kirby forgot Kansas, lifted her, warm and alive, radiantly beautiful, in
+his arms.
+
+"Our friends the enemies," she whispered as she remained for a second in
+his embrace and then drew away, "will attack no more this day--thanks to
+you."
+
+There was no possible need for another shot, Kirby saw. In terrified
+silence, the first of the apes had already floundered behind the prickly
+pear and aloe bushes, and the last stragglers were using all the power
+in their legs to catch up. On the beach, Naida's followers were picking
+themselves up, and already a few of them had burst into ringing
+laughter.
+
+"Come on, all of you," Naida said to them, and, including Kirby in her
+glance, added, "We may as well go to the caciques now, and have it over
+with."
+
+
+CHAPTER IV
+
+It was with Naida at his side and the other girls grouped about them,
+that they started their journey to the "caciques," whoever they might
+be, "to have it over with," whatever that might mean. As they strode
+along in silence, Kirby did what he could to straighten out in his mind
+the many curious things which had happened since he sat testing his rope
+in the upper world this morning.
+
+In final analysis, it seemed to him that, extraordinary as his
+experience had been, there was nothing so much out of the way about it,
+after all. The only unusual thing was the existence of this inhabited
+pocket in the earth. For the rest, the strange colors to which he could
+not put a name, were simply some manifestation of infra-reds and
+ultra-violets. And then the startling effect of his single shot at the
+ape-men--that was simply the old story of savage creatures running from
+a new weapon and a new enemy; naturally the shot had sounded loud in
+this enclosed cavern. Lastly, the pull of gravity down here seemed upset
+somehow. But why should it not seem so, at this distance within the
+earth? The American was no scientist; the conclusions he reached seemed
+very reasonable to him.
+
+All told, the last thing Kirby found he needed to do was pinch himself
+to see if he was awake.
+
+A place of indefinite extent, the cavern seemed to be exactly what he
+had already judged it--a giant pocket within the earth. The ceiling, or
+the sky, was of some kind of natural glass--no doubt the same kind which
+was crackling on his clothes now--and from it emanated the brilliant,
+many colored glow which lighted the cavern. Radium? Perhaps it was that.
+Perhaps the rays were cast off from some other element even less
+understood than mysterious radium. As for the plant and animal life with
+which the cavern teemed, it was amazing.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But Kirby did not give himself up to silent observation any longer.
+
+"Will you finish telling me," he asked of Naida, "about the task I am to
+perform for you here?"
+
+Naida, walking with lithe strides along a path jungle-hemmed on both
+sides, smiled at him.
+
+"You are to be our leader."
+
+"Yes?"
+
+Now both Naida and the other girls became sober.
+
+"You will lead us in a revolt."
+
+"Ah!" Kirby whistled softly.
+
+"In a revolt against the caciques--the wise men--whose kind have
+governed the People of the Temple since the beginning."
+
+Her statement was received with acclaim by the whole troop, who crowded
+close around, the while they smiled at Kirby.
+
+"You mean I am to lead a revolt," he asked, "against these same caciques
+whom we are going now to face?"
+
+Naida nodded emphatically.
+
+"Yes, if revolt proves necessary. And it probably will."
+
+"Hum." Kirby scratched behind his ear. "You'd better tell me what you
+can about it."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Then, as they hurried on, Naida spoke rapidly.
+
+The situation before the People of the Temple was that for a long time
+now, the only children to be born had been girls. Worse still, not even
+a girl had been born during a period equal to sixteen upper-world years.
+The only remaining members of a race which had flourished in this
+underground land for countless thousands of years, consisted of the
+caciques, a handful of aged people, and the thirty-four girls, including
+Naida, who accompanied Kirby now.
+
+On one hand was promised extinction through lack of reproduction. On the
+other, even swifter and more terrible extinction at the hands of the
+ape-men, whom Naida called the Worshippers of Xlotli, the Rabbit God,
+the God of all bestiality and drunkenness.
+
+It was the menace of the ape-men, rather than the less appalling one of
+lack of reproduction, which was making the most trouble now. Ages ago,
+when the People of the Temple had flourished as a race, they had been
+untroubled by the Worshippers of Xlotli. But now the ape-men were by far
+the stronger; and they desired the girls who had been born as the last
+generation of an ancient race. The battle of this morning had been only
+one of many.
+
+Dissension between the caciques, who ruled the People of the Temple, and
+their girl subjects, had arisen on the subject of the best way of
+dealing with the ape-man menace.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Some time ago, Naida, heading a council of all the girls, had proposed
+to the caciques that support be sought amongst the people of the upper
+world. This would be done judiciously, by bringing to the lower realm a
+few men who were wise and strong, men who would make good husbands, and
+who could fight the ape-men.
+
+This proposal the priests had promptly quashed. They would never
+receive, they said, any members of the teeming outer races from whom the
+People of the Temple had so long been hidden. Those few who had
+blundered into the Valley of the Geyser during the centuries, and who
+had never escaped, were enough. Better, said the caciques, that a
+compromise be arranged with the subjects of the Rabbit God.
+
+Flatly then, the priests had proposed that some of the girls, the number
+to be specified later, should be given to the ape-men, and peace won.
+During the time of reprieve which would thus be afforded, prayers and
+sacrifices could be offered the Lords of the Sun and Moon, and to
+Quetzalcoatl, the Feathered Serpent. In answer to these prayers, the
+Gods would surely send the aged people who alone were left as
+prospective parents, a generation of sons.
+
+Once the priests' program of giving up some of the girls to the ape-men
+had been made definite, it had not taken Naida and the others long to
+decide that they would never submit. And then, while matters were at an
+acute stage, a tall, blond white man had come to the Valley of the
+Geyser--Kirby.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As Naida had finished her story, Kirby mustered a smile despite the
+soberness which had come upon him.
+
+"So the white man came," he repeated after her, "and all of you decided
+forthwith to stage your revolt."
+
+"Why not?" Naida answered. "We observed you until we were sure you
+possessed the qualities of leadership we wanted. After that, we did what
+we could to coax you to come here."
+
+Kirby grinned at that.
+
+"Now," Naida ended simply, "we will go to the caciques. If they accept
+you, and grant our requests to them, there will be peace. If they rage,
+it will be war."
+
+Suddenly she drew closer to Kirby as they swung along, and slipped her
+hand into his, looking up at him in silent entreaty.
+
+"How much farther," he asked in a voice which became sharp, "until we
+reach the headquarters of these caciques?"
+
+"They live in a castle which our ancestors built ages ago on a protected
+plateau," Naida answered tensely. "It is a good distance still, but we
+will cover it soon enough."
+
+They crossed now one edge of a shadow-filled forest composed principally
+of immense, pallid palmlike trees. Farther on, the path wound through a
+belt of swampy land covered by gigantic reeds which rustled above their
+heads with a glassy sound, and by things which looked like the cat-tails
+of the upper world, but were a hundred times larger. Everywhere hovered
+odd little creatures like birds, but with teeth in their long snouts and
+small frondlike growths on each side of their tails. About some swamp
+plants with very large blooms resembling passion flowers, flitted dragon
+flies of jeweled hues and enormous size, and under the flowers hopped
+strange toadlike creatures equipped with two pair of gauzy wings.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Finally, through a tunnel composed of ferns a hundred feet high, they
+emerged to a still densely overgrown but higher country which Naida said
+was a part of the Rorroh forest.
+
+In the forest, Kirby gained a hazy impression of bronzy, immense cycads
+and what appeared to be tree chrysophilums with gorgeous blossoms. Then
+he received a much clearer impression of other trees with blossoms of
+bright orange yellow and very thick petals, each tipped with a glassy
+sharp point. The disconcerting thing about the tree was that, as they
+approached, the scaly limbs began to tremble and wave, and suddenly
+lashed out as though making a human effort to snatch at the bright
+travelers.
+
+Naida and all the others hurried along without offering comment, and
+Kirby asked no questions.
+
+Once he thought he saw a group of gorilla creatures parallelling their
+course back amongst the forest growth, but if Naida observed the
+animals, she paid no attention. The one thing which had any effect upon
+the company was the appearance, presently, of two vast, birdlike
+creatures. As these things approached, Naida signaled to all to crouch
+beneath the shelter of a tall rock beside the path.
+
+Enormous, the birds had bat wings, and carried with them, as they
+approached, the stink of putrid flesh. The long beaks were overfull of
+sharp teeth. The heads, set upon bodies of glistening white-grey, were
+black. Reddish grey eyes searched the jungle as the creatures flapped
+along. But, the Pterodactyls--if they were that--passed above Naida's
+band without offering attack, and presently Naida gave the command to
+advance again.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In time, they came to a chasmlike gorge across which was suspended
+a slender long thread of a bridge. Not far above the bridge, a
+considerable river emptied itself into the gorge in a mirrorlike
+ribbon. Kirby could not hear the torrent fall--or rather could not
+hear it strike any solid bottom. But from somewhere in the unlighted,
+unfathomed depths of the abyss rose strange bubbling and whistling
+sounds.
+
+At the bridge, Naida paused and pointed to the land across the river.
+And as Kirby looked in the direction indicated, he beheld a rocky
+eminence rising for several hundred feet straight up from the expanse of
+a level, tree and grass covered plain. Atop of the plateau, glimmered
+the complex towers and turrets, the crenellated walls of a castle which,
+in its grey antiquity, seemed as old as the race of men.
+
+"It is behind those walls that the caciques dwell," Naida said quickly.
+"It is behind the castle, in a series of separate houses, that the older
+members of the race dwell. We shall go and look upon them presently. But
+first we will force an interview with the caciques."
+
+In silence Kirby took her hand, and, with the others following, they
+moved out upon the swaying, perilous causeway which hung above the
+chasm. After that, the trip across the plain to the foot of the plateau
+cliffs was quickly accomplished.
+
+Here, however, Kirby thought they must face trouble, for he found that
+the great walls, of a sparkling, almost glassy smoothness, shot up to a
+height of at least three hundred feet, and that no path of any sort was
+visible.
+
+"We're here," he said, "but how can we get up?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But understanding began to dawn as Naida laughed, and produced from the
+pouch at the side of her gauzy dress four pliable discs of a substance
+which resembled rubber.
+
+"You are very strong, are you not?" she asked.
+
+"Yes."
+
+"Then you will have no trouble in following us up the cliff. Our Serpent
+God, Quetzalcoatl, taught us how to climb long ago."
+
+With that she handed Kirby the set of vacuum discs, and producing
+another for herself, moistened them in a pool of water close at hand.
+Then, as all of the girls followed her action, she strapped them to her
+hands and feet, and in a moment they had begun the ascent.
+
+"Why," Kirby said presently, "with these things you could hang by your
+feet and walk on a smooth ceiling!"
+
+Naida laughed, and they worked their way upward.
+
+When the climb was accomplished and the discs were put away, Kirby found
+himself standing on the outer edge of a mediaeval paradise, of a
+magnificent plateau partly fortified by nature, partly by the hand of
+man.
+
+"Ah!" he cried in deep admiration, then followed Naida.
+
+The building--the castle--in the near distance, resembled a castle of
+Spain, save that there was greater beauty and subtlety of architecture.
+Turreted on all four corners, constructed of material which looked like
+blocks of natural glass, the fairylike structure was crowned by a
+gigantic tower of something which resembled obsidian. Up and up this
+tower soared until its gleaming black tip seemed almost to touch the
+glassy-radiant sky of the cavern.
+
+No people showed themselves, and Kirby saw that the bronze-studded
+portals set in the front of the castle were closed.
+
+Admiringly, he glanced at the surrounding land laid out in checkerboard
+patches of gardens and orchards where grew a bewildering variety of
+unknown fruits and blooms. Butterflies drifted past, and the air was
+freighted with the scent of flowers. Inside a walled enclosure, Kirby
+saw a good-sized plot heavily grown with the plant on which he had been
+subsisting. As they passed this ground, each of the girls, Naida
+leading, made a strange little bowing, gliding genuflection, and Kirby
+wondered.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Now, however, new sights distracted him as they crossed a port
+drawbridge above a deep moat which was a fairyland of aquatic plants.
+Although not a sound had come from the castle, the great entrance doors
+were swinging back.
+
+"Be ready," Naida whispered, "for almost anything. The doors are being
+opened by some of the palace guard. I have little doubt that word was
+long ago rushed to the caciques that we are come to them with an
+upper-world man!"
+
+Kirby answered with a nod. Then they passed the outer doors, passed
+inside, and Kirby blinked at what he saw.
+
+In a long hall decorated bewilderingly with a carven frieze in which
+appeared all of the symbols common to early Mexican religions, and many
+new ones, stood a row of bright suits of armor of the Sixteenth Century.
+From each suit peered the glassy face and shovel beard of a dead
+Conquistadore.
+
+So this was what happened to intruders from the upper world! The
+Conquistadore who kept his long watch beside the geyser was not the only
+one! Kirby felt an involuntary chill prickle up his back. But he was not
+given long to think before Naida, ignoring the gruesome array, clasped
+his arm.
+
+"Look! Behold!"
+
+And Kirby saw that with almost magical silence the whole wall at the end
+of the corridor was sliding back to reveal an enormous amphitheatre in
+the center of which stood a vast circular table. Ranged in a semicircle
+about that table, stood fifteen incredibly ancient men clad in long,
+glistening grey robes. Blanched beards trailed down the front of the
+garments until they all but touched the floor.
+
+The caciques!
+
+Kirby, on the threshold of the amphitheatre, squared his shoulders and
+held his head high. Then with Naida on his right, his own eyes boring
+unyieldingly into the smouldering, narrowed eyes which stared at him, he
+advanced.
+
+But in front of him the priests moved suddenly. From Naida burst a
+shriek. In the radiant glare of the council room flashed the long, thin,
+cruel blade of a sacrificial knife.
+
+The cacique who had whipped it from his robe flew at Kirby with a condor
+swoop, talon-hands outstretched, his wrinkled, bearded face contorted
+with fury.
+
+
+CHAPTER V
+
+Before Kirby was more than half set to fight, the priest was clawing at
+his throat, and a gnarled old fist was poised to drive the knife in a
+death stroke.
+
+Kirby did the only thing he could do quickly--sprang to one side. The
+move saved him. The knife whipped past his shoulder, and the cacique
+nearly fell. But it had been a close enough squeak for all that.
+
+Nor was it over. After Kirby the priest sprang with unexpected agility,
+and before Kirby could snatch at his pistol the talon-hands were lunging
+at his throat once more.
+
+With the gasps of the girls ringing in his ears, Kirby bunched himself
+for another side leap only to find the cacique all over him like an
+octopus. Momentarily the knife hung above his chest, and Kirby, dismayed
+at the powers of his opponent, almost felt that the thing must plunge
+before he could break the octopus hold.
+
+But he had no intention of being defeated, and now he was getting used
+to the fight. The priest's left arm swiftly clenched about his neck and
+shoulders, and the right arm, with the knife, attempted a drive through
+to the heart. Suddenly, however, Kirby lurched sideways and backward,
+and as the octopus grip slackened for a flash, he himself got a
+wrestler's grip that left him ready to do business. As the priest broke
+free, he slid around in an attempt to fasten himself on Kirby's back.
+Quickly, tensely Kirby doubled, and knew that he had done enough. The
+cacique shot over his shoulders, described a somersault in midair, and
+landed with a sharp crack of head and shoulders against unyielding
+stone.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From the semicircle of other priests went up a gasp. From Naida came a
+strangled cry of joy. Kirby made one leap for the knife which had fallen
+from the cacique's hand as he slumped into unconsciousness, and then he
+straightened up with the weapon safe in his possession.
+
+"There, you old billygoat," he croaked in English, "maybe you won't try
+any more fast ones for awhile."
+
+A second later he stepped over the sprawled body to stand beside Naida.
+
+Upon the wrinkled countenances of the remaining caciques was stamped a
+look of dismay and hatred which boded no good. It was plain to Kirby
+that in battering up the man detailed to kill him, he had committed a
+desecration of first order.
+
+"Is there anyone else who cares to fight?" he flung at them in Spanish,
+showing a contempt as great as their rage.
+
+The response he got was instant. From one old gullet, then from others,
+came choking, snarling sounds which presently became words. By those
+words Kirby heard himself cursed with a vituperation which made him,
+even in his temporary triumph, feel grave.
+
+But he did not let that soberness trouble him long. For the main point
+now was that no one made a move to fight further, which was what he had
+expected. He had flung them the challenge, knowing that he was possessed
+of their knife, and suspecting that it was their only weapon. The belief
+that no one would care to try a barehanded conflict, no matter what
+insult was waiting to be avenged, seemed justified as none of the
+caciques advanced, and as even the cursing presently ceased.
+
+"No?" Kirby asked. "There is to be no more fighting?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One of the caciques now came forward a few steps.
+
+"No," he answered with a lameness which was not to be denied. "But you,
+a criminal interloper in our realm, have been marked as a victim for
+sacrifice, and from this there is no power in the universe which can
+save you."
+
+Kirby, after a reassuring glance at Naida, looked at the floored priest
+who was sitting up now, looking stupidly about, and feeling himself all
+over, and Kirby suppressed a grin.
+
+"Ah, I am to be sacrificed, eh? But what happens until that time comes?
+Listen my Wise Ones--"
+
+He stabbed a finger at them, and his eyes flashed.
+
+"Listen! What you mean to say is that I have defeated you, and you must
+lay off me until you can launch another attack. But I have a few things
+to say to that. One is that I am not going to permit myself to _be_
+sacrificed. Another is that I demand, right here and now, that you begin
+to discuss with me certain agreements which are going to regulate the
+future conduct of affairs in this world to which I have come."
