It is not my intention, nor is it
possible no matter how interesting to me, to set down
ad seriatim the happenings of the next twelve
hours. But a few will not be denied recital.
O’Keefe regained cheerfulness.
“After all, Doc,” he said
to me, “it’s a beautiful scrap we’re
going to have. At the worst the worst is no more
than the leprechaun warned about. I would have
told the Taitha De about the banshee raid he promised
me; but I was a bit taken off my feet at the time.
The old girl an’ all the clan’ll be along,
said the little green man, an’ I bet the Three
will be damned glad of it, take it from me.”
Lakla, shining-eyed and half fearful too:
“I have other tidings that I
am afraid will please you little, Larry darlin’.
The Silent Ones say that you must not go into battle
yourself. You must stay here with me, and with
Goodwin for if if the
Shining One does come, then must we be here to meet
it. And you might not be, you know, Larry, if
you fight,” she said, looking shyly up at him
from under the long lashes.
The O’Keefe’s jaw dropped.
“That’s about the hardest
yet,” he answered slowly. “Still I
see their point; the lamb corralled for the altar
has no right to stray out among the lions,”
he added grimly. “Don’t worry, sweet,”
he told her. “As long as I’ve sat
in the game I’ll stick to the rules.”
Olaf took fierce joy in the coming
fray. “The Norns spin close to the end
of this web,” he rumbled. “Ja! And
the threads of Lugur and the Heks woman are between
their fingers for the breaking! Thor will be
with me, and I have fashioned me a hammer in glory
of Thor.” In his hand was an enormous mace
of black metal, fully five feet long, crowned with
a massive head.
I pass to the twelve hours’ closing.
At the end of the coria road
where the giant fernland met the edge of the cavern’s
ruby floor, hundreds of the Akka were stationed
in ambush, armed with their spears tipped with the
rotting death and their nail-studded, metal-headed
clubs. These were to attack when the Murians
debauched from the corials. We had little
hope of doing more here than effect some attrition
of Yolara’s hosts, for at this place the captains
of the Shining One could wield the Keth and
their other uncanny weapons freely. We had learned,
too, that every forge and artisan had been put to
work to make an armour Marakinoff had devised to withstand
the natural battle equipment of the frog-people and
both Larry and I had a disquieting faith in the Russian’s
ingenuity.
At any rate the numbers against us would be lessened.
Next, under the direction of the frog-king,
levies commanded by subsidiary chieftains had completed
rows of rough walls along the probable route of the
Murians through the cavern. These afforded the
Akka a fair protection behind which they could
hurl their darts and spears curiously enough
they had never developed the bow as a weapon.
At the opening of the cavern a strong
barricade stretched almost to the two ends of the
crescent strand; almost, I say, because there had
not been time to build it entirely across the mouth.
And from edge to edge of the titanic
bridge, from where it sprang outward at the shore
of the Crimson Sea to a hundred feet away from the
golden door of the abode, barrier after barrier was
piled.
Behind the wall defending the mouth
of the cavern, waited other thousands of the Akka.
At each end of the unfinished barricade they were
mustered thickly, and at right and left of the crescent
where their forest began, more legions were assembled
to make way up to the ledge as opportunity offered.
Rank upon rank they manned the bridge
barriers; they swarmed over the pinnacles and in the
hollows of the island’s ragged outer lip; the
domed castle was a hive of them, if I may mix my metaphors and
the rocks and gardens that surrounded the abode glittered
with them.
“Now,” said the handmaiden,
“there’s nothing else we can do save
wait.”
She led us out through her bower and
up the little path that ran to the embrasure.
Through the quiet came a sound, a
sighing, a half-mournful whispering that beat about
us and fled away.
“They come!” cried Lakla,
the light of battle in her eyes. Larry drew her
to him, raised her in his arms, kissed her.
“A woman!” acclaimed the
O’Keefe. “A real woman and
mine!”
With the cry of the Portal there was
movement among the Akka, the glint of moving
spears, flash of metal-tipped clubs, rattle of horny
spurs, rumblings of battle-cries.
And we waited waited it
seemed interminably, gaze fastened upon the low wall
across the cavern mouth. Suddenly I remembered
the crystal through which I had peered when the hidden
assassins had crept upon us. Mentioning it to
Lakla, she gave a little cry of vexation, a command
to her attendant; and not long that faithful if unusual
lady had returned with a tray of the glasses.
