Without effort at concealment I hastened
to the vicinity of our quarters, where I felt sure
I should find Kantos Kan. As I neared the building
I became more careful, as I judged, and rightly, that
the place would be guarded. Several men in civilian
metal loitered near the front entrance and in the
rear were others. My only means of reaching,
unseen, the upper story where our apartments were situated
was through an adjoining building, and after considerable
maneuvering I managed to attain the roof of a shop
several doors away.
Leaping from roof to roof, I soon
reached an open window in the building where I hoped
to find the Heliumite, and in another moment I stood
in the room before him. He was alone and showed
no surprise at my coming, saying he had expected me
much earlier, as my tour of duty must have ended some
time since.
I saw that he knew nothing of the
events of the day at the palace, and when I had enlightened
him he was all excitement. The news that Dejah
Thoris had promised her hand to Sab Than filled him
with dismay.
“It cannot be,” he exclaimed.
“It is impossible! Why no man in all
Helium but would prefer death to the selling of our
loved princess to the ruling house of Zodanga.
She must have lost her mind to have assented to such
an atrocious bargain. You, who do not know how
we of Helium love the members of our ruling house,
cannot appreciate the horror with which I contemplate
such an unholy alliance.”
“What can be done, John Carter?”
he continued. “You are a resourceful man.
Can you not think of some way to save Helium from
this disgrace?”
“If I can come within sword’s
reach of Sab Than,” I answered, “I can
solve the difficulty in so far as Helium is concerned,
but for personal reasons I would prefer that another
struck the blow that frees Dejah Thoris.”
Kantos Kan eyed me narrowly before he spoke.
“You love her!” he said. “Does
she know it?”
“She knows it, Kantos Kan, and
repulses me only because she is promised to Sab Than.”
The splendid fellow sprang to his
feet, and grasping me by the shoulder raised his sword
on high, exclaiming:
“And had the choice been left
to me I could not have chosen a more fitting mate
for the first princess of Barsoom. Here is my
hand upon your shoulder, John Carter, and my word
that Sab Than shall go out at the point of my sword
for the sake of my love for Helium, for Dejah Thoris,
and for you. This very night I shall try to reach
his quarters in the palace.”
“How?” I asked.
“You are strongly guarded and a quadruple force
patrols the sky.”
He bent his head in thought a moment,
then raised it with an air of confidence.
“I only need to pass these guards
and I can do it,” he said at last. “I
know a secret entrance to the palace through the pinnacle
of the highest tower. I fell upon it by chance
one day as I was passing above the palace on patrol
duty. In this work it is required that we investigate
any unusual occurrence we may witness, and a face peering
from the pinnacle of the high tower of the palace was,
to me, most unusual. I therefore drew near and
discovered that the possessor of the peering face
was none other than Sab Than. He was slightly
put out at being detected and commanded me to keep
the matter to myself, explaining that the passage
from the tower led directly to his apartments, and
was known only to him. If I can reach the roof
of the barracks and get my machine I can be in Sab
Than’s quarters in five minutes; but how am
I to escape from this building, guarded as you say
it is?”
“How well are the machine sheds
at the barracks guarded?” I asked.
“There is usually but one man
on duty there at night upon the roof.”
“Go to the roof of this building,
Kantos Kan, and wait me there.”
Without stopping to explain my plans
I retraced my way to the street and hastened to the
barracks. I did not dare to enter the building,
filled as it was with members of the air-scout squadron,
who, in common with all Zodanga, were on the lookout
for me.
The building was an enormous one,
rearing its lofty head fully a thousand feet into
the air. But few buildings in Zodanga were higher
than these barracks, though several topped it by a
few hundred feet; the docks of the great battleships
of the line standing some fifteen hundred feet from
the ground, while the freight and passenger stations
of the merchant squadrons rose nearly as high.
It was a long climb up the face of
the building, and one fraught with much danger, but
there was no other way, and so I essayed the task.
The fact that Barsoomian architecture is extremely
ornate made the feat much simpler than I had anticipated,
since I found ornamental ledges and projections which
fairly formed a perfect ladder for me all the way
to the eaves of the building. Here I met my first
real obstacle. The eaves projected nearly twenty
feet from the wall to which I clung, and though I
encircled the great building I could find no opening
through them.
The top floor was alight, and filled
with soldiers engaged in the pastimes of their kind;
I could not, therefore, reach the roof through the
building.
There was one slight, desperate chance,
and that I decided I must take it was for
Dejah Thoris, and no man has lived who would not risk
a thousand deaths for such as she.
Clinging to the wall with my feet
and one hand, I unloosened one of the long leather
straps of my trappings at the end of which dangled
a great hook by which air sailors are hung to the
sides and bottoms of their craft for various purposes
of repair, and by means of which landing parties are
lowered to the ground from the battleships.
I swung this hook cautiously to the
roof several times before it finally found lodgment;
gently I pulled on it to strengthen its hold, but
whether it would bear the weight of my body I did not
know. It might be barely caught upon the very
outer verge of the roof, so that as my body swung
out at the end of the strap it would slip off and
launch me to the pavement a thousand feet below.
An instant I hesitated, and then,
releasing my grasp upon the supporting ornament, I
swung out into space at the end of the strap.
Far below me lay the brilliantly lighted streets, the
hard pavements, and death. There was a little
jerk at the top of the supporting eaves, and a nasty
slipping, grating sound which turned me cold with
apprehension; then the hook caught and I was safe.
Clambering quickly aloft I grasped
the edge of the eaves and drew myself to the surface
of the roof above. As I gained my feet I was
confronted by the sentry on duty, into the muzzle of
whose revolver I found myself looking.
“Who are you and whence came you?” he
cried.
“I am an air scout, friend,
and very near a dead one, for just by the merest chance
I escaped falling to the avenue below,” I replied.
“But how came you upon the roof,
man? No one has landed or come up from the building
for the past hour. Quick, explain yourself, or
I call the guard.”
“Look you here, sentry, and
you shall see how I came and how close a shave I had
to not coming at all,” I answered, turning toward
the edge of the roof, where, twenty feet below, at
the end of my strap, hung all my weapons.
The fellow, acting on impulse of curiosity,
stepped to my side and to his undoing, for as he leaned
to peer over the eaves I grasped him by his throat
and his pistol arm and threw him heavily to the roof.
The weapon dropped from his grasp, and my fingers
choked off his attempted cry for assistance.
I gagged and bound him and then hung him over the
edge of the roof as I myself had hung a few moments
before. I knew it would be morning before he
would be discovered, and I needed all the time that
I could gain.
Donning my trappings and weapons I
hastened to the sheds, and soon had out both my machine
and Kantos Kan’s. Making his fast behind
mine I started my engine, and skimming over the edge
of the roof I dove down into the streets of the city
far below the plane usually