+
+A low exclamation answered that, but it came from no priest. They
+remained sullen and staggered. It was Naida who murmured, and there was
+excitement and pleasure in her voice. Suddenly she placed her lips
+against Kirby's ear.
+
+"You must not treat with them," she said. "Tell them you want to see the
+Duca, and will destroy them all unless he comes!"
+
+Understanding burst over Kirby. The Duca! Then these men were only the
+representatives of a High Priest, the Duca!
+
+"Yes," he repeated resolutely to the assembled greybeards, "a meeting is
+going to be held in this chamber of council at once. But I will not
+deal with you! Do you understand me? I must see the Duca. I leave it to
+you to decide whether you will summon him, or force me to fight my way
+through to wherever he is staying."
+
+"The Duca!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The words burst in dismay from the gimlet-eyed cacique who had said
+there would be no more fighting. He looked at Naida, well aware of the
+fact that it was her interference which had made Kirby extend his
+demand. And his look was black.
+
+Kirby slid between Naida and the cacique.
+
+"Yes," he spat out, "the Duca! Will you summon him, or--"
+
+He did not repeat what he would do as an alternative. A second passed in
+silence. It seemed as if the cacique who had been speaking was ready to
+burst.
+
+"Answer me!" Kirby thundered.
+
+And then the priest obeyed.
+
+"Very well," he growled in a voice which quaked with rage. "I obey. But
+you will wish you had never made the demand!"
+
+The next second he swung on his heel, and leaving his company behind as
+a guard, headed toward a stair which led upward from one side of the
+amphitheatre, and which was protected by a door of heavy, grilled metal
+work. The stairway seemed to be spiral, and was all enclosed. Kirby
+realized that it must lead into the tall and beautiful tower of obsidion
+which he had seen outside.
+
+"Oh," Naida whispered as looks and smiles of approval came from all of
+the girls, "you have been magnificent! Mark now, what we must do. You
+must be the one to state our terms, because you have already won a
+victory for us. Tell the Duca that we will not submit to any compromise
+with the ape-men, and least of all will we let any of our number go to
+the ape-men."
+
+A deep flush crept into Kirby's cheeks at thought of what he would like
+to do to the man who had proposed that sacrifice.
+
+"Then tell him," Naida continued, "that we want men brought to our world
+from the world above. And finally tell him we will live under his
+dictatorship no longer, and hereafter demand a voice in all councils
+affecting temporal affairs."
+
+"All right," Kirby spoke grimly. "I'll tell him. Naida, is this high
+priest we're waiting for, the one who proposed sacrifice of some of you
+to the apes?"
+
+Naida nodded.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Next moment, she, Kirby, and all the others, including the row of
+glowering caciques, became silent. At sounds from above, all looked
+toward the grilled doorway to the tower. Then Kirby realized that all of
+the girls, as well as the caciques, were dropping to their knees.
+
+"No!" he commanded quickly. "Get up! You must not abase--"
+
+He had not finished, and Naida had scarcely risen, when the heavy door
+swung on noiseless hinges.
+
+The light in the amphitheatre seemed to become more intense. Then,
+against the great glow, Kirby beheld majesty, beheld one who represented
+the apotheosis of priestly rank and power.
+
+Clad in robes of filmy material which glimmered white beside the gray
+robes of his underlings, the Duca wore about his waist the living flame
+of a girdle composed of alternate cut diamonds and blood red rubies each
+larger than a golf ball. And Kirby, searching for comparisons, realized
+that the Duca's face, upheld to others, would be as remarkable as his
+jewels must be when compared to ordinary gems. It was a chiseled face,
+seamed by a thousand wrinkles, which a god might have carved from ivory
+before endowing it with the flush and glow of life. A mane of snow white
+hair cascaded back from a tremendous forehead to fall about thin but
+square shoulders and mingle with the downward sweep of pure white
+beard. The eyes, black as polished jet, flamed now with the glare of
+baleful fires.
+
+As Naida, stealing close to Kirby, trembled, and even the abased
+caciques trembled, Kirby himself felt as if icy water was trickling over
+him.
+
+He fought the sensation off. For suddenly he knew that in spite of first
+impressions which made the man seem a living god, the old Duca was
+human. And what was more, he was in the wrong. All of which being true,
+the thing to do was keep a level head and fight.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+All at once Kirby spoke across the silence in the great room.
+
+"I have sent for you," he said, weighing words carefully.
+
+"And I,"--the Duca's voice was mellow and deep--"have come. But I am not
+here because you summoned me."
+
+"Oh!" Kirby let sarcasm edge his words. "Well, I won't quibble about
+your motives for coming. Did my messenger tell you why we are here and
+demand your presence?"
+
+"Your messenger," the old man said calmly, "told me."
+
+"Very well. Do you consent to listen to Naida's and my terms? If you
+_will_ listen--"
+
+"But wait a moment," the Duca interrupted, still calmly, but with a look
+in his eyes which Kirby did not like. "Are you asking _me_, to my face,
+whether I will listen to terms which you offer as self-styled victor of
+a battle with my caciques?"
+
+Kirby nodded. His apprehension increased.
+
+"Ah," said the Duca softly. And then, amazingly, a smile deepened every
+wrinkle of his parchment face. "But do you not remember that I said I
+had _not_ come here because you summoned me?"
+
+"Yes," Kirby said solidly. "I remember very well."
+
+"The thing which brought me here was the failure of my followers to
+accomplish an assignment which I had given them--namely, that of ending
+your life."
+
+"Hum." Kirby scratched behind his ear. "You are _not_ interested in
+arranging terms of peace, then."
+
+"I am here,"--suddenly the Duca's voice filled the room--"to do that
+which my priests were unable to do. And the moment has come when the
+Gods will no longer trifle with you. You dog! You thieving intruder!
+You--"
+
+Swiftly the Duca plunged one withered but still powerful hand into the
+folds of his robe above the flaming girdle. Then his hand flashed out,
+and in it he held--
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But Kirby did not get to see.
+
+A strangled cry of terror smote his ears. Naida leaped toward him from
+one side, while Elana, the lovely youngest girl, sprang from another
+direction, hurled Naida aside, and stopped in front of Kirby.
+
+Through the glaring room flickered a tiny red serpentine creature which
+the Duca hurled from a crystalline tube in his hand. As the minute snake
+struck Elana's breast, she gave a choked cough, and then, as she half
+turned to smile at both Naida and Kirby over her shoulder, her eyes went
+blank, and she collapsed gently to the polished stones of the
+floor--dead.
+
+A second later came squirming out from under her the ghastly, glimmering
+little snake which had struck.
+
+Slowly, while every mortal in the room stood paralyzed, Kirby stepped
+forward and set his heel upon the writhing thing. When he raised his
+boot, the snake was only a blotch on the floor.
+
+The Duca was standing as still as girls and caciques. The laughter with
+which he had started to greet what he had thought would be Kirby's
+extermination had faded to a look of wonder--and fear. He was an easy
+mark.
+
+Up to him Kirby rolled, and with all the force of soul and muscular
+body, drove his fist into the Duca's face.
+
+"By God," he roared, "you want war, and you shall have it!"
+
+The Duca was simply out--not dead. Since Kirby did not want him dead, he
+did not strike again, but swung back from the sprawled body, faced
+Naida, and pointed to the tower door.
+
+"Up there!" he snapped. "Seize the tower. I have a reason!"
+
+At the Duca's crashing downfall, had come to the caciques a tension
+which made Kirby know they would not be dummy figures much longer. His
+eyes never left them.
+
+"Quick, Naida!" he snapped again. "We must hold the tower!"
+
+Naida, all of the girls, were staring dazedly at Elana, dead.
+
+"The tower!" she choked. "But we cannot go there. It is the Duca's!"
+
+"Because it is the Duca's," Kirby said firmly, "is exactly why we must
+hold it. Come, Naida, please--"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+And then he saw comprehension begin to dawn at last.
+
+He also saw two of the caciques glide from the wooden line, and slink
+toward him past the unconscious Duca, stealthily.
+
+As Naida suddenly cried out to her companions, pushed at two of them,
+and then darted like a rainbow nymph toward the silent and forbidding
+upward spiral of steps, Kirby faced the gliding caciques.
+
+One he clutched with viselike hands, and lifted him. As the other
+shrieked and sprang, he was mowed down by the hurtling body of his
+fellow priest which Kirby flung forward mightily.
+
+The rest of the caciques were howling. While Naida waited beside the
+tower door, the other girls flashed up the steps. The Duca still lay
+where he had fallen, a thread of blood oozing from his mouth. Kirby,
+after his last look over all, solemnly stooped and gathered in his arms
+the limp, radiant little body of the girl who had given her life that
+her friends might be left with a leader.
+
+A moment later, he was standing on the steps. Naida, unopposed by the
+still stupefied caciques, swung shut the tower door and shot a double
+bolt.
+
+"Naida--" Kirby whispered as he held Elana closer to him, "oh, I am so
+sorry that we could have won only at such a price."
+
+As Naida stooped to kiss the pale little forehead with its halo of
+golden hair, sobs came. But then she raised her eyes, and they were, for
+Kirby, alight with the message that she could and would accept Elana's
+sacrifice, because she would gladly have made it herself.
+
+"We will not forget," she whispered. "Carry her tenderly, and come."
+
+For better, for worse, the Duca's tower was theirs.
+
+
+CHAPTER VI
+
+At the end of an hour, Kirby was taking a turn of guard duty at the foot
+of the steps, while the others remained with Elana in a chamber above.
+To Kirby, with things thus far along, it seemed that the seizure of the
+tower had proved a shrewd stroke.
+
+It seemed that the tower was to the Duca what hair was to Sampson. From
+Naida had come the information that the Duca lived hidden within the
+great shaft of obsidion, and appeared but seldom even before his
+caciques. Apparently a large part of his hold upon his subjects was
+maintained by the mystery with which he kept himself surrounded. And now
+his retreat was lost to him! Such had been the moral effect of the loss
+upon both Duca and caciques, that his whole first hour had gone by
+without their doing anything.
+
+Kirby, standing just around the first turn of the winding stairway,
+presently cocked his ears to listen to the conclave being held in the
+amphitheatre.
+
+"Why not starve them out, O Holy One?" he heard one of the caciques ask
+of the Duca, only to be answered by a growl of negation.
+
+The Duca, Kirby had gathered before this, wanted to fight.
+
+"But there is no food in the tower, is there?" the cacique still pressed
+on, and this time he was supported by other voices.
+
+"No," the Duca rumbled back. "But am I to be deprived of my retreat,
+left here like a common dog amongst other dogs, while these accursed
+fiends starve slowly to death? No! I tell you, you must fight for me!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But he had told them so several times before and nothing had happened.
+Kirby grinned at the thought of the caste the Duca was losing by being
+driven to this belittling parley.
+
+"Holy One," exclaimed a new priest in answer to the urge to fight, "what
+can we do against the golden haired fiend? The stairs are so narrow that
+he could defend them alone. And then there are the gates of bronze. If
+we could shatter the first, at the foot of the steps, we should only
+encounter others. The Duca must remember that his tower was built to
+withstand attack."
+
+"Even so," the Duca snapped back, "it must be attacked! I--"
+
+But then he fell silent, having been made so by the sounds of dissension
+which arose amongst his caciques. Kirby, laughing to himself, turned
+away from his listening post, and tip-toed up the steps.
+
+After he had closed and bolted behind him three of the bronze portals so
+feared by the caciques, he turned to the entrance of the chamber in
+which he had left Naida and the others. Here all was silent, and he
+found his friends grouped about a couch on which lay Elana. Feeling the
+solemnity of the moment, he would have taken his place quietly amongst
+the mourners.
+
+Naida, however, came to him at once, and in a low voice asked for news
+from the amphitheatre, and when Kirby answered that the caciques were
+unanimously in favor of leaving them alone until they starved, she
+exclaimed:
+
+"Oh, then it is good news!"
+
+After that, however, a shadow of doubt flickered in her great eyes.
+
+"And yet, is it? It means temporary immunity, of coarse.
+But--starvation!"
+
+Kirby assured her with a grin.
+
+"If we had to starve we might worry. But there is more food here than
+the Duca thinks. Look!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+From a bulging pocket of his tunic he fished a strip of the roots on
+which he had subsisted so comfortably. Naida's eyes widened, and several
+of the girls gave low cries.
+
+"Yes," Naida exclaimed, "but such food! Why--why, do you know what you
+are offering us? Why, this is the sacred Peyote! Only the Duca eats it,
+and, at rare intervals, his priests."
+
+Kirby was really startled now.
+
+"But surely you and the others have taken quantities of the stuff away
+from the Valley of the Geyser. Do you mean--"
+
+"Because we gathered the Peyote does not mean that we have ever tasted
+it. We gather it for the Duca. To taste would be complete, utter
+sacrilege. Have _you_ been eating it?"
+
+Inwardly Kirby was chuckling at this added proof of the buncumbe with
+which the Duca--and other Ducas--had fooled all.
+
+"Of course I've been eating the Peyote."
+
+"And--and nothing has happened to you?" Naida asked.
+
+"Hardly. I certainly haven't been blasted by the Lords of the Sun and
+Moon, or the Serpent either!"
+
+Naida and all the others were silent. The conflict between their
+reverence for the food and their clear desire to eat it, now that it was
+become the food of their leader, was pathetic.
+
+Kirby put one of the strips in Naida's hand.
+
+"Why not?" he asked. "We have bested the Duca in fair fight. We have
+seized his tower. Why not eat his food?"
+
+As he had hoped it would, the suggestion at last settled the matter. A
+moment later, as Naida nibbled her first bite, she smiled.
+
+"Why, it--it's good!"
+
+With the question of provisions settled at least for a time, Kirby's
+next thought was of the tower. The present lull of peace seemed made for
+exploration.
+
+"Come along," he said to Naida, "we've plenty to do," and then, when he
+explained, they set out, accompanied by Nini, a cousin of Naida's, and
+Ivana, a younger sister.
+
+All of the others remained with little Elana.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+While they climbed spiral stairs, Naida explained that the chamber they
+had just left was used by the Duca as a place in which he prayed before
+and after contacts with caciques or subjects. A sort of halfway station
+between earth and heaven, as it were, where the Duca might be purged of
+any sullying influence gained from human relationships.
+
+At thought of the rank, egotistical hypocrisy implied by the story,
+Kirby smiled grimly. Then they came to a new door, heavier than that
+which barricaded the prayer chamber. Unlocked, the thing swung
+ponderously at Kirby's push, and with the three girls pressing close
+beside him, he entered--and stopped.
+
+"Naida!" he gasped.
+
+"Oh, _oh_!" she cried, and while Nini and Ivana gasped, she clapped her
+hands in an instinctive, feminine reaction of joy. "But there are things
+here which I believe none but the Ducas of our race have ever seen! Oh!
+Why, the sacred girdle is as nothing compared to this display!"
+
+By "display" she meant a treasure which took Kirby's breath away, which
+made his heart act queerly.
+
+The walls of the chamber were fashioned of polished blocks of obsidion
+on which stood out in heavy bas-relief a maze of decorative figures
+fashioned of pure, beaten gold--the same kind of gold which had gone
+into the making of the cylinder of gold. With his first glance at the
+gorgeously wrought motifs of Feathered Serpent and Sun and Moon symbols,
+Kirby knew to a certainty whence the golden cylinder had come
+originally.
+
+But even the gold--literally tons of it there must have been--was
+nothing compared to the gems.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+They were spread out in blinding array upon a great table in the center
+of the room. There were pearls as big as turkey eggs and whiter, softer
+than the light of a June morning growing in the East. There were rubies.
+One amongst the many was the size of a baseball and glowed like the
+heart of a red star. The least of the two or three hundred gems would
+have outclassed the greatest treasures of the Crown jewels of England
+and Russia combined.
+
+Most overwhelming of all, however, was the jewel which rested against a
+square of black cloth all its own in the center of the table. While his
+heart still acted queerly, while Naida, Nini, and Ivana hung back,
+delighted, but still too bewildered to move, Kirby advanced and took
+gingerly in his hands a single white diamond about eighteen inches long,
+and almost as wide and deep as it was long.
+
+The thing was carved with exquisite cunning to a likeness of the living
+head of Quetzalcoatl, the Feathered Serpent.
+
+Kirby dared not guess how many pounds the carven hunk of flashing,
+blue-white carbon weighed. He knew only that like it there was no other
+diamond in the world, and that the thing was real. Naida and the two
+girls were silent now, and suddenly Kirby realized that to their awe of
+the gem was added awe of deepest religious nature. Slowly he put the
+diamond head of the Serpent back upon its square of cloth.
+
+"We--we had heard that this thing existed," Naida said presently, voice
+hushed, "but no one except the holy men of our race has ever beheld
+it."
+
+"But, what is it?" Kirby asked. "Whence came it?"
+
+However, when Naida would have answered, he interrupted.
+
+"But wait! Tell me as we go. We could stay here for the rest of our
+lives without much trouble, but we've got to cover the rest of the tower
+and get back to the others."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was after they had closed the door to the treasure room that Naida
+told him the story.
+
+"There is not so much to tell," she began. "The diamond itself is so
+gorgeous that it is hard to talk about. But here is the story. A great
+many ages ago one of the Ducas of our race found the diamond, decided to
+carve it into a perfect likeness of the head of the Serpent God. All of
+the craftsmen of the race helped him and when they were done, they took
+their image to Quetzalcoatl himself, and showed him what they had done.
+
+"Quetzalcoatl was pleased. So pleased, that he promised all of the wise
+men that he would cease to prey upon them as he had in the past, and
+henceforward would take his toll of sacrifice from the ape-men alone.