Raising mine, I saw the lines furthest away leap into
sudden activity. Spurred warrior after warrior
leaped upon the barricade and over it. Flashes
of intense, green light, mingled with gleams like
lightning strokes of concentrated moon rays, sprang
from behind the wall sprang and struck and
burned upon the scales of the batrachians.
“They come!” whispered Lakla.
At the far ends of the crescent a
terrific milling had begun. Here it was plain
the Akka were holding. Faintly, for the
distance was great, I could see fresh force upon force
rush up and take the places of those who had fallen.
Over each of these ends, and along
the whole line of the barricade a mist of dancing,
diamonded atoms began to rise; sparking, coruscating
points of diamond dust that darted and danced.
What had once been Lakla’s guardians dancing
now in the nothingness!
“God, but it’s hard to
stay here like this!” groaned the O’Keefe;
Olaf’s teeth were bared, the lips drawn back
in such a fighting grin as his ancestors berserk on
their raven ships must have borne; Rador was livid
with rage; the handmaiden’s nostrils flaring
wide, all her wrathful soul in her eyes.
Suddenly, while we looked, the rocky
wall which the Akka had built at the cavern
mouth was not! It vanished, as though
an unseen, unbelievably gigantic hand had with the
lightning’s speed swept it away. And with
it vanished, too, long lines of the great amphibians
close behind it.
Then down upon the ledge, dropping
into the Crimson Sea, sending up geysers of ruby spray,
dashing on the bridge, crushing the frog-men, fell
a shower of stone, mingled with distorted shapes and
fragments whose scales still flashed meteoric as they
hurled from above.
“That which makes things fall
upward,” hissed Olaf. “That which
I saw in the garden of Lugur!”
The fiendish agency of destruction
which Marakinoff had revealed to Larry; the force
that cut off gravitation and sent all things within
its range racing outward into space!
And now over the debris upon the ledge,
striking with long sword and daggers, here and there
a captain flashing the green ray, moving on in ordered
squares, came the soldiers of the Shining One.
Nearer and nearer the verge of the ledge they pushed
Nak’s warriors. Leaping upon the dwarfs,
smiting them with spear and club, with teeth and spur,
the Akka fought like devils. Quivering
under the ray, they leaped and dragged down and slew.
Now there was but one long line of
the frog-men at the very edge of the cliff.
And ever the clouds of dancing, diamonded
atoms grew thicker over them all!
That last thin line of the Akka
was going; yet they fought to the last, and none toppled
over the lip without at least one of the armoured
Murians in his arms.
My gaze dropped to the foot of the
cliffs. Stretched along their length was a wide
ribbon of beauty a shimmering multitude
of gleaming, pulsing, prismatic moons; glowing, glowing
ever brighter, ever more wondrous the gigantic
Medusae globes feasting on dwarf and frog-man alike!
Across the waters, faintly, came a
triumphant shouting from Lugur’s and Yolara’s
men!
Was the ruddy light of the place lessening,
growing paler, changing to a faint rose? There
was an exclamation from Larry; something like hope
relaxed the drawn muscles of his face. He pointed
to the aureate dome wherein sat the Three and
then I saw!
Out of it, through the long transverse
slit through which the Silent Ones kept their watch
on cavern, bridge, and abyss, a torrent of the opalescent
light was pouring. It cascaded like a waterfall,
and as it flowed it spread whirling out, in columns
and eddies, clouds and wisps of misty, curdled coruscations.
It hung like a veil over all the islands, filtering
everywhere, driving back the crimson light as though
possessed of impenetrable substance and
still it cast not the faintest shadowing upon our
vision.
“Good God!” breathed Larry. “Look!”
The radiance was marching marching down
the colossal bridge. It moved swiftly, in some
unthinkable way intelligently. It swathed
the Akka, and closer, ever closer it swept
toward the approach upon which Yolara’s men
had now gained foothold.
From their ranks came flash after
flash of the green ray aimed at the abode!
But as the light sped and struck the opalescence it
was blotted out! The shimmering mists seemed
to enfold, to dissipate it.
Lakla drew a deep breath.
“The Silent Ones forgive me
for doubting them,” she whispered; and again
hope blossomed on her face even as it did on Larry’s.
The frog-men were gaining. Clothed
in the armour of that mist, they pressed back from
the bridge-head the invaders. There was another
prodigious movement at the ends of the crescent, and
racing up, pressing against the dwarfs, came other
legions of Nak’s warriors. And re-enforcing
those out on the prodigious arch, the frog-men stationed
in the gardens below us poured back to the castle and
out through the open Portal.