+Them he hated and would continue to hate because they worshipped not him
+but Xlotli.
+
+"And so it came about," Naida went on slowly, looking up at Kirby as
+they still mounted wide steps to the upper reaches of the tower, "that
+our people gained immunity from a God which had always before harmed and
+destroyed them. Our race presently began to build this castle here on
+the high plateau, and Quetzalcoatl kept his compact with them. He still
+comes out of his chasm at intervals and preys upon the ape-men, but no
+one of our race has seen him for thousands of years, and he has always
+let us alone. And there is the whole myth and explanation of why the
+great diamond is revered among us as a holy of holies."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+They had mounted to a new door which Kirby guessed might give entrance
+to the Duca's living quarters. But he was in no mood to open it at
+once.
+
+"Wait a minute," he said as they all paused. "You say that, although
+none of your race has seen Quetzalcoatl since the diamond head was
+carved, he still comes out of his chasm and makes trouble for the
+ape-men. Just what does that mean?"
+
+"Why--" Naida looked at him wonderingly. "I mean what I have said. The
+Serpent comes out of his chasm and--"
+
+"What chasm?" Kirby asked sharply.
+
+"Why, the one we crossed this morning. It extends to the far reaches of
+our country, beyond the Rorroh forest, where the ape-men dwell but which
+our people never visit. It is in that distant part of the chasm that the
+Serpent dwells."
+
+"But--but--Oh, good Lord!" Kirby whistled softly. "Naida, do you mean to
+tell me that Quetzalcoatl was not simply a mythical monster, but an
+actual, living serpent which is alive _now_?"
+
+Naida and the others shrugged.
+
+"Why not?" she answered. "Sometimes we have captured a few ape-men, and
+they tell us stories of how Quetzalcoatl kills them. _They_ say he is
+very much alive."
+
+"But," Kirby mumbled in increasing wonder, "is this living creature the
+same which your ancestors worshipped first as long ago, perhaps, as a
+million years?"
+
+"That," Naida answered unhesitatingly, "I'm not sure of. Our caciques
+believe that the Serpent, although it lives longer than any other
+sentient thing, finally dies and is succeeded by a new Serpent which is
+reproduced by itself, within its own body."
+
+So overwhelming did Kirby find this unexpected sequel to their discovery
+of the great diamond head, so staggered was he by the fact that
+Quetzalcoatl, of Aztecan myth, might exist as a sentient creature here
+in this cavern world, that he had little heart left for exploring other
+wonders.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Nevertheless, he presently pushed open the new door before which they
+had paused, and behind it found, as he had expected, the Duca's living
+quarters.
+
+These were as severe as the jewel chamber had been gorgeous. A thin
+pallet spread upon a frame of wood formed the bed, and beside it stood a
+single stiff chair. That was all. The walls of glistening obsidion were
+bare.
+
+There was, however, a door in one circular wall, and as Kirby flung this
+open, his previous disappointment changed to delight. For shelves along
+the walls of the small chamber held roll after roll of parchment covered
+with script. And in one corner lay six undamaged, almost new Mannlichers
+and several hundred rounds of ammunition!
+
+"Naida," he exclaimed, "do you know what those are?"
+
+"I suppose that they are weapons of the sort you used against the
+ape-men this morning?"
+
+Kirby grinned.
+
+"They are the same kind I used, and then some. With these weapons we can
+do what we never could with the smaller one. How did they get here?"
+
+"They came when I was much younger," Naida answered with a shade of
+sadness in her voice. "The men who had them penetrated the Valley of the
+Geyser, coming by a different route from the one you followed. When the
+Duca learned they were there, he sent such men of the race as were still
+able to fight to kill them. That order of the Duca's was one of the
+first things to turn me against him. The men were not harming us, and
+they should have been permitted to go away. But the Duca insisted that
+they be killed, and in the fight were lost eight of our youngest and
+strongest men."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kirby stooped to inspect the rifles.
+
+"Has no one learned to use these weapons?"
+
+"No," Naida answered. "The Duca kept them for himself."
+
+"We think," put in Ivana, "that he hoped to learn to use them, and was
+afraid for us to have the knowledge."
+
+Kirby filled one of the magazines, and felt the heft of the gun with
+pleasure.
+
+"Very well," he said. "It looks to me as though your time to learn the
+art of shooting has come at last. Come, I think we had better be getting
+back downstairs."
+
+Kirby took three guns himself, and with the others lugging the rest,
+they started back. The parchment rolls, he decided, must be left for
+examination later on.
+
+They were all elated when they rejoined the girls in the prayer chamber,
+and high spirits were still further increased by the report, promptly
+given, that all had remained quiet in the amphitheatre. Save only for
+the presence of Elana, radiant and calm in death, the give and take of
+questions would have been accompanied by actual gaiety.
+
+But the time of peace did not last much longer. While Naida was in the
+midst of answering incessant questions about the wonders of the jewel
+chamber, Kirby heard a sound from below, and suddenly went over to the
+downward-winding steps.
+
+"Listen," he called sharply back to the others.
+
+He had not been mistaken. Many footsteps echoed from the amphitheatre,
+and he made out that the caciques were coming toward the bolted gate at
+the foot of the steps. While he listened, and Naida came eagerly to his
+side, silence fell.
+
+But then clear words came up to them.
+
+"Let the upper-world man come to the foot of the steps," called the
+Duca. "I have an offer to make him!"
+
+
+CHAPTER VII
+
+To himself Kirby chuckled. Such real entreaty filled the Duca's voice
+that there seemed no danger of further treachery from him at the
+moment.
+
+With a grin, Kirby took Naida's hand and led her down the steps,
+unbolting each bronze gate but the last.
+
+"What do you want?" he asked in a cool voice a moment later, when he
+stopped on the final step and faced the Duca from behind the protection
+of the final gate.
+
+Clearly the parley was going to be a blunt one.
+
+"I want you to leave our world," the Duca rumbled promptly.
+
+He was drawn up in a posture intended to display dignity. But his left
+cheek, where Kirby had hammered him, was pulpy and discolored, and
+somehow he seemed to Kirby more than ever merely human.
+
+"Under what conditions am I to leave?"
+
+"If you will vacate my tower at once," the Duca said with a flush of
+eagerness which he could not conceal, "I will permit Naida and one of my
+caciques to escort you back to the Valley of the Geyser. I will also
+give you directions by which you may travel in safety from there to the
+outer world."
+
+Kirby, wanting more details, made himself seem thoughtful.
+
+"And what will happen to me, and to the girls, if I decline?"
+
+Encouraged, the Duca made an impressive gesture.
+
+"You will be left in the tower to die of starvation. Mine is not a
+complicated offer. It should require no complicated decision. What is
+your answer?"
+
+Kirby dropped his carefully assumed mask of thought.
+
+"My answer is this," he lashed out. "I will not leave! The tower is
+ours, and we will hold it until you have accepted Naida's peace terms on
+your priestly oath!"
+
+"But if you stay in the tower you will starve!" thundered the Duca.
+
+"No, we won't starve! We won't starve because we eat the food of
+Ducas!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In silence, Kirby took from his pocket a strip of the sacred Peyote and
+bit off one end of it. Suddenly the hush in the amphitheatre became
+complete. As he watched Kirby chewing, the Duca gasped and choked.
+
+"Moreover," Kirby announced with slow emphasis, "I have taken possession
+of the weapons which you took from men of the upper world, and which
+have already sent men of your race to their death. I have no wish to
+kill either you or your caciques, but if you do not presently discuss
+peace with me, you will certainly find yourself embroiled in a struggle
+more bitter than the mild one of this morning."
+
+With that said, he swung on his heel, and taking Naida's hand again,
+started with her up the steps.
+
+"I have nothing more to say," he called over his shoulder to a Duca
+whose white haired majesty had been stripped from him.
+
+"We're getting on," he whispered to Naida a moment later. "The best
+thing for us is just to sit still now, and wait."
+
+With the questions he wanted to ask Naida about her world becoming
+insistent, he found himself, as a matter of fact, glad for the prospect
+of further respite. As both of them rejoined the girls in the Duca's
+prayer chamber, the first thing he did was to take from his tunic the
+cylinder of gold which he had found in the canyon.
+
+"What is this, Naida?" he asked, hoping to start talk that would make
+all of them forget the Duca and politics, and at the same time help him
+to learn much that he wished to know.
+
+But a queer thing happened. Naida's reaction to the carven gold was as
+unexpected as it was marked.
+
+"_Oh!_" she cried in a voice which suddenly trembled with surprise, with
+blank dismay. Somehow, the cylinder of gold brought to her face things
+which not even the Serpent's head of the diamond had evoked.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The prospect of a long session of talk began to fade out in Kirby's
+mind.
+
+"But Naida, whatever is there about this fragment of gold to startle you
+as it does?"
+
+By this time all of the thirty-odd other girls had come flocking about
+them, and all were staring at the cylinder as fascinatedly as Naida.
+
+"Do you see what he has there?" Naida finally asked, ignoring Kirby in
+her continued excitement.
+
+"Do we _see_?" answered the girl she had addressed. "Naida, surely it is
+the carving which was lost!"
+
+Naida was quivering with feeling now.
+
+"Do you realize what it means to our cause that it should have been
+returned to us in this way?"
+
+The girl to whom she had spoken, and the others, simply looked at her,
+but in one face after another presently dawned awe and joy.
+
+Kirby stood still, puzzled and interested, until at last Naida was
+recovered enough to speak to him.
+
+"Where did you get this thing which you call 'a fragment of gold'?" she
+asked in a hushed voice.
+
+"I found it," Kirby answered, "lying beside the skeleton of an
+upper-world man, while I was ascending the canyon which brought me to
+the Valley of the Geyser."
+
+"And you do not know what the cylinder is? But no, of course you could
+not."
+
+"_What_ is it, Naida?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Naida glanced at her friends, then laid her hand on Kirby's.
+
+"Next to the great diamond, it is the most cherished possession of our
+race. In some respects it is even more holy than the Serpent's head. The
+cylinder happens to be the first work in gold which was ever produced by
+our people. It was made when the race was new. It was because our first
+wise men had found they could create things of beauty like this
+cylinder, that they decided to attempt the creation of the Serpent's
+head, which is supposed to have brought all of our blessings upon us."
+
+Kirby thought he was beginning to understand the excitement which his
+introduction of the cylinder had created. He also thought he could see
+what Naida had meant by implying that the cylinder could be made to aid
+their cause.
+
+"Tell me," he asked in a mood approaching reverence, "how the cylinder
+came to be lying beside a dead man's bones."
+
+"It was stolen," Naida answered in the breathless silence which the
+others were keeping. "When I was very young, an upper-world man found
+his way here, and the Duca captured and meant to sacrifice him. But
+while they were leading him to the temple where such special ceremonies
+are held--the building stands on another plateau, beyond this--the man
+broke away. Some of the priests in the procession were carrying the
+cylinder, for it was an occasion of great importance. The prisoner
+knocked them down, got the cylinder away from them, and finally escaped
+by the same route over which you came."
+
+"And he escaped," said Kirby wonderingly, "only to be killed by a
+rattlesnake before he ever reached the civilized world. But do you mean
+that you never knew your sacred cylinder was so close to you all these
+years?"
+
+Naida shook her head.
+
+"We never got to the canyon of which you speak, for a special reason
+which I shall explain some day. And besides that, I think the Duca was
+afraid of this man who fought so bravely. So he counted the cylinder as
+lost. And that is one of the reasons why he killed the men with the
+rifles, who appeared in the Valley a few years later."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kirby looked at her thoughtfully. The mood for discussing all the
+wonders of this lower world, which had made him bring out the cylinder
+originally, had quite vanished.
+
+"I suppose," he said, "that anyone who was responsible for the return of
+the cylinder to its rightful owners, would be held in some respect?"
+
+Naida nodded vigorously, while little lightnings of excitement flickered
+in her eyes.
+
+"He might be held in more than respect."
+
+"What, then, do you suggest that we do next?"
+
+Again the small lightnings darted, and Naida reached for the cylinder.
+
+"Do you mind if I take it for a moment?"
+
+"Of course not."
+
+Promptly then she faced around.
+
+"Wait here, everyone," she ordered.
+
+And with that she waved the cylinder in a flashing little arc before
+their eyes, and darted to the door.
+
+It was all so unexpected that she was gone before Kirby could speak.
+Slowly, with all of the suddenly gay company of girls following after
+him, he went to the doorway, and stood on the steps leading to the
+amphitheatre.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A minute passed. He heard voices downstairs. He heard Naida's voice
+ringing clearly, though he could not distinguish her words. He heard a
+great cry from a score of male throats. More minutes passed. Words that
+were low and tense poured out in a rumbling volume. Above the rumble,
+Naida's voice presently sounded again, clear and sweet, but incisive.
+Then, when no more than five or six minutes had gone, Kirby heard the
+clang of the bronze gate at the foot of the steps, heard light, swift
+footsteps ascending.
+
+"Naida!" he called softly.
+
+She flashed upward toward him around the last curve in the stairway.
+Straight to his outstretched arms she went.
+
+"It is done! It is done!" she whispered.
+
+"Tell us!" cried first one girl and then others.
+
+Naida drew away from Kirby at last.
+
+"I told the Duca," she said to all of them, "that our leader would keep
+the cylinder for a period of time equal to one upper-world year. If the
+Duca grants all the terms of peace which we will ask of him, and if he
+accepts the upper-world man as our temporal ruler, and all goes well for
+a year, then we will consider replacing the cylinder where it belongs."
+
+"And what," Kirby asked exultantly, "does the Duca say?"
+
+Suddenly, without warning, Naida dropped before him on one knee, and
+from that position gazed up at him laughing.
+
+"He says he will make you our King, to govern all temporal affairs
+within our realm! He is waiting for you to come and hold a conclave
+now."
+
+"_What?_"
+
+Still kneeling half in fun, half in sincere reverence, Naida held out
+the precious, potent cylinder of gold.
+
+"Guard it carefully!" she exclaimed. "So long as you keep it away from
+the Duca, making him hope to win it back, he will consent to almost
+anything. Yes, he is waiting with the caciques in the amphitheatre now;
+waiting to draw up terms of peace."
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII
+
+To be King amongst these people! A queer sensation tugged at Kirby's
+heart as he descended the steps with Naida at his right, and all of
+her--and his--dainty and gracious friends following after. Yet, intense
+as his emotion was, never for a second was he able to doubt the evidence
+of his senses which told him that all of this was real. As they
+descended the black steps of the tower, Naida's sweetness, her grace,
+the warm humanity of her, made him humble with gratitude for the
+extraordinary fortune which had come to him, an unromantic aviator born
+in Kansas.
+
+Then they were standing in the brilliant light of the amphitheatre, and
+the Duca, surrounded by his caciques, was advancing to meet them.
+
+It was not a long conference which followed. Kirby saw from the start
+that the Duca was indeed ready to come to terms. So treasured an object,
+it seemed, was the cylinder of gold, that the mere fact that Kirby
+possessed it made the Duca respect the possessor, whether he would or
+no. With this initial advantage, it did not take long to make demands
+and win acceptance.
+
+It was agreed that some systematic campaign of extermination should be
+planned and carried out against the ape-men. Further, the project for
+eventually bringing other upper-world men to the realm was accepted.
+Most notable of all, it was agreed that while the Duca should retain a
+voice in the regulation of temporal affairs, Kirby should possess an
+absolute veto over his word.
+
+Naida said there must be some formal ceremony to celebrate Kirby's
+ascendency to power. To this the Duca consented, and established the
+date as a fortnight hence, and the place as the temple on the plateau
+beyond the plateau of the castle, where the Ducas had been invested with
+their robes of state from time immemorial. At the end, it was decided
+that little Elana should be left in the prayer chamber until a burial
+ceremony could be held on the morrow.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In less than an hour, Kirby, Naida, and the others withdrew from the
+amphitheatre to return to the regular dwelling places of the girls. Deep
+in his mind, Kirby did not know how sincere the Duca was, and fear
+lingered, somehow, but he put it aside for the present.
+
+As they came out of the castle, proceeding in a gay procession across
+the drawbridge above the moat of beautiful aquatic plants, Kirby saw
+that the light from the glass sky was fading to a glow like that of
+spring twilight in the upper world. Naida answered his question about
+the phenomenon by saying that day and night in the cavern corresponded
+to the same period above. What quality of the glass sky gave out light,
+she did not know, but it seemed definite that the element was sensitive
+to the presence of light in the upper world, and when the sun sank
+there, the glow faded here.
+
+A flower embroidered path led them around the castle to a group of
+little crystalline houses all overgrown with bougainvillea vines and
+honeysuckle. In front of the first, Naida paused, and while the others
+went on to the other houses, she looked at Kirby.
+
+"It is Elana's dwelling," she said simply, "and it will be vacant now.
+Elana would want you to take it. Will you, please?"
+
+The twilight was deepening swiftly. Kirby nodded reverently, then drew
+close to Naida.
+
+"Naida?"
+
+"Yes?"
+
+He took her hand.
+
+"I can stay here, I can consent to become, after a fashion, a King, only
+if you will reign with me as Queen. Will you, Naida? Will you love me as
+I have learned to love you during this single day in Paradise?"
+
+She did not answer. But presently Kirby's mind went blank for sheer joy.
+For then Naida raised her face, and he kissed her lips.
+
+It made no difference then that, despite the day's victory, Kirby could
+see trouble ahead, and feared, rather than rejoiced at, the Duca's too
+easy acceptance of terms. The future could take care of itself. This
+moment in the dusk belonged to him and Naida.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The two weeks which passed for Kirby after that particular twilight sped
+quickly. During the first morning, all attended the ceremony which was
+held for Elana's burial in the plot of gardened ground where lay her
+ancestors. Ensuing mornings were devoted to conferences in the
+amphitheatre with Duca and caciques.
+
+After the fourth day Kirby, at Naida's insistence, moved into splendid
+quarters in the castle--a suite of chambers across the amphitheatre from
+those in which the caciques dwelt. In practically forcing the move on
+Kirby, Naida won his consent finally by agreeing to have their wedding
+ceremony performed on the day of his coronation; then she would come to
+the castle with him.
+
+The afternoons of that first fortnight before the wedding and coronation
+were spent in hunting and fishing. Also Kirby and Naida visited often
+the aged people of the race, who dwelt in crystalline, vine covered
+houses like those of the girls, but removed from them. Naida's relatives
+were dead, but she had relatives there, and to all these aged ones, who
+sat living in the past, she did what she could to explain present
+developments in the affairs of the younger generation.
+
+Last but not least, Kirby set aside certain hours each afternoon which
+he devoted to the formation of a rifle squad amongst the girls. Six
+rifles he had, and in turn he trained each of the girls in their use,
+having set up a range at the foot of the plateau cliffs. The results he
+gained made him feel that the day would come soon enough when he would
+dare launch an offensive against the ape-people; and especially pleasing
+was the sense of power over the Duca which he gained. The Duca showed no
+sign of treachery. Yet Kirby did not trust him. Never did he quite
+forget the misgivings which had lingered in his mind after the first
+conclave.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As for his relationship with Naida, that grew with every moment they
+could steal to spend with each other. And side by side with their
+growing knowledge of each other grew, for Kirby, an increasing store of
+knowledge of the realm.
+
+He learned, amongst other things, what seemed the origin of the worship
+of the Serpent, Quetzalcoatl, amongst primitive Mexican races. The time
+had been when the People of the Temple had mingled freely with the races
+above them; and, that they might have ready means of egress to the
+world, they had built the tunnel through which Kirby had entered the
+Valley of the Geyser. Thus, going and coming as they did, they had
+spread their cult of the worship of Quetzalcoatl; and when, eventually,
+strife arose between the peoples of upper world and lower, and the
+People of the Temple withdrew to their realm, they left behind them the
+Serpent myth which was to live through countless centuries.
+
+The tunnel, Naida said, had been abandoned when her people left the
+upper world once and for all, and its use for any reason prohibited.
+This, Naida gave as the reason why none of them went near the tunnel
+now, and why the cylinder of gold had lain in the canyon undiscovered.
+It was the explanation she had promised on the day in the tower, when
+first she saw the cylinder.
+
+So the days passed, until the day set aside for wedding and coronation
+dawned. On that morning, Kirby, having concluded a long conference with
+the Duca, was walking with Naida in the gardens outside the castle.
+
+"Tell me," he said to her: "do you yourself believe that this Serpent
+has the powers of a God?"
+
+Naida looked at him quickly, a sudden fright in her eyes.
+
+"I believe the Serpent exists to-day, somewhere in the distant reaches
+of the chasm, beyond the Rorroh forest."
+
+"Yes, but do you believe the Serpent is God?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Actually frightened now, she looked swiftly about. But when she saw that
+they were alone, confidence returned.
+
+"No!" she exclaimed. "I do not believe Quetzalcoatl is a god. I believe
+he is the most terrible creature anywhere in our realm, and that men
+first worshipped him through fear. I believe our race would be better a
+hundred times if they had never made him their God."
+
+Kirby whistled.
+
+"Then you do _not_ believe that the Ducas of past ages talked with him.
+You do not believe it was Quetzalcoatl's pleasure over the great diamond
+which made him cease preying on your people?"
+
+"No! Long habit makes me show respect for these myths, and adhere to the
+customs of our cult, but I do not believe. I think our race gained
+immunity for the Serpent's ravages, not through a compact with
+Quetzalcoatl, but because our builders were intelligent enough to erect
+the castle up here on the plateau, where Quetzalcoatl could not reach
+them. To tell the truth, I think the whole cult is false and wrong, and
+I wish Quetzalcoatl were dead and gone from the world!"
+
+Kirby smiled. In spite of Naida's reverence for certain features of the
+cult, he had long suspected that her true feelings were those she had
+just expressed. And he was glad for this new bond of understanding
+between them. He glanced at her with understanding and perfect trust.
+
+"Naida, since we have talked so frankly, there is one more thing which I
+must bring out."
+
+She looked up at him.
+
+"What is it?"
+
+"The Duca."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She drew closer, her perfumed body brushing his, her great eyes
+caressing him.
+
+"Naida, I am afraid of the man."
+
+"And so am I!" she confessed suddenly.
+
+"It has all been too easy," Kirby said in a slow voice. "There is no
+doubt whatever that our possession of the cylinder of gold has had great
+influence on the Duca, and yet--"
+
+He paused, taking her hand.
+
+"And yet," she went on for him, "you do not believe he would have
+conceded what he has, unless he intends to make trouble?"
+
+Kirby nodded twice, emphatically.
+
+"Well, you have trained all of us to use the rifles."
+
+He smiled gravely at her understanding.
+
+"Yes, I have. And your skill, and that of the others, with the rifles,
+will always help us. Yet even so--"
+
+Closer still she drew now, and there was sadness in her eyes.
+
+"I think I see," she said in a voice which choked. "When do you think he
+will make a move to start trouble?"
+
+Kirby hesitated, then drew a long breath.
+
+"To-day!"
+
+"On--on the day of our union?" Naida echoed in dismay. "Can you tell
+where or how he will strike at us?"
+
+Kirby shook his head.
+
+"There are a hundred things he could do. Naida, I--I--Well, somehow I am
+afraid of the ceremony this afternoon--the wedding ceremony!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He felt a little shiver go through her, and would have taken her in his
+arms, save that a gay cry rang in the garden then.
+
+"Naida, Naida!" It was her cousin, Nini, a bronze-haired youngster as
+elfin and Pucklike as her name. "I thought we should never find you! Do
+you realize this is your _wedding_ day, and that you're acting as if
+there was nothing to be done?"
+
+Nini darted a mocking glance at Kirby, who grinned.
+
+"Do come, Naida!" cried another girl. "Your gown is ready, and we want
+you to ourselves for awhile."
+
+Other girls joined them, some singing and some carrying an obligato on
+the sweet, flutelike instruments which Kirby had first heard as he hung
+in the throat of the geyser. In front of them all, Kirby laughed and
+kissed Naida on the forehead. But as he took leave of her thus, he
+whispered:
+
+"We must not let our guard relax for a second this afternoon. And I
+think there is a more definite precaution which I will take, besides."
+
+
+CHAPTER IX
+
+Some hours later, Kirby smiled with tight-lipped satisfaction at thought
+of that precaution which he had taken. What it was only he, Nini, Ivana,
+and three other girls knew, which secrecy pleased him as much as the
+precautionary measure itself.
+
+Seated alone in a dimly-lighted, thick-walled cell of the ancient temple
+in which the dual ceremony of wedding and coronation would take place,
+he was waiting for the moment when the festivities would begin. Thus far
+the Duca had done nothing. Yet Kirby's uneasiness would not leave him,
+and he continued to be thankful that, if trouble should start, the Duca
+might not find as many trumps in his hand as he expected.
+
+A couple of hours after Kirby had left Naida and the other girls in the
+garden, all had begun the two-mile journey from the castle to the small
+plateau on which stood this temple, where the ceremony would be held.
+Now, while Kirby waited alone, the Duca and his caciques had gone to
+another wing of the temple. Naida, attended by her bridesmaids, had been
+assigned to a cell of their own, and the rest of the girls were waiting
+in the nave of the temple. Unable to attend the walk from their plateau
+to this, the old people of the race had remained in their crystal
+houses.
+
+With ten minutes more to wait, Kirby rose from a bench on which he had
+been seated, and began to pace his cell. It was this archaic pile of
+stone, he finally decided, which was causing his depression. Unlike the
+bright and cheerful castle, this place, older than any other building in
+the realm, was squat, thick-walled, and gloomy. Here, in the dusky cells
+which lined labyrinthine corridors, the early generations of the race
+had found protection from outside dangers. All of which was all right,
+Kirby thought, but just the same he wished he had insisted upon being
+wedded in the brilliant and cheerful amphitheatre.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But presently he stopped pacing and faced the door of his cell. Then he
+breathed a sigh of relief.
+
+From down the twisting corridors which wound out to the central nave,
+stole the high sweetness of soprano voices, the whisper of flutes, and
+the mellow resonance of little gongs of jade and gold. It was the signal
+for which he had waited.
+
+It had been the Duca's instructions that he should come out into the
+temple when the music began, and meet Naida there. Both would advance to
+the altar, and when they were in place, the Duca would come to them.
+Kirby, therefore, after a glance at the blue trousers and tunic of
+tanager scarlet which the girls had made for him, opened the door of his
+cell, and stepped out.
+
+In a moment he traversed the windings of the corridor, and halted under
+a flat arch at one side of the temple nave.
+
+As he paused so, to await the appearance of Naida and her bridesmaids
+under a similar arch directly across the temple, he held his breath. Not
+even nymphs could be as graceful as were the twenty-six girls who were
+performing the dance of Life Immortal, which tradition decreed should be
+given before the ceremony by which, in this realm, two souls were
+wedded. The flash of rainbow gowns was like the swirling of light in a
+sky at dawning. The music of voices, flutes, and the little gongs of
+jade, would have stirred the souls of the dead.
+
+If only the confounded sense of approaching disaster would leave him,
+Kirby thought grimly, this would be a magnificent moment. As it was, he
+turned his eyes away from the girls, and began to examine the temple.
+
+Just as Naida had told him the case would be, he found both sides of the
+nave surrounded by arches similar to the one under which he was
+standing. Everywhere, dim and tortuous corridors led to cells like the
+one he had just left. Then, in one end of the nave, loomed a closed door
+from behind which the Duca and caciques would appear when the couple to
+be wedded were in place, before the altar.
+
+The altar itself, a rectangular mass of some jadelike stone, stood at a
+distance of perhaps twenty paces in front of the closed door. On top of
+the greenish stones, resting on a cushion of some crimson material,
+flashed the crown which would be used at the coronation. Kirby's eyes
+widened as he beheld a single rose-cut diamond two inches in diameter,
+mounted in an exquisitely simple bandeau of wrought gold. But, a moment
+later, even the crown which would be his--if nothing happened--seemed
+only a bauble compared to the other prize which he had won in this world
+beneath the world.
+
+Naida!
+
+ * * * * *
+
+He realized that the dance was ended, the music stilled, and that the
+rainbow garbed girls had formed a double line in the center of the
+temple. Suddenly his heart beat fast, and for just a moment, as he dared
+look full and deeply at Naida, and she smiled back at him across the
+distance, he even forgot to be depressed.
+
+But even as he advanced to meet her, his uneasiness returned.
+
+Now the girls were singing again, their voices raised in a triumphant
+chorale as beautiful as Naida's face with its warm red lips and smiling
+eyes, as beautiful as her wedding gown that might have been woven, in
+its filminess, of mist from the sea. The bridesmaids, silent, their
+lovely faces alight, paused. But Naida came on.
+
+From her floated to Kirby a fragrance more overwhelming than even the
+perfume of the geyser. Presently he felt her hand on his arm, and at
+last they stood side by side. Now again, his premonition of evil left
+him for a flash; but again it returned.
+
+"I love you," he whispered.
+
+"I love _you_."
+
+"But I am still afraid."
+
+Naida's smile faded.
+
+"And I too. Oh, I've been terribly afraid! We will keep our guard!"
+
+"Yes."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In front of them, on the altar, the crown diamond winked and shimmered
+in a dim light. The swelling chorus of triumph, in which the bridesmaids
+had joined now, made the whole temple ring. Slowly, while Naida moved
+easily beside him, Kirby began to march to the altar.
+
+Then it was done, and they were halted. After both of them had given a
+lingering glance at the crown whose diamond shimmered now within their
+reach, they raised their eyes to the closed door behind the altar.
+
+The thing was swinging open. An inch it moved, two inches.
+
+Kirby waited, never taking his eyes away from the widening crack. With a
+crashing final volume of sound, the chorus swept magnificently to its
+climax. Then the door was flung wide.
+
+Still Kirby stood stiffly before the altar, with Naida drawn up
+splendidly beside him. After two seconds, however, he moved.
+
+Duca and caciques were not standing in the corridor.
+
+In the semi-darkness, the only figures visible there were squatting,
+grotesque things whose bodies were covered with whitish hair and whose
+leathery faces were disfigured by gashes of mouths filled with enormous
+teeth.
+
+A feeling of standing face to face with final disaster, turned Kirby
+sick. As he jerked back from the altar, sweeping a paralyzed Naida with
+him, the ape-men let out gibbering howls, half-human. With gigantic,
+hopping strides, the foremost rank of the creatures swung forward,
+straight into the temple.
+
+
+CHAPTER X
+
+Kirby, already falling back toward the other girls, caught Naida up in
+his arms, and ran.
+
+"Nini!" he bellowed. "Ivana! Get the rifles!"
+
+While the two whom he had ordered sprang to a corridor, and four others
+followed, Kirby fell in with the others and dropped Naida on her feet.
+Sick as he was, there was still a ray of hope, because the hard-headed
+precaution he had taken against treachery this morning was to have Nini
+and Ivana bring the rifles here and hide them.
+
+The first of the ape-men, snarling, laughing, had hopped beyond the
+altar, and the yellow foam of madness was slavering from his jaws. Over
+his shoulder he howled some jargon which made his hairy legion struggle
+to catch up with him.
+
+"Have you got any puff balls?" Kirby snapped at Naida.
+
+She shook her head numbly, just as Nini and Ivana swung forward with the
+Mannlichers.
+
+"No. But you had sense enough to bring the rifles! Oh, what does it
+mean?"
+
+"The Duca has sold himself out to the ape-man! He was helpless against
+us, and has brought them to destroy us for him. Here, Ivana, give me a
+rifle! Everyone for herself!"
+
+The next moment he had a Mannlicher at his shoulder.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As the thing kicked, an ape who would have reached him in two more jumps
+crashed over with his heart torn out, the temple echoed with sound which
+threatened to rip its solid walls apart, and bright flashes at Kirby's
+right and left told him that other rifles were getting under way.
+
+He fired again, twice more, slaughtering an ape with each shot. The five
+other rifles were creating havoc.
+
+Blocked by a dozen torn and bleeding bodies on the floor, the
+reenforcements which still poured from the corridor, began to mill
+around amongst themselves, and the forward charge slowed down. All the
+panic which had sent the ape-men scuttling from the beach at their first
+experience of gunfire, seemed ready to break loose again now.
+
+Kirby felt it was good enough for the work of a minute.
+
+"Get into line as I showed you how!" he shouted. "Rifles in the front
+rank, the others behind them. We're all right now! Keep firing!"
+
+"Keep behind me!" he ordered Naida, still unarmed.
+
+Then he placed a shell in the chest of one brute who was broader and
+heavier than the others--a leader--and saw that he had increased the
+demoralization; and from the hastily-formed front rank a volley leaped
+hot and jagged.
+
+Then the rout which had threatened broke loose. As eight ape-men slumped
+into blubbering, bleeding heaps, the milling remainder of the horde
+turned, and in a fighting, scrambling frenzy attempted to get back to
+the corridor.
+
+Kirby let his triumph take the form of thoughts about what he would do
+to the Duca when that personage could be rounded up.
+
+"Follow after them!" he ordered. "Don't stop until we have located the
+Duca. He is the one we must settle--"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But he never finished.
+
+As he himself, holding fire for a second, prepared to follow up the
+retreat, he found himself confronted by the utterly unexpected.
+
+A voice unquestionably the Duca's began to shout orders at the ape-men
+from somewhere down the corridor! And, riot or no riot, the tones of
+that voice seemed to inspire the creatures with more fear than the rifle
+fire.
+
+So suddenly the change came, that by the time Kirby flung his rifle
+again to his shoulder, the crazy retreat had been halted, and as he
+fired again, the ape-men swung in their tracks and began to charge!
+
+There was no time to guess by what power the Duca had turned the tables.
+There was not even time for orders. Kirby fired twice, knowing that the
+ape-men had been infused with some spirit which would bring them on in
+spite of rifle fire.
+
+Naida, unarmed, cried out behind him, and he shoved his gun at her.
+
+"Take it!"
+
+He had just inserted a new clip. He handed her others.
+
+"Fire for your lives!" he shouted to the girls.
+
+"But you!" Naida gasped. "You are unarmed!"
+
+"I'll be all right."
+
+On the floor lay a jagged, hand-chipped knife of obsidion which had
+fallen as some ape died. Kirby grabbed it.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+In another second the flood of ape-men had burst in all its fury over
+him. Crashing, thundering shots were dinning in his ears, animal death
+screams and the Valkyrie battle cries of the girls filled the temple. He
+could not tell how many of the apes were fighting him. As a cave-man's
+club whizzed past his head, he drove his knife once, and yanked it
+dripping from hairy, yielding flesh to plunge it again. A sudden
+side-step carried him away from another assailant. He dropped the knife
+to snatch the gigantic club of one of the creatures he had killed.
+
+Quicker in every movement than the ape-men, he laid on, right and left,
+with such power that blood spurted in a dozen places, and heads were
+split open on every side. And because of his speed, the frantic, clumsy
+blows and knife thrusts which were directed at him proved harmless.