“They’re licked!” shouted Larry.
“They’re
So quickly I could not follow the
movement his automatic leaped to his hand spoke,
once and again and again. Rador leaped to the
head of the little path, sword in hand; Olaf, shouting
and whirling his mace, followed. I strove to
get my own gun quickly.
For up that path were running twoscore
of Lugur’s men, while from below Lugur’s
own voice roared.
“Quick! Slay not the handmaiden
or her lover! Carry them down. Quick!
But slay the others!”
The handmaiden raced toward Larry,
stopped, whistled shrilly again and again.
Larry’s pistol was empty, but as the dwarfs rushed
upon him I dropped two of them with mine. It
jammed I could not use it; I sprang to
his side. Rador was down, struggling in a heap
of Lugur’s men. Olaf, a Viking of old,
was whirling his great hammer, and striking, striking
through armour, flesh, and bone.
Larry was down, Lakla flew to him.
But the Norseman, now streaming blood from a dozen
wounds, caught a glimpse of her coming, turned, thrust
out a mighty hand, sent her reeling back, and then
with his hammer cracked the skulls of those trying
to drag the O’Keefe down the path.
A cry from Lakla the dwarfs
had seized her, had lifted her despite her struggles,
were carrying her away. One I dropped with the
butt of my useless pistol, and then went down myself
under the rush of another.
Through the clamour I heard a booming
of the Akka, closer, closer; then through it
the bellow of Lugur. I made a mighty effort, swung
a hand up, and sunk my fingers in the throat of the
soldier striving to kill me. Writhing over him,
my fingers touched a poniard; I thrust it deep, staggered
to my feet.
The O’Keefe, shielding Lakla,
was battling with a long sword against a half dozen
of the soldiers. I started toward him, was struck,
and under the impact hurled to the ground. Dizzily
I raised myself and leaning upon my elbow,
stared and moved no more. For the dwarfs lay
dead, and Larry, holding Lakla tightly, was staring
even as I, and ranged at the head of the path were
the Akka, whose booming advance in obedience
to the handmaiden’s call I had heard.
And at what we all stared was Olaf,
crimson with his wounds, and Lugur, in blood-red armour,
locked in each other’s grip, struggling, smiting,
tearing, kicking, and swaying about the little space
before the embrasure. I crawled over toward the
O’Keefe. He raised his pistol, dropped
it.
“Can’t hit him without
hitting Olaf,” he whispered. Lakla signalled
the frog-men; they advanced toward the two but
Olaf saw them, broke the red dwarf’s hold, sent
Lugur reeling a dozen feet away.
“No!” shouted the Norseman,
the ice of his pale-blue eyes glinting like frozen
flames, blood streaming down his face and dripping
from his hands. “No! Lugur is mine!
None but me slays him! Ho, you Lugur ”
and cursed him and Yolara and the Dweller hideously I
cannot set those curses down here.
They spurred Lugur. Mad now
as the Norseman, the red dwarf sprang. Olaf struck
a blow that would have killed an ordinary man, but
Lugur only grunted, swept in, and seized him about
the waist; one mighty arm began to creep up toward
Huldricksson’s throat.
“’Ware, Olaf!” cried
O’Keefe; but Olaf did not answer. He waited
until the red dwarf’s hand was close to his
shoulder; and then, with an incredibly rapid movement once
before had I seen something like it in a wrestling
match between Papuans he had twisted Lugur
around; twisted him so that Olaf’s right arm
lay across the tremendous breast, the left behind
the neck, and Olaf’s left leg held the Voice’s
armoured thighs viselike against his right knee while
over that knee lay the small of the red dwarf’s
back.
For a second or two the Norseman looked
down upon his enemy, motionless in that paralyzing
grip. And then slowly he
began to break him!
Lakla gave a little cry; made a motion
toward the two. But Larry drew her head down
against his breast, hiding her eyes; then fastened
his own upon the pair, white-faced, stern.
Slowly, ever so slowly, proceeded
Olaf. Twice Lugur moaned. At the end he
screamed horribly. There was a cracking
sound, as of a stout stick snapped.
Huldricksson stooped, silently.
He picked up the limp body of the Voice, not yet
dead, for the eyes rolled, the lips strove to speak;
lifted it, walked to the parapet, swung it twice over
his head, and cast it down to the red waters!