+
+A terrific drive which smashed a snarling face into pulp, left Kirby
+free for a second, and he emerged from the first round of battle ready
+to cut in and help the girls. But then he saw that he had gotten
+separated from the main body.
+
+"Naida!" he called. "Naida!"
+
+A series of shots answered him, and as several apes fell, a gap was
+opened through which he saw her conducting a well ordered retreat of all
+the girls toward the dark corridors surrounding the temple. Again Kirby
+fell to with his club, swinging, hacking, fighting with his whole
+strength to catch up. He made headway, and hope began to come again. The
+ape-men would not kill, or even harm, the girls. What they wanted was to
+carry them off. If he and Naida together could get their party rounded
+up in the corridors, the chances were good.
+
+"Naida!" he shouted again. "Coming!"
+
+Battering down an ape in front of him, he jumped up on the corpse, and
+saw that already the vanguard of girls had reached the first sheltering
+corridor. Naida had been cut off from the others by eight or ten apes.
+But even so her fire made her mistress of the situation, and she seemed
+all right.
+
+It was just as Kirby started to jump down from the corpse that he saw
+something which put another complexion on the matter, and left him
+frozen where he was.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Behind Naida, directly in the path in which her slavering aggressors
+were slowly forcing her, a huge stone slab in the temple floor had begun
+to tilt up as if it were a trapdoor raised by an invisible hand. Within
+the yawning opening, Kirby caught a glimpse of stone steps winding down
+into blackness.
+
+In a flash he saw that it was Naida, and her alone, that the ape-men
+were after. The Duca's determination was to capture her, and it was the
+presence of this trapdoor, making capture possible, which had brought on
+the second charge of the apes.
+
+A scream, high and wild, from Naida released Kirby from his trance of
+horror. He leaped off the corpse, and smashed a suddenly presented skull
+like an egg shell. Momentarily he saw Naida, too terrified to fire,
+staring at the open trapdoor. Kirby felled two apes and felt their blood
+on his arms.
+
+"Ivana!" he yelled. "Help Naida, for God's sake!"
+
+An answering shout, not from Ivana alone but from many girls, encouraged
+him, and he swung his club with a speed and force which would let
+nothing stand before him. But then another scream from Naida rang in his
+ears.
+
+"Naida!" he shouted. "It's all right! We're coming!"
+
+He knew, though, that it _wasn't_ all right. Fighting like a maniac, he
+opened another lane down which he glimpsed her. Fighting still, in a
+last terrific effort to force his way down the lane to her side, he saw
+the black opening gape at her feet; and, as Naida screamed again, a
+dozen hairy arms reached it at once, twisted the empty rifle out of her
+hands, and lifted her shining body as if it had been a feather.
+
+Shouts and murderous fire were coming from the other girls, and Kirby
+swung his club as never before. But even as he fell upon the last two or
+three apes which kept him away from Naida, those who had snatched her,
+bolted down the steps.
+
+Kirby was left with the memory of Naida's great eyes fixed upon his,
+fear-filled, beseeching his protection. In a second, the ponderous
+trapdoor crashed into place, and she was gone.
+
+
+CHAPTER XI
+
+Dazed and grief-stricken, Kirby stood in the bloody, corpse-filled nave
+of the temple, surrounded by thirty-two girls whose faces were blanched
+and most of whose eyes were tear-bright. The fight was over, and they
+were assembled to decide what must be done, but for a time no one
+spoke.
+
+Gaining the trapdoor just as it was pinioned from beneath, Kirby had
+torn at it with bare hands. But that had been hopeless. Then he had
+begun to fight again. But that had been hopeless also. With howls and
+screams they started to retreat, and it had not taken Kirby long to find
+out that every part of their raid had been carefully planned, even to
+this retreat under fire. Straight into the damp black tunnel which led
+away from the corridor behind the altar, the ape-men had leaped. And
+Kirby, in hot pursuit, had heard the Duca's voice driving them on. Too
+much the soldier to follow in that darkness where the Duca knew every
+foot of the way, and he knew nothing, Kirby had seen that he must go
+back to the girls and take stock.
+
+Now he looked at the strewn ape corpses, smelled the corrosive reek of
+burned powder, and tried to put aside his grief.
+
+"The Duca," he said at last, "must have been planning this with the apes
+ever since the first morning in the castle."
+
+Ivana, Naida's sister, nodded.
+
+"The Duca brought the ape-people here, kept them in the tunnel, and then
+herded them back when their work was done. I suppose it was one of the
+caciques who opened the door when the time was right."
+
+"Does anyone think we ought to try the tunnels now?" Kirby asked.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Several girls shook their heads. He knew that already they felt he had
+been wise in giving up the pursuit. Ivana spoke.
+
+"If the Duca and his horde stay underground, we shouldn't have a chance
+against them. And if they don't, we're better here."
+
+Kirby shot a searching glance at her, somehow sure that her thoughts
+were running parallel with his.
+
+"You don't think they're going to stay here, do you?"
+
+"No, and you don't either," Ivana answered.
+
+"It seems to me that they will retreat into the Rorroh as fast as they
+can," Kirby then observed.
+
+"And do you think the Duca and all the caciques will go with the apes?"
+This time it was Nini who spoke, and with the council so well launched,
+Kirby began to feel better.
+
+"I think," he answered Nini, "that the Duca has gone over to Xlotli
+altogether. We fooled him to-day. Instead of killing or capturing us
+all, he--he only got Naida. But he won't give up. I think he is taking
+the apes off to some place from which he can launch a new attack. And
+we've got to stop him before he is ready to deliver another blow."
+
+"What do you mean?" Ivana now asked.
+
+"Do you know where the villages of the ape-people are?"
+
+"Yes. None of us has been very far into the Rorroh, but I could guess
+where some of the villages may stand."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Silence fell after that, but Kirby knew from the glint in Ivana's eyes,
+and the quick breaths which other girls drew, that they understood.
+
+"Ivana," he said suddenly, "will you go with me into the Rorroh jungle,
+and stay with me, facing down every danger it may conceal, until we have
+found Naida and brought her back?"
+
+A flush of life crept into Ivana's pallid cheeks.
+
+"Yes!"
+
+Kirby faced the other girls, all of them keyed up now.
+
+"Nini, will you go?"
+
+Nini, bronze-haired, dainty nymph of a girl, who had yet the stamina of
+a man, looked at him with brave eyes. Then her hands tightened on her
+rifle, and she stepped forward.
+
+"When will you have us start?" Ivana asked in a low voice.
+
+"Now!" Kirby answered, and, taking up the rifle which lay beside
+him--the same with which Naida had fought--he looked at the other
+girls.
+
+"There is not one of you," he said slowly, "who would not go willingly
+on this quest. But the pursuit party must be small and mobile. And
+there is another duty. To all of you I leave the care of the castle and
+the plateau. Take the three rifles I shall leave behind, do what you can
+to reassure the old people, and hold the plateau safe until we return."
+
+A murmur of girls' voices sounded in the temple. Kirby motioned to Nini
+and Ivana, and followed by a low cheer, they moved off together.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The night was on them, where they crouched in a cave above a swiftly
+flowing river. Kirby, rifle across his knees, sat peering out across the
+black, invisible stretches of the forest. His nostrils quivered to this
+mingled smells of fresh growth and fetid decay of the grotesque land. In
+his ears shrilled the creaking and scraping of insects, the flap of
+unseen wings, the distant bellowing grunt of some unseen, unknown
+animal.
+
+"I cannot sleep," Ivana said presently, from back in the cave.
+
+"Hush," he whispered, "you will wake Nini."
+
+"But I am already awake!" came her answer. "I--I cannot forget the white
+snakes which slid from that tree when you tried to cut firewood."
+
+"Hush," Kirby murmured again. "Presently the moon will rise on the earth
+above, and light will come here. Even if the jungle is terrible, were
+you not born with courage? Go to sleep now, both of you, because you
+must relieve me soon."
+
+As silence fell again, he knew that the real thing behind their
+nervousness was their ghastly doubt about what the night was bringing to
+Naida. But none of them spoke of Naida. So sickening were the
+possibilities that Kirby would not permit conjecture to occupy even his
+mind when, at length, the sound of even breathing told him that Nini and
+Ivana slept.
+
+After dreary passing of an hour, a faint light grew over the jungle,
+silver and clear, and Kirby let his mind run back to the two deserted
+ape-men communities which they had found and searched before dusk sent
+them to the cave. From the signs of hasty departure, it looked as though
+a far-reaching order had taken the brutes away from their dwellings, and
+sent them--somewhere.
+
+That somewhere seemed likely to be the great central community which
+Ivana said was rumored to exist in the far reaches of the Rorroh. The
+problem was how to locate the community through the hideous country. But
+Kirby presently drove the question from his head. To-morrow's evils
+could best be faced when morrow dawned.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Enough light had grown now so that the swirling bosom of the river, and
+a strip of sand directly below the cliff in which their cave was set,
+were visible. As Kirby let his eyes wander to the lush growth beyond the
+sand, he heard something which made him stir uneasily. Some creature
+which suggested power and hugeness immeasurable was moving there.
+
+The brush parted, and he saw plainly an animal with the bulk of a
+two-story house. On two feet the nightmare thing stood, as lightly as a
+cat, and then came down on all four feet as it ambled out on the sand
+and extended into the lapping river a tremendous beak studded with
+teeth. A smell of crushed weeds and the musty odor like that of a lion
+house filled the night. The tyranosaur--it was more like a tyranosaur
+than anything else--breathed heavily and guzzled in great mouthfuls of
+water.
+
+Kirby sat perfectly still. He hoped the thing would go away. But the
+tyranosaur did not go away. All at once it hissed loudly and stood up,
+its eyes glowing green and baleful, and Kirby leaned forward.
+
+From the water was slithering another creature with a gigantic,
+quivering, jelly body. Kirby saw to his horror that, in addition to four
+short legs with webbed, claw-tipped feet, there sprouted from the body a
+number of octopus tentacles. From the scabrous mottle of the head,
+cruel, unintelligent, bestial eyes glared at the rearing tyranosaur.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+One of the serpentine tentacles whipped out, slapped against the
+tyranosaur's fore-shoulder to call forth a hiss and a short bellow. Then
+other tentacles waved in the moonlight, and in a flash the tyranosaur
+was enmeshed as by a score of slimy cables. He was not altogether
+helpless. Suddenly the steam shovel of a beak buried itself in the jelly
+body of the water animal, and there spurted out a flood of inky liquid.
+The water animal emitted a sickening gurgle. But the tyranosaur's
+advantage was only temporary. Closer and closer drew the ugly, scabrous
+tentacles. The tyranosaur never had a chance. Its green eyes flared, the
+shovel beak plunged and slashed, but never for a second did the
+tentacles relax. As Kirby stared, he saw the water animal begin to back
+up, dragging its gigantic enemy with it. For a second the whole night
+was hideous with the sound of hisses, gurgles, dashing water. Then the
+river boiled once and for all, and both animals sank in its depths.
+
+Kirby chafed cold hands together and shivered a little, then turned to
+see if Nini and Ivana had heard the struggle.
+
+Fortunately, however, they still slept. And as if this peace which was
+upon them were an omen of good, the jungle continued quiet for the next
+hour. Kirby wakened them at last, and after a snatched nap, was in turn
+awakened.
+
+The three of them started again when the first glimmerings of dawn came
+to the forest. Of food there was plenty--fruits which grew in profusion,
+and some roots which Nini grubbed out of the earth. Having started along
+the first trail which they encountered beside the river bank, they ate
+as they walked.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kirby judged they had kept their steady gait for more than two hours
+before a slight widening of the trail roused him from the preoccupation
+into which he had fallen.
+
+"See there," he exclaimed to both girls, and pointed at a grove of trees
+with fanlike leaves which towered up to the right of the trail. "What
+are those big bundles fastened to the lower limbs?"
+
+Ivana glanced at Nini, who nodded as if in answer to a question.
+
+"This must be one of the places where the ape-people leave their dead,"
+Nini answered. "The bundles--But come over to them."
+
+Kirby forced his way ahead until he stood beneath a huge, unsavory
+bundle wrapped in roughly woven brown fibre, and wedged in a fork
+between two limbs. Judging from the ugly odor which overhung the grove,
+there could be no question about what the bundle contained. Nini and
+Ivana, glancing at the scores of similar bundles which burdened the
+trees of the whole grove, made wry faces. Kirby slung his rifle in the
+crook of his arm, and nodded toward the trail.
+
+"There must be a village somewhere near," he said.
+
+A mile farther on they found what they were seeking, a colony of seventy
+or eighty conical dwellings of mud and thatch, which were ranged in a
+double circle about a central common of bare, well-trodden earth. It
+took no long reconnaissance to discover that the town was deserted
+completely of all inhabitants.
+
+Ivana beckoned and darted to one of the nearest huts, and Kirby,
+following her, found lying on the uneven earth floor within, a
+half-skinned animal which resembled a small antelope. An obsidion knife
+beside the carcass, the disordered condition of a couch of grass, the
+sour odor of recent animal occupancy, all told their story.
+
+"The owner left in a hurry," Kirby observed aloud.
+
+Nini, who had gone beyond, to a larger hut which might have belonged to
+a king ape, called out excitedly to them.
+
+"A great number of apes have eaten a hurried meal here!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kirby entered the shadowed, foul-smelling interior of the central hut to
+find her statement true. Broken meats, some raw, some cooked, lay on the
+dirt floor, and scattered bits of fruit were mingled with them. The
+ashes of a burned out fire at the hut entrance were cold, but had not
+been for long.
+
+"Do you think--" Ivana began.
+
+"I think the whole of the Duca's horde came this way, fed, and went on,
+taking everyone with them," Kirby finished.
+
+"But which direction did they take?" asked Nini, who was standing at the
+door of the big hut and had already begun to examine the crowding,
+green, inscrutable walls of jungle which foamed up to the clearing on
+all sides.
+
+No less than seven trails wound away into the dark country beyond, and
+Kirby saw that the question would not be an easy one.
+
+Having hastily circled the clearing and peered down one trail after
+another without finding a clue, he knew that it was the Duca's
+intelligence which had made the ape-people depart without leaving even
+tracks behind them. He did not like the situation.
+
+"Well," he rumbled to his companions, "we may as well take our choice.
+One chance in seven of coming out right!"
+
+But the words were hardly out of his mouth before he pulled himself up
+with a jerk, and cursed himself for having given in.
+
+"Ivana! Nini!" Sharpness, a sudden ring of hope edged his voice. "Am I
+seeing things, or is that--"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+As he pointed to a huge aloe bush down one of the trails to their left,
+they started to run. Then Kirby knew that he was not seeing things. What
+his first inspection of the trails had failed to show, he saw plainly
+now.
+
+Tied loosely to one branch of the aloe bush, almost concealed amidst the
+deep green of foliage, was a bit of white cloth! In a second Kirby was
+holding out to his companions a tiny strip of Naida's wedding gown.
+
+"She knew we would come!" He stared down the trail with narrowed, keen
+eyes.
+
+How Naida had contrived to leave her signal was more than they knew. The
+fact that she _had_ done so, sent all three of them down the trail at
+driving speed.
+
+An hour passed, then another, and the morning which had been barely born
+when they first took the trail, wore on to the sultriness and vast,
+colored light of a tropical noon. Twice the main trail forked, and twice
+they found an unobtrusive bit of cloth to guide them beyond the works.
+When the hands of Kirby's still useful watch pointed to twelve, they
+paused to eat and rest. Then they pushed on.
+
+Meanwhile, the country through which they passed left Kirby with a clear
+understanding of why Naida and her people had shunned the Rorroh forest
+down the centuries of time.
+
+Just one thing which stuck in his head was the sight of a small creature
+like a marmoset, sticking an inquisitive nose into the heart of a
+sickly-sweet plant which resembled a terrestrial nepenthe. No sooner had
+the little pink snout touched the green and maroon splotched petals,
+than the plant writhed, closed its leaves, and swallowed the monkey
+whole. Little squeaks of agony and terror sounded for a moment, and
+ceased.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At midafternoon they paused in a spot where a forest of trees with
+whorled tops were slowly being strangled to death by immense orchids of
+every conceivable shape and color, and by a kind of creeping mistletoe
+which grew almost as they watched. Here also, the ground was covered
+with fluffy, grey-green moss which seethed constantly as if it were a
+carpet of maggots. Both Ivana and Nini warned Kirby on his life not to
+touch or go near the moss, and a moment later he knew why.
+
+From the forest came the flash of a small, five-toed horse being pursued
+by some animal with a hyena head that barked. At the edge of the mossy
+glade the hyena swerved aside, but the terrified horse plunged straight
+out on the carpet of moss. Instantly the air was filled with the sound
+of animal screams, and a series of tiny, muffled explosions. A cloud of
+greenish-red mist swirled about the horse. Quivering, still screaming,
+the animal went down on its knees, and as the reddish green smoke fell
+on him and settled, it became a mass of growing moss spores.
+
+Before Kirby's eyes, the pitiful animal was covered by a shroud of green
+that spread over him and cloaked him, licking over all with tiny sounds
+like far off muffled drums as fresh spore cases developed and burst. The
+screams died. Even as Kirby drew the girls to him and they passed on,
+the horse's nostrils, eyes, mouth were filled with choking green moss;
+and he lay still.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+On and on, deeper into the jungle Kirby pushed, and never for a moment
+did his companions falter. But the way was not so easy now, for nerves
+were jaded, muscles sore, and no human will could have been powerful
+enough to cast aside the growing fear for Naida.
+
+Fear came finally to a head when, toward dusk, Kirby sighted a fork
+ahead of them, approached it confidently to look for Naida's sign, and
+found nothing.
+
+"Oh Lord!" he muttered, and realized that it was the first time any of
+them had spoken for long.
+
+"There must be something to guide us!" Ivana exclaimed as she searched
+with questing eyes through the swiftly deepening gloom of evening.
+
+Nini, making an effort to keep up hope in spite of the paleness which
+came to her lovely face, darted down both paths, glancing as she went at
+every bush and shrub. But she returned in a moment, and as she shook
+her head, her great eyes were somber.
+
+Kirby grunted, scratched behind his ear. Then, however, he stifled an
+exclamation, and clutched at the hands of both girls.
+
+On one of the two trails appeared suddenly in the dusk an ape-creature.
+Kirby saw at once that the thing was small--a female undoubtedly--and
+that it had spied them and was moving toward them with all speed. And
+borne in upon him most certainly was the fact that the ape-woman was
+making signals of peace. In her outstretched hand flickered through the
+gloom a strip of cloth that was gauzy and white.
+
+Again--a strip of Naida's gown.
+
+"If you know any words of her tongue, call to her," Kirby said sharply.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ivana obeyed. All three of them started forward. The ape-woman, after
+returning the hail in creaking gutturals, came up to them, and with an
+unexpected look of pathos and entreaty in her face, began to address the
+girls with a flood of talk.
+
+Word after creaking word she poured out while Nini and Ivana listened in
+silence. Finally Kirby could stand the suspense no longer.
+
+"What is it, Ivana? What does she say? Your eyes are lighting up with
+hope! Tell me--"
+
+Ivana smiled and turned toward him, while the ape-woman still looked her
+entreaty.
+
+"She says," Ivana announced bluntly, "that she and the other women
+amongst their people, do not want any of the girls of our race to be
+taken by their males. Already the men are quarreling about Naida. They
+will not look at their own women. Naida told this woman that we would be
+following, and sent her to lead us to the place where the ape-people are
+assembling!"
+
+Kirby felt his lips tightening in a grim smile at the thought that
+jealousy was not unknown even to the semi-human creatures of this
+neither world. He looked at Nini and Ivana during a stretched out
+second. Then he moved.
+
+"Good," he snapped. "We go on at once."
+
+That was his only recognition of what was surely one of the important
+happenings of a lifetime. But for all that, his tired brain, which so
+lately had felt the chill of black depression, was suddenly set on fire
+with triumph and thanksgiving.
+
+
+CHAPTER XII
+
+As they marched rapidly, the ape-woman, who called herself Gori,
+succeeded in making them understand that most of the ape-tribes,
+commanded by the Duca and his caciques, were assembled in the central
+community toward which they were heading, that grave danger of some sort
+threatened Naida, and that the need for haste was great. But what the
+danger was, the two girls could not understand.
+
+"We can't make out what is going to happen--what they plan to do
+to-night," Ivana whispered at last to Kirby. "All Gori says is that we
+must rescue Naida and take her away, and must take the Duca away so that
+he cannot influence the men any more. And she keeps repeating that we
+must hurry."
+
+"And you can't find out what we must rescue Naida _from_?"
+
+Ivana shook her head.
+
+"I'm afraid we're facing something of an appalling nature, as dangerous
+to ourselves as to Naida. But I know nothing more."
+
+By the time the silver glow which corresponded to moonlight flooded the
+jungle, Gori had left the open trail, and was leading them across
+country which humans could not have negotiated without the guidance she
+offered. Advancing cautiously always, she stopped for long seconds at a
+time to reconnoitre, shifting her huge ears about and changing their
+shape, twitching her nostrils, and glancing hither and thither with
+bright little eyes. Sometimes they passed immense spike-tipped flowers
+ten feet in diameter, with fleshy yellow leaves which gave out a
+nauseating stench. Vines with long, recurved thorns and blossoms of deep
+scarlet, laced the undergrowth together and made passing dangerous.
+Fire-flies drifted past, and all above and about them flapped moths as
+big as bats.
+
+Kirby, his clothes almost torn from his body, sweat pouring from every
+pore, heard the labored breathing of the girls, and wondered how they
+could hang on. But they did, and after a long time, Gori, halting in the
+midst of a slight clearing, held up a warning hand.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+A queer sensation came over Kirby. As he stared and listened, he
+realized that the twinkles he saw far ahead were not fire-flies, as he
+had thought, but lights. In the frosted moon glow, Nini and Ivana drew
+close, and Kirby clasped their hands and pressed them for a second. Too
+tired to exult further he was, even though they seemed close to their
+goal of goals.
+
+Gori swung her hairy arm in a signal, and with rifles clasped carefully,
+they began to advance. When, five minutes later, they stood in the heart
+of a rank glade beyond which they could see nothing, Gori spoke to the
+two girls in her creaking whisper, and Nini laid a restraining hand on
+Kirby's.
+
+"We have gone as far as Gori dares! She says we must climb a tree here,
+and watch what will go on in a clearing just beyond this thicket."
+
+"And we still don't know what we're getting into," Kirby muttered.
+
+But at any rate they had reached the end of their march.
+
+Exultation did come to Kirby now, but still he was too completely
+fagged, as were both girls, to give much sign. Gori pointed to a tree
+some fifty feet away, which shot up to a great, foliage-crowned height.
+They moved toward it, and in a moment were climbing, Gori first, the
+girls after her, and Kirby last.
+
+"Here we are," Ivana presently whispered, at the same time drawing
+herself out on a limb just beneath one on which Gori and Nini had
+crawled.
+
+Kirby found himself hedged in by tasselated leaves through which he
+could not see. The foliage thinned, however, and soon Ivana halted,
+perched herself in a comfortable position. Kirby, making himself at ease
+beside her, and seeing that Nini and Gori were in place, turned his eyes
+slowly, expectantly downward.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+At first, all that he saw from his bird's-eye perch, was a circular
+clearing two hundred yards across, which was surrounded on all sides by
+lowering jungle. In the exact center of the circle, like a splotch of
+ink on gray paper, there gaped a deep hole which might have measured six
+feet in diameter. Around this hole, eight poles as tall and stout as
+telephone poles stood up in bristling array. The moonlight showed that
+the whitish earth of the clearing was tamped smooth as though thousands
+of creatures had danced or walked about there for centuries. But not a
+living form was visible.
+
+A grunt of disappointment escaped Kirby after that one look. When he
+looked beyond the clearing, however, a change came to his feelings.
+
+A quarter of a mile away, lights were twinkling--the same ones which had
+been visible on the last stretch of the journey. And the moonlight
+touched the little conical roofs of fully two hundred huts of the
+ape-people. No sound was audible save the soughing of night wind in the
+trees, the shrilling of insects. Nevertheless, there stole over Kirby
+all at once a feeling that the great ape-village was crowded to
+overflowing. What was more, he felt himself touched by an eery
+sensation--familiar these days--of evil to come.
+
+Ivana, seated with her rifle across her knees, stirred on the limb
+beside him.
+
+"Oh," she whispered suddenly, "I am afraid of this place!"
+
+Kirby took her hand.
+
+"I know. Maybe it is the sensation of all the legions of the apes herded
+together so silently in their village. I wish we knew what to expect
+from them. I wish--"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But he broke off, and called softly to Nini on the limb above. She
+looked down with a drawn expression about her mouth.
+
+"Are you all right?" Kirby whispered.
+
+"Yes. But--Well, are both of _you_ all right? Gori says we have reached
+here in time, but I--" A gasp of uneasiness escaped her, and Kirby heard
+Ivana echo it. "There is something about that black, silent hole out
+there in the clearing, and about those poles sticking up like fangs,
+that makes me terribly, terribly afraid. Oh, what are they planning?
+Where is Naida? What are they going to do to her?"
+
+Kirby whistled in a low key. He had not thought about the black hole in
+the clearing.
+
+"Hum," he muttered, "that's interesting. Ivana, Nini, what do you
+suppose--"
+
+But he got no answer. Gori's twitching lips grimaced them to silence.
+
+The next instant, the stillness of the night was hurled aside by a
+howling, gurgling shout from a hundred, a thousand hysterically
+distended ape throats. With the sickening sound came from the village
+the sullen roaring of drums.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ten minutes later, a Kirby who was cold with apprehension and wonder
+looked down from his leaf-crowned height at such a spectacle as he knew
+human eyes had never before seen. The shouting had died away, the drums
+were silenced. Crammed into the clearing, their foul, hairy bodies
+packed close together, the silver light glinting against rolling red
+eyes and grinning white teeth, stood fully a thousand apes!
+
+Once the first tumult of shouting in the village had died, they had come
+on in silence, and in orderly procession. Those who bore the
+drums--huge gourds with heads of stretched skin--had formed a line
+entirely around the outer diameter of the circular clearing. Then
+others, lugging vats of a dark, heady-smelling liquor, had deposited
+their burden beside the drums, and formed a second circle. The balance
+of the thousand had crowded itself together as best it might, leaving
+bare the center of the clearing with its black hole and fangs of poles.
+Kirby, looking down at these legions, did not wonder that cold sweat
+wetted his back.
+
+Capable of thinking about only one thing--Naida--he was trying with all
+his strength not to think. Ivana, her face blanched in the light which
+filtered their camouflage of leaves, sat rigid, her hands locked about
+her cold rifle. On the branch above, Nini and Gori were as still as
+mummies. No one had spoken since the vanguard of apes had appeared.
+
+But at last Nini leaned close to Kirby.
+
+"Have you any idea of what all this means?"
+
+A draught of hot night air carried up a stench of drunkenness, and the
+goaty odor of massed animal bodies.
+
+"No," Kirby whispered. "I suppose, from Gori's having brought us here,
+that Naida is going to appear somehow. We've simply got to trust that
+Gori knows what she is about."
+
+"But listen--" Ivana suppressed a shudder. "Suppose they should bring
+Naida here presently to force her to take part in some ceremony at which
+we can only guess. Gori, who thinks we can work miracles, supposes we
+can rescue Naida. But I--I'm not so certain. Is there _anything_ we can
+do?"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+It was exactly that question which had made Kirby fight to keep himself
+from thinking. His face turned gray before he answered. But answer he
+did, finally.
+
+"Yes, there is one thing we can do, Ivana. We've got to be frank with
+each other, and so far, this is the _only_ thing I've been able to
+figure out. If Naida is brought here, and they make any move to harm her
+or torture her, we can, and we will, shoot her quickly, before harm or
+pain comes."
+
+A grim silence settled once more. During the last miles of march in the
+jungle, there had persisted in Kirby's heart the hope that there would
+be at least _something_ favorable in whatever situation they might
+encounter. His spirits were so low now that he dared not speak again.
+
+Amongst the noiseless sea of ape-men below them came, every now and
+again, a little ripple of motion as some anthropoid shadow fell out of
+his place, approached the liquor vats, and swilled down the black brew,
+a quart at a gulp. But mostly there was little commotion. Ivana drew a
+sibilant breath and said that she wished something would happen.
+
+"I wish," Kirby answered tensely, "that we knew _what_ is going to
+happen."
+
+But the nightmare waiting was not to go on forever. Kirby leaned forward
+and pointed.
+
+It was only instinct that had made him know action must come. For a
+second, no change in the expression of the ape-men, no movement in their
+crammed ranks, was visible. Then, however, a queer, subdued grunting
+rumbled deep down in many throats, and those who had faced the
+hundred-foot space in the center of the clearing squatted down on their
+hams.
+
+In the back of the crowd necks were craned. The stronger shoved the
+weaker in an effort to get a better view of the cleared stage, and a few
+ape-men who had been drinking hurried on unsteady legs to their places.
+
+"The drums!" Kirby whispered then.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+With almost military precision, the scores of leather-faced creatures
+who had led the procession into the clearing, clasped the skin-headed
+gourds to their shaggy bellies, and stood with free arm raised as
+though awaiting a signal. Nini moved in her position, and Kirby felt
+Ivana shiver and edge close to him.
+
+From the front rank of the crowd, there sprang up a great male creature
+with the face of a gargoyle and the body of a jungle giant. Just once he
+reeled on his feet, as though black alcohol had befuddled him, then he
+steadied himself, flung both arms above his head, and rolled out a
+command which burst upon Kirby's ears like thunder.
+
+It was as if the whole cavern of the lower world, and the whole of the
+round earth itself, had been rocked uneasily, dreadfully by the
+bellowing, crashing explosion of the drums. Maddened by the turmoil he
+had let loose, the gargoyle-faced giant ape-man leered about him with
+blood-shot, drunken eyes, and beat on his cicatrized chest with massive
+fists. Suddenly he let out a bellow. Straight up into the air he sprang
+in a wild leap. When he came down, he was dancing, and the portentious,
+the sickeningly mysterious ceremony for which such solemn preparation
+had been made, was begun.
+
+Kirby drew a rasping breath. Knowing that there must be some definite
+reason for the dance having begun just when and as it had, he looked
+beyond the solitary dancing giant, on beyond the crowded legions of the
+apes, toward the village. There, where the main trail from the community
+approached the clearing, he saw precisely the thing which he had both
+hoped desperately and dreaded terribly to find.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Headed directly toward the clearing, moving down the trail with slow,
+majestic pace, came a procession headed by a bodyguard of ape-men and
+augmented by other men whose nakedness was covered by unmistakable,
+unforgetable priestly robes of gray.
+
+All at once the ape-people in the clearing began to scuffle apart,
+opening a lane down which the procession might pass to the central
+stage with its dancer, its ink spot orifice, and its fangs of tall
+poles. Kirby, watching the congregation, watching the majestic approach
+of gray robes through the night, wiped away from his forehead a sweat of
+fear.
+
+"I think," Nini called in a voice pitched high to outsound the drums,
+"that the--the Duca is with them!"
+
+"Yes." Kirby pointed jerkily. "In the middle of the procession, there,
+surrounded by his caciques!"
+
+The Duca!
+
+Yet his approach did not hold Kirby. Directly behind the priests were
+emerging now from the jungle a new company of ape-men. Squinting his
+eyes, Kirby saw that two of them were lugging on a pole across their
+shoulders a curious burden--a sort of monstrous bird cage of barked
+withes. Crouched on the floor of the cage in a little motionless, white
+heap--
+
+But Kirby closed his eyes. Ivana, cowering against him, gulped as though
+she were going to be sick. Nini leaned down from above and looked at
+them with dilated eyes. Although none of them spoke, all knew that they
+had found Naida at last.
+
+Kirby was the first to pull himself up. Opening his eyes, he stared long
+at the white gowned, motionless shape within the cage. Next summing up
+the whole situation--the cage surrounded by an armed band, the clearing
+crammed with a thousand ape-men--he shook his head. Afterward, he made a
+quick movement with his hands.
+
+Ivana, seeing that movement, seeing the expression on his face, started
+out of her daze.
+
+"No! No! Oh, there must be some other way out for her! There must--"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Her cry, half a shriek, did not change Kirby's look. What he had done
+with his hands was to throw a shell into the chamber of his rifle. Now
+he held the rifle grimly, ready to carry it to his shoulder.
+
+The procession with the bodyguard of ape-men at its head, the renegade
+Duca and his caciques following next, and the cage bringing up the rear,
+advanced relentlessly down the lane to the central stage. The
+gargoyle-faced ape-man who held the stage alone danced with increasing
+wildness, writhing, twisting, with weird suppleness. Upon the dancing
+giant the procession bore down, and before him it finally halted.
+
+The halt left the Duca and the king ape facing each other, and the ape
+ended his dance. After each had given a salute made by raising their
+arms, both Duca and the king ape turned to face the creatures who were
+standing with the cage slung across their shoulders. Whereupon the
+bearers of the cage advanced with it until they stood between two of the
+tall poles. There, facing the ominous hole in the center of the
+clearing, with a pole on either side of them, the ape-men lowered the
+cage to the ground.
+
+Kirby felt his last hope and courage ebbing. Now he noticed that each
+pole was equipped with a rope which passed through a hole near its top,
+like a thread through the eye of a needle. And while he stared at the
+dangling ropes, the ape-men made one end of each fast to a ring in the
+top of the cage. The next instant they leaped back, and began to heave
+at the other end of the lines.
+
+From the drums came a quicker pounding, a more head-splitting volume of
+thunder. Over all the ape-people who watched the show, passed a shiver
+of what seemed to be whole-souled, ecstatic satisfaction. Slowly, as the
+two ape-men heaved hard, the cage swung off the ground, and slowly rose
+higher and higher into the moonlit air.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+When finally the thing hung high above the heads of the multitude,
+swaying midway between its tall supports, the ape-men who had done the
+hoisting fastened their lines to cleats on the poles. Then they turned
+to the Duca and the giant king who stood behind them, executed a queer,
+lumbering bow, and fell back to the rear.
+
+The next moment it seemed as though every creature in the clearing--men
+and those who were only half men--had gone crazy. The king flung himself
+into the air as if he were a mass of bounding rubber. Following his
+lead, the whole assembly let out howls that drowned even the drums, and
+then began to sway, to squirm, to leap, even as their king was doing
+before them.
+
+The caciques and the Duca joined in the madness of foul dancing as
+heartily as any there. Their eyes were flaming, their long robes
+flapping, their beards streaming.
+
+On his perch in the tree Kirby muttered an oath which was lost, swept
+away like a breath, in the shrieking turmoil of sound. Then he turned to
+Ivana.
+
+"They've brought Naida here to sacrifice her."
+
+"But _why_?" Ivana's sweet face was frozen in lines of horror. "I've
+been able to guess what was going to happen to her. But--_sacrifice_.
+Why will it be that?"
+
+"Don't you see?" Looking up to include Nini, Kirby found his hands
+quivering against his rifle. "It is easy to understand. In the temple
+yesterday, what the Duca hoped to do was to kidnap most, or all, of the
+girls for the ape-people. But he was able to get only Naida. The first
+result was that the ape-men started to quarrel over the one girl. From
+what Gori says, trouble started on all sides at once. It became
+inadvisable to let Naida live. So the Duca, in his shrewdness, planned a
+sacrifice. By sacrificing Naida, he rids himself of a source of
+contention amongst the ape-men. He also hopes his act will win favor
+from his Gods, and make them help him when he is ready to launch a new
+attempt to capture _all_ the girls."
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Ivana and Nini looked at each other, then at Kirby, and horror was
+etched deeper into their faces.
+
+"I think," gulped Ivana, "that you--are right. I--begin to understand."
+
+Nini leaned close to them.
+
+"Tell us, then, _how_ this sacrifice is to be made."
+
+Silent at that, Kirby presently made a heavy gesture toward the
+maelstrom of howling, leaping animals below them.
+
+"I couldn't guess at first. Now I think I can. They have placed her in
+that cage and swung it high above the black hole you were afraid of.
+What can that mean except that she is to be offered to--to--"
+
+It was a monstrous theory which had stunned his hope and courage, and to
+voice the thing in words was too gruesome.
+
+His bare suggestion, however, made Ivana pass a hand limply over her
+forehead and look at him with blank, stricken eyes. Nini tottered so
+uncertainly that Gori, who had remained motionless and silent
+throughout, had to steady her with muscular arms. If it was impossible
+for Kirby to utter his fears aloud, he had no need to speak to make them
+understood.
+
+"And--and we can do nothing?" Nini choked at last.
+
+"You can see for yourself how she is surrounded. If we had been able to
+get here sooner, we might have done something. Now--"
+
+Kirby's voice trailed off, and he gave an agonized look at his rifle.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The terrific dance in the clearing was going forward with madness which
+increased second by second. It had been a general debauch at first, with
+the whole thousand of the apes bellowing and squirming. Now a change was
+becoming apparent. Red eyes which had caught the glare of ultimate
+madness, focused upon the caciques, the Duca, and the great king, all of
+whom were swaying together on the central stage. As they looked, the
+horde of ape-men broke loose with a heightened frenzy of noise and
+movement too overwhelming for Kirby to follow. He leaned forward, making
+an effort to see what actions of Duca and king could be so influencing
+the congregation. And then he saw.
+
+Both of those central figures, the one with hair-covered giant's body
+and evilly grimacing face, the other with white robes and whipping
+silver hair, were definitely emulating the motions of a serpent!
+
+It was as if the angles and joints had disappeared from their bodies.
+They were become gliding lengths of muscle as swift, as loathsome in
+their supple dartings and coilings as any snake lashing across the
+expanses of primeval jungle. Lost in what they did, unconscious of the
+nightmare, demoniac legion before which they danced, they had eyes only
+for the empty, ominous hole beneath Naida's cage. As they circled the
+hole, drawing ever and ever closer to it, they opened and closed their
+arms with the motion of great serpent jaws biting and striking.
+
+"God in Heaven!" Kirby cried in a voice which shrilled with horror and
+then broke.
+
+It was not alone the Duca's dance which had wrung the shout from him. As
+Nina and Ivana shrieked and cowered, as Gori twitched, gasped, buried
+her head in trembling arms, Kirby knew that Naida was fully aware of
+what was going on--had been, perhaps, from the beginning.
+
+Slowly, numbly she raised herself from her huddled position, rose to her
+knees, and clutching with despairing hands at the sides of her cage,
+looked out from between the bars.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+The king and Duca edged closer to the hole until they were dancing upon
+its very brink. From that position, they stared down into the depths,
+their faces tense and strained. And then their look became radiant,
+exalted, joyous. Suddenly the Duca leaped back. He shrieked something
+at the gargoyle ape, and they flung their arms high in a commanding,
+mighty signal which was directed across the nightmare legion of ape-men,
+to the drums.
+
+As Kirby winced in expectancy, the drums ceased to roar. Over the night
+smashed a hideous concussion of silence, deafening, absolute. And the
+ape-men--all of them--and the Duca, his caciques, and the king, ceased
+to dance. As if a whirlwind had hurled them, the caciques scattered in
+all directions. The Duca, having already leaped back from the gaping
+orifice, suddenly turned and ran with blurred speed over to the
+slobbering, deadly still front rank of the congregation. An instant
+later the king crouched down beside him, and the whole stage was left
+bare and deserted.
+
+Kirby gave one look at Naida, found her staring down, deeper and deeper
+down, into the hole which yawned beneath her so blackly. Then Kirby
+lowered his eyes until he, too, stared at the opening.
+
+Amidst the pressing silence there stole from the earth an uneasy sound
+as of some immense thing waking and stirring. Came a hissing note as of
+escaping steam. The tribes of the ape-men waited in silent rapture.
+Kirby saw Naida still looking down, and felt Ivana crouch against him,
+fainting. He held his rifle tighter, and continued to stare.
+
+Something red, like two small flames, licked up above the edge of the
+pit. Then Kirby gasped and all but went limp. Up and out into the
+moonlight slid a glistening white lump that moved from side to side and
+licked at the night with flickering black and red tipped forked tongue.
+
+The glistening white lump was the head of Quetzalcoatl, buried God of
+the People of the Temple. It was wider and bigger than an elephant's,
+and the round snake body could not have been encircled by a man's two
+arms. Kirby guessed at the probable length of the Serpent in terms of
+hundreds of feet.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Sick, numb, he glanced at Naida, who was still staring silently, and
+hitched his rifle half up to his shoulder. But he did not look down the
+sights yet. Although it was time, and more than time, that he fired, he
+would not do it until the last possible second, when nothing else
+remained.
+
+Slowly from the hole slid a fifteen or twenty-foot column of the body,
+and Quetzalcoatl, thus reared, looked about him with a pair of eyes
+immense and not like snake's eyes, but heavily lidded and lashed; eyes
+that stared in a wise, evil way; eyes glittering and round and black as
+ink. After a time the mouth opened in a silent snarl, showing great
+white fangs and recurved simitars of teeth. The head was snow white,
+leperous in its scabby, scaly roughness, with here and there a patch of
+what looked like greenish fungus. From the rounded body trailed a short,
+unnatural, sickening growth of--feathers. Old and evil and very wise the
+Feathered Serpent seemed as his forked tongue flickered in and out and
+he stared at the ape horde, who stared back silently.
+
+He seemed in no hurry to devote his attention to the cage set forth for
+his delectation. The black eyes rolled beneath their lashes, staring now
+at the Duca in his robes, and again at the huddled ape-people. But after
+ghastly seconds, Quetzalcoatl at last had seen enough.
+
+Again the moonlight glinted against simitar teeth as the great, white,
+puffy mouth yawned in its silent snarl. Quetzalcoatl reared his head a
+little higher, slid further from his hole, and then looked up at the
+dangling cage of barked withes.
+
+In Kirby's mind stirred cloudily a remembrance of moments in the past:
+the feel of Naida's first kiss, her look as they advanced to the altar
+in the temple. Then he saw things as they were now, with Naida
+surrounded by all the tribes of the apes, and with Quetzalcoatl staring
+from beneath heavily lidded lashes at the whiteness of her.
+
+Suddenly Kirby stirred to free his shoulder of Ivana's supine weight
+against it, and he made himself look down his rifle. He let the breath
+half out of his lungs, and nursed the trigger.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But he did not fire.
+
+All at once he started so violently that he almost hurtled from the
+tree. Suddenly, trembling, he lowered his rifle.
+
+"Oh, thank God!" he yelped in the silence of the night.
+
+The idea which had transformed him was perhaps the conception of a
+lunatic. But it was still an idea, and offered a chance.
+
+Again Kirby peered down his rifle. But he no longer aimed at Naida. As
+Quetzalcoatl lifted white fangs, Kirby aimed deliberately at him, and
+turned loose his fire.
+
+With the first shot, the Serpent lurched back from the cage, snapped his
+jaws, and closed evil, black eyes. From one lidded socket squirted dark
+blood. As a second and third shot crashed into the cavernous fanged
+mouth, and others ripped into the flat skull, Quetzalcoatl seemed dazed.
+His head wavered back and forth and his hiss filled the night, but he
+did nothing.
+
+But all at once Kirby felt that he was _going_ to do something in a
+second, and a great calm came upon him. He quickly jammed home a fresh
+clip of shells.
+
+"Nini! Ivana! Fire at the Serpent. Give him everything you've got! Do
+you understand? Fire! He thinks that the ape-people have hurt him, and
+he will be after them in a second. If we have any luck, he will do to
+them what we never could have done, and maybe destroy himself at the
+same time! Me, I'm going down there and get Naida now!"
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII
+
+No sooner did Kirby see comprehension in the girls' faces than he swung
+around and let go of his perch. As he crashed, caught the next limb
+below him, and let go to crash to another, he had all he could do to
+suppress a yelp of joy. For all at once every voice in the ape
+congregation was raised in howls and screams of devastated terror.
+
+He did not care how he got down from the tree. Seconds and half seconds
+were what counted. From the last limb above the ground he swung into
+space, and a split second later staggered to his feet, clutched his
+rifle, and started for the clearing. His lungs seemed collapsed and both
+ankles shattered. He did not care. Not when the ape screams were growing
+louder with every step he took. Not when he heard Nini and Ivana pouring
+down from their tree a continuation of the scorching fire he had
+started.
+
+Panting, his breath only half regained, but steeled to make the fight of
+his life, he tore from the jungle into the clearing just in time to see
+a twisting, pain-convulsed seventy-foot coil of white muscle lash up and
+strike Naida's cage a blow which knocked it like a ball in the air.
+Naida screamed and hung to the bars.
+
+But she was all right. It was not against her that Quetzalcoatl was
+venting his wrath: the blow had been blind accident. As Kirby stood at
+the clearing's edge, he knew to a certainty that Quetzalcoatl's reaction
+to sudden pain had been all he had dared hope.
+
+In front of him forty or fifty ape-bodies lay in a crushed heap. While
+yard after yard of the Serpent's bleached length streamed out of the
+hole, the hundreds of feet of coils already in the clearing suddenly
+whipped about a whole squadron of ape-men, and with a few constrictions
+annihilated them as if they had been ants. Across the clearing, the
+leperous head reared up as high as the trees and swooped down, fangs
+gleaming. The howls of the ape-men trying to flee, the screams of those
+who had been caught, rose until they became all one scream.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But Kirby had not left the safety of the tree merely to get a ringside
+view of carnage. He faced his next, his final task unhesitatingly.
+Straight out he leaped from the shadows of the jungle into the clearing,
+out into the presence of the beleagured, screaming ape-men. Well enough
+he knew that those creatures, despite their frenzy, might sight him and
+fall upon him at any second; well enough he knew that a single flick of
+the white coils all over the clearing could crush him instantly. But the
+time to worry about those hazards would be when they beset him. With a
+yell as piercing as any in the whole bedlam, Kirby rushed forward.
+
+High up in the moonlit vault of the night, swaying between the two poles
+which supported it, hung the white cage which was Naida's prison. By the
+time Kirby had sprinted fifty yards, he knew that his yells had reached
+Naida. For she staggered to her knees and looked straight at him. A
+second later, though, he realized that the almost inevitable recognition
+of him by ape-men had come to pass.
+
+Eight or ten of the creatures, left unmolested for a second by the
+Serpent, halted in the mad run they were making for the sheltering
+jungle, and while one pointed with hairy arm, the others let out
+shrieks. Kirby gritted his teeth in something like despair. Then he
+realized that the worst danger--Quetzalcoatl's blurred coils--was not
+threatening him so far. And he went on, straight toward the ape-men.
+
+He did not look where, how, or at whom he struck. All he knew was that
+his rifle blazed, and as he clubbed at soft flesh with the butt, blood
+spurted, and new screams filled the night. He felt and half saw big,
+stinking bodies going down, and clawed his way forward, around them,
+over them. Then he felt no more bodies, and knew that he was through. A
+little farther he ran over the trampled earth, and stopped and looked
+up.
+
+The howls of the living, the shrieks of the dying deafened him. Renewed
+shots from the rifles in the tree, made the Serpent lash about in a
+dazzling white blur, smashing trees, apes, everything in its path. But
+Kirby, finding himself still safe, scarcely heard or saw. His eyes,
+turned upward, saw one thing only.
+
+"Naida!"
+
+ * * * * *
+
+She had snapped two of the withes of the cage and was leaning forward
+through the opening. Her face was livid with horror and exhaustion, but
+she was able to look at him with eyes that glowed.
+
+"You--you came!" she gasped. "You came to me!"
+
+In a flash Kirby jumped over to the poles and began to cast off one of
+the lines which held the cage aloft.
+
+"Get ready for a bump!" he shouted, as he lowered away, arms straining.
+
+Paying out the one line left the cage suspended from the second, but let
+it sweep from its position between the poles, down toward one pole. As
+the thing struck the tall support, Kirby bounded over to stand beneath
+it, only too sharply aware of the death waiting for him on every side,
+but ignoring it. Naida still hung suspended a good twenty feet above
+him, but there was no time to let go the other line. He braced himself
+and held up his arms.
+
+"Jump!" he yelled.
+
+Then he saw the white gown sweeping down toward him, felt the crash of a
+soft body against his, and staggered back. Recovered in a tenth of a
+second, he drew a deep breath, and looked at Naida beside him, tall and
+brave, unhurt.
+
+"Are you able to run?" he snapped, and then, the moment she nodded,
+motioned toward the jungle.
+
+Behind them, in front, on all sides, rose screams so horrible that he
+wondered even then if he would ever forget. As he started to run, he
+realized that when Naida had finally landed in his arms, the nearest
+squirming loop of the Serpent had been no more than four yards away, and
+that, right now, if their luck failed, a single unfortunate twist of the
+incredible hundreds of feet of white muscle could still end things for
+them.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+But luck was not going to fail. Somehow Kirby knew it as they sprinted
+side by side, and the sheltering jungle loomed closer every second. And
+a moment later, something beside his own inner faith made him know it,
+too.
+
+"Look, Naida! Look!" he screeched all at once.
+
+At the upper end of the clearing, where an unthinkable slaughter was
+going on, there leaped out from amongst a surging mass of apes, leaped
+out from almost directly beneath a downward smashing blur of white snake
+folds, a figure which Kirby had not seen or thought about for many
+seconds.
+
+The Duca's robe hung in tatters from his body. Blood had smeared his
+white hair. His eyes were those of a man gone mad from fear. And as he
+escaped the tons of muscle which so nearly had engulfed him, he began to
+run even as Kirby felt himself running.
+
+Straight toward him and Naida, Kirby saw the man spurt, but whether the
+mad eyes recognized them or not, he could not tell, nor did he care. All
+at once his feeling that they would escape the clearing, became
+conviction.
+
+For suddenly the same single twitch of Quetzalcoatl's vast folds which
+might have finished them, if luck had not held, put an end to the Duca's
+retreat. At one moment the man's path was clear. The next--
+
+Kirby, running for dear life, gasped, and heard Naida cry out beside
+him.
+
+The great loops flashed, twisted, and where had been an open way for
+the Duca, loomed a wall of scaly white flesh. The living wall twitched,
+closed in; and as the Duca dodged and leaped to no avail, a cry shrilled
+across the night--a cry that cut like a knife.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kirby saw no more. But it was likely that most, if not all, of the
+caciques had gone with the Duca.
+
+Somehow, anyhow, in but a few seconds more, Kirby dove into the spot
+from which he had left the jungle to enter the clearing. As Naida
+pressed against him, winded but still strong, he found his best hopes
+for immediate retreat realized, for Gori, Nini, and Ivana, down from
+their tree, ran toward them.
+
+"She is all right," he said with a gesture which cut short the outbursts
+ready to come. "But we've got to keep going. Ivana, tell Gori that her
+people are gone, wiped out, but that if she will cast her lot with us,
+we will not forget what she has done. Come on!"
+
+With Gori leading them they ran, stumbling, recovering themselves,
+stumbling again. To breathe became an agony. But not until many minutes
+later, when they plowed into the cover of a fern belt whose blackness
+not even the moonlight had pierced, did Kirby call a halt.
+
+Here he swept a final glance behind him, listened long for sounds of
+pursuit, and relaxed a little only when none came to disturb the night
+stillness. However, that relaxation, now that he permitted it at last,
+meant something.
+
+The complete silence gave him final conviction that what he had said
+about the whole ape-people being destroyed was true. As for the
+Serpent--well, perhaps he was destroyed even as they were. Perhaps not.
+In any case the grip which Quetzalcoatl held upon the imagination of the
+People of the Temple had been destroyed by this night's work, and that
+was what counted most. The Serpent would be worshipped no longer.
+
+ * * * * *
+
+Kirby reached out in the darkness and found Naida's hand.
+
+"Come along," he said to all of the party. "I think the past is--the
+past. And with Gori to guide us out of the jungle, and our own brains to
+guide us through the jungle of self-government after that, I think the
+future ought to be bright enough."
+
+Ivana and Nini both chuckled as they moved again, and Gori, hearing her
+name spoken in a kindly voice, twitched her ears appreciatively. Naida
+drew very close to Kirby.
+
+"What are you thinking about?" she asked presently.
+
+"The--temple," he answered.
+
+"About the crown which probably is still lying on the altar there?"
+
+Kirby looked up in surprise.
+
+"Why, I had forgotten about that!"
+
+"What was it, then?"
+
+"But what could I have been thinking about except how you looked when we
+came together in that gloomy place, and walked forward, side by side?
+_Now_ have I told you enough?"
+
+Naida laughed.
+
+"There is so much to be done!" Kirby exclaimed then. "As soon as
+possible, we must climb to the Valley of the Geyser, go on into the
+outer world, and there seek carefully for men who are willing, and fit,
+to come here. And that is only one task. Others come crowding to me
+every second. But first--"
+
+"What?" Naida asked softly.
+
+"The temple. Naida, we will reach the plateau sometime to-morrow. All of
+the girls who kept watch there will be waiting for us, and it will be a
+time of happiness. May we not, then, go to the temple? There will be no
+priests. But we will make our pledges without them. Tell me, may I hope
+that it will be so--to-morrow?"
+
+Naida did not answer at once. She did not even nod. But presently her
+shoulder, still fragrant with faint perfume, brushed his. She clasped
+his hand then, and as they walked on in silence, Kirby knew.
+
+
+
+
+The Reader's Corner
+
+[Illustration: The Readers' Corner
+
+A Meeting Place for Readers of
+Astounding Stories]
+
+
+"Literature"
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+After comparison with various other magazines which specialize in the
+publication of Science Fiction, we--The Scientific Fiction Library
+Ass'n, of 1457 First Ave., New York City--have found that your magazine,
+Amazing Stories, publishes stories to which the term "literature" may be
+applied in its real sense. A fine example of this is the story "Murder
+Madness," by Murray Leinster. Others of the finer novels are: "The
+Beetle Horde," by Victor Rousseau, and, up to the present installment,
+"Earth, the Marauder," by Arthur J. Burks. "Brigands of the Moon," by
+Ray Cummings, was interesting and well-written, but it was not
+literature (not a story which you will remember and read over again). Of
+the shorter stories, the novelettes, the best are: "Spawn of the Stars,"
+by Charles W. Diffin, "Monsters of Moyen," by Arthur J. Burks, and "The
+Atom Smasher," by Victor Rousseau.
+
+Since the magazine started, there are only three stories that did not
+belong in the magazine, and were not even interesting. These are: "The
+Corpse on the Grating," by Hugh B. Cave; "The Stolen Mind," by M.
+Staley, and the last (I wonder that the editors who used such good sense
+in picking the other finer stories, let it pass), "Vampires of Venus,"
+by Anthony Pelcher. May you keep up the high standard of fiction you are
+publishing at present.--Nathan Greenfeld, 873 Whitlock Ave., New York
+City.
+
+
+You See--It Didn't!
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+Firstly, let me say that I am sending a year's subscription to
+Astounding Stories, which will tell you that they are good.
+
+On the average, the stories are of good literary merit and plot.
+However, there is one thing that seems to be getting rather pushed
+into the background and that is the second part of your title,
+"Super-Science." If this is to be a Science Fiction magazine let us have
+it so. I am kicking against stories like "Murder Madness" and the like.
+They are really excellent in every way but just need that tincture of
+a little scientific background to make them super-excellent. "Brigands
+of the Moon" and "The Moon Master" seem to me more the type of story
+"our mag" should publish, from its name.
+
+No doubt this criticism will leave you cold and this effusion find its
+way into the nearest waste paper basket, but I find that a number of
+your readers in Australia think somewhat the same as I do.
+
+More brickbats--I hope not! and more bouquets--I hope so! the next time
+I write.--N.W. Alcock, 5 Gaza Rd., Naremburn, N.S.W., Australia.
+
+
+Not in de Head!!
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+I shall be glad to take advantage of your cordial invitation to come
+over to "The Readers' Corner." In the first place, I find your magazine
+the best of its kind on the market, and you are to be congratulated on
+having such excellent authors as Ray Cummings, Murray Leinster and
+Captain S. P. Meek. Nevertheless, there are so many things to be
+criticized that I hardly know where to begin.
+
+Let's start of with stories of future warfare. Although this class is
+potentially one of the most interesting, it is at the same time one of
+the most abused. Ray Cummings can write classics in this field, but the
+efforts of most the others are atrocities. I'll wager that their
+favorite childhood sport was mowing down whole regiments of lead
+soldiers with oxy-acetylene torches. It shows in their writings. Why
+can't they think of something original? Why can't they make their
+stories logical? The merits of a story are not dependent on the number
+of people wiped out by one blast of a death ray! But they all stick to
+the same old plot. A merciless but well-meaning scientist, or hordes
+from a foreign planet, wipe out thousands of American citizens at one
+blow. Hundreds of airplanes are disintegrated before they discover that
+the enemy is invulnerable. An ultimatum in domineering tones gives the
+terror-stricken populace forty-eight hours in which to surrender. But,
+all unknown to the dastardly villains, an obscure young scientist labors
+to save his country and the girl he loves. Fifteen minutes before the
+time set in the ultimatum he perfects a new weapon that soon sends the
+invaders to their well merited fate.
+
+Surely you realize how ridiculous the whole affair is. It is only
+slightly less nauseating than the plot used in the stories of advanced
+civilizations where the hero is conducted on a sight-seeing tour by the
+individual in whose path he popped upon entering this new world. I can't
+believe that more than a handful of my fellow beings are of such low
+intelligence that they can find enjoyment in such trash. You will notice
+that although every reader has a different list of favorite authors, Ray
+Cummings has his name in practically every list. He is easily your
+favorite author. Ray Cummings does not wipe out whole cities at one
+time. His heroes do not save the world by inventing a new weapon at a
+moment's notice. His wars are not of forty-eight hours' duration. His
+conquerors do not attempt to win the war by one great attack on New York
+City. Do try to have your authors write logical stories.
+
+I would now like to criticize the love element in your stories. I do not
+claim that there should be none whatever from cover to cover of your
+magazine, but I do claim that there should be none unless it really
+helps the plot. Most of your authors seem to think that a girl is
+necessary in every plot and so they bring her in, disregarding the fact
+that they do not know how to handle such material. The way it stands
+now, the heroine is introduced in a lame, routine fashion; is rescued
+once or twice; and accepts the hero as a husband in an altogether lame
+fashion.
+
+There are many other points but they can wait. Logical war stories, no
+Utopias or sight-seeing tours, sensible love element, plus your present
+policy will make a corking magazine.--Philip Waite, 3400 Wayne Ave., New
+York, N.Y.
+
+
+No Present Plans
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+Thanks for the new color cover. It certainly is a big improvement. The
+picture on the front of "our" magazine was just as astounding as the
+story by R. F. Starzl from which it was drawn. Let's have more stories
+from the pen of Mr. Starzl.
+
+In my opinion "Beyond the Heaviside Layer" is the best story I have read
+in Astounding Stories to date. I am very pleased that you intend to
+print a sequel to it.
+
+Now I would like to ask you a question. Do you intend to print an Annual
+or Quarterly, or do think you will ever enlarge the size of this
+magazine? I don't care so much whether you enlarge the magazine or not,
+but I certainly would like to read an Annual or Quarterly.
+
+Even though this letter meets the fate of thousands of other such
+letters and sees the inside of your wastebasket, I will at least have
+had the pleasure of writing to you and wishing "our" magazine success to
+the nth degree.--Forrest J. Ackerman, 236-1/2 N. New Hampshire, Los
+Angeles, Calif.
+
+
+"Excellent" to "So-So"
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+I notice a large number of subscribers are giving their opinions of
+Astounding Stories. I hate to be with the crowd, but I have to side with
+the majority in this case and say it's just about right.
+
+My favorite writers are R. F. Starzl (that "Planet of Dread" was a
+peach). Chas. W. Diffin, A. Merritt, Ralph Milne Farley, Murray Leinster
+and Ray Cummings.
+
+Now as to the August issue, here is how I rate them:
+
+"Planet of Dread"--more than 20c. worth at the first crack. A real
+story.
+
+"Lord of Space"--excellent. I meant to include Victor Rousseau in my
+list of favorites above.
+
+"The Second Satellite"--so-so.
+
+"Silver Dome"--so.
+
+"Earth the Marauder"--too deep for me. And that Beryl stuff is sheer
+bunk.
+
+"Murder Madness"--a real story. Get more like this.
+
+"The Flying City"--too much explanation and description and not enough
+action.
+
+Perhaps it looks like I'm sort of critical after all, but I didn't mean
+it just that way. What I'm driving at is that Astounding Stories is by
+far superior to its competitors, and I'm telling you so because it might
+make you feel better to know it. If you want to print this testimonial,
+go to it. To tell the truth, I'll be looking for it.--Leslie P. Mann,
+1227 Ogden Ave., Chicago, Illinois.
+
+
+"Too Many Serials"
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+I have just finished the August issue, and I would like to tell you my
+opinion of it and the magazine as a whole.
+
+The stories in order of merit were:
+
+1--"The Second Satellite"; 2--"The Flying City"; 3--"Silver Dome";
+4--"The Lord of Space"; 5--"The Planet of Dread."
+
+I won't pass judgment upon the serials, as I have not read all the
+parts.
+
+In "The Flying City" there are a number of points I am hazy about. How
+could Cor speak English? However, this could be cleared up by saying
+that Cor sent out men to get the language, etc.
+
+As a whole, Astounding Stories is a good magazine. There are too many
+serials, however, but since other readers like them I won't complain.
+
+You have a fine array of Science Fiction authors. With such writers as
+Vincent, Meek, Hamilton, Starzl and Ernst, your magazine can't be
+anything but a success.
+
+The September layouts look good to me. I hope it is.--E. Anderson, 1765
+Southern Blvd., New York, N.Y.
+
+
+Thanks, Mr. Glasser
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+Somewhat belatedly I am writing to commend you most heartily on the
+August issue of Astounding Stories, which I consider by far the finest
+number since the inception of the magazine last January. The authors
+whose work appeared in this issue are among the greatest modern writers
+of fantasy and scientific fiction. Leinster, Burks, Hamilton,
+Rousseau--what a brilliant galaxy! And Starzl, Vincent, Rich; all
+writers of note. If ever a magazine merited the designation "all-star
+number," your August issue filled the bill.
+
+However, I am confident that even this superb achievement will be
+surpassed by some future edition of Astounding Stories, for each
+succeeding number to date has improved on the one before. And with a new
+Cummings novel in the offing, it seems the August issue, despite its
+excellence, will speedily be eclipsed.--Allen Glasser, 1510 University
+Ave., New York, N.Y.
+
+
+Are Our Covers Too "Gaudy"?
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+This is the first time that I have ventured to air my views to any
+magazine, but as yours interests me greatly I hereby shed my reticence.
+
+I believe, of all magazine of your type, you have come nearest
+perfection. But there are just a few things that bother me, and, no
+doubt, others like me. In the first place, must you make your covers as
+lurid and as contradictory to good design as they are? Really, I blush
+when my newsdealer hands me the gaudy thing. People interested in
+science do not usually succumb to circus poster advertising.
+
+Then there are the stories. I realize that you must cater to all tastes,
+but some of them are very childish, slightly camouflaged fairy tales.
+Science Fiction can be written very convincingly, as is testified by the
+stories of H. G. Wells, Ray Cummings, Jules Verne, and others. These
+writers attain their effects by the proper use of the English language,
+without silly and obviously tacked-on romance, the use of known
+scientific facts elaborated sensibly and by not trying to make a novel
+out of a short story.
+
+The stimulation of the imagination from Science Fiction is most
+enjoyable and I shall continue to read your magazine even though my
+fault finding is not considered, for, as I said before, you certainly
+have come nearer my ideal than any of the others.--Hector D. Spear, 867
+W. 181st St., The Tri-Sigma Fraternity, New York City.
+
+
+Nossir--Our Astronomy Is O. K.
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+I am taking advantage of your invitation to write to you. Since
+Astounding Stories is available you have given me a lot of pleasure, and
+I hope you may get a little pleasure out of reading this.
+
+First, I want to say that you're hitting the ball as far as I'm
+concerned. I could hardly suggest an improvement.
+
+In the August issue I liked "Planet of Dread," by R. F. Starzl, best.
+When that thing in the "pipe" grabbed me, I mean Gunga, wow! And it gave
+me a lot of satisfaction to see the Master in "Murder Madness," by
+Murray Leinster, get it in the neck. "Lord of Space" was good, too. In
+fact all the stories were good. I have only read two or three I really
+did not like since you started.
+
+Say, I never heard of a planet named Inra. Don't you think your author
+ought to brush up on his astronomy? I also noticed some other authors
+are a little weak on astronomy; not that I'm complaining. The stories
+are O. K. with me.--Harry Johnson, 237 E. 128th St., New York City.
+
+
+Mr. Yetter Checks Up on Us
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+As I am a constant reader of Astounding Stories I wish to say that
+though S. P. Meek is one of my favorite authors his story, "Cold Light,"
+was a little wrong when he called the "Silver Range" by the name of
+"Stillwater Range." I also think it would have been better if he had had
+a car take Dr. Bird and Carnes out to the hills, became even in Fallon a
+burro is a strange sight.
+
+But Meek, Cummings, Burks and all the rest of our famous authors'
+stories should be in the magazine often. If Verrill, Wells, Nathenson
+and Hamilton would also write, the magazine would be perfect.
+
+I like all the stories, though some seem to be copies, and others lack
+science.
+
+Here is for a long life for Astounding Stories!--Frank Yetter, 369
+Railroad Ave., Fallon, Nevada.
+
+
+"Charm All Its Own"
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+Let me congratulate you. I have just read "The Planet of Dread," by R.
+F. Starzl, in your August issue of Astounding Stories.
+
+Real science, you know, is pretty rigidly limited, but super-science of
+the kind you seem to run has a freshness and charm all its own.
+
+I came upon your magazine quite by accident, and from now on no doubt
+will look for it as I stand before the racks of magazines, trying to
+decide upon something to read--Anton J. Sartori, 1330 W. 6th St., Los
+Angeles, Calif.
+
+
+Inra Could Exist
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+You will have to excuse this old telegraph office typewriter. It is all
+I have to express my appreciation to you for the tremendously
+interesting magazine you put out. I have only read the last three
+issues, but those are enough to convince me that Astounding Stories
+fills a long-felt want. I read all the others too, but from now on I'm
+going to look over their offerings at the stand before I buy. They have
+to go some to come up to the standard set by you, especially in the
+August copy.
+
+That story, "The Planet of Dread," was the most weird, exciting,
+thrilling, satisfying--in short, the most "astounding" story I have ever
+read. Nothing has seemed so real since I first read Wells' stories. I
+liked the characters. Poor Gunga. I could just see him, trying to
+sacrifice the man he obviously worshipped to stop that horrible noise.
+The picture of Gunga on the cover was just exactly what I would expect
+the Martian to look like. You have a good artist. I liked Mark
+Forepaugh, too. He didn't lose his nerve for one minute--not Mark. Who
+says civilization is going down, when the future holds men like that?
+
+Next to "The Planet of Dread" I liked "The Lord of Space." That was a
+vivid and well-drawn story, too. Those two, I think, were the
+outstanding stories for August. But I must not forget "Murder Madness,"
+the serial; it was thrilling and convincing. That's the only kick I
+have: so many stories sound thin. I don't believe them when I read them.
+I also want to mention "The Forgotten Planet" and "From An Amber Block."
+Good, exciting, and you can believe them without too much strain.
+
+Oh, by the way, the author of "The Planet of Dread" made a mistake when
+he chose a mythical planet for his terrific adventures. Why not Venus or
+Mercury? If they have water the conditions on them would be similar to
+what he described for Inra. There ain't no such planet. But why expect
+perfection! I'm satisfied.
+
+I wish you success. That's a late wish. You're a success already.--Tom
+P. Fitzgerald, Newcastle, Nebraska.
+
+
+Thus Ended the Quest
+
+Dear Editor:
+
+This is my first letter to your magazine, and right away I'm asking for
+a pair of sequels. One of these is to "The Moon Master," by Charles W.
+Diffin. These sad endings depress me greatly, but if I looked at the
+ending first to see whether or not it was sad it would ruin the story;
+and besides sad endings usually have good stories in front of them. The
+other sequel I want is to "From The Ocean's Depths," by Sewell P.
+Wright, and its sequel "Into The Ocean's Depths."
+
+In looking over my back copies of the magazine I find that I have not
+disliked a single story. Thus endeth my quest for a brickbat.
+
+Are you going to put out a quarterly? Both the other Science Fiction
+magazines that I get do so, and I observe that it gives opportunity for
+a story of full novel length all in one piece. Not that I object to
+serials, but I like once in a while to sit down to a long story without
+having to dig out three or four magazines. However, please continue the
+long serials, for what is life without the element of suspense?--Hugh M.
+Gilmore, 920 N. Vista St., Hollywood, Cal.
+
+
+"The Readers' Corner"
+
+All Readers are extended a sincere and cordial invitation to "come over
+in 'The Readers' Corner'" and join in our monthly discussion of stories,
+authors, scientific principles and possibilities--everything that's of
+common interest in connection with our Astounding Stories.
+
+Although from time to time the Editor may make a comment or so, this is
+a department primarily for _Readers_, and we want you to make full use
+of it. Likes, dislikes, criticisms, explanations, roses, brickbats,
+suggestions--everything's welcome here; so "come over in 'The Readers'
+Corner'" and discuss it with all of us!
+
+_The Editor._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+
+
+
+Transcriber Notes
+
+Typographical and hyphenation inconsistencies have been standardized.
+
+Otherwise, archaic and variable spelling is preserved, including
+'obsidion' and 'tyranosaur'.
+
+Passages in italics indicated by _underscores_.
+
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Astounding Stories of Super-Science,
+December 1930, by Various
+
+*** END OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK ASTOUNDING STORIES, DEC. 1930 ***
+
+***** This file should be named 30691.txt or 30691.zip *****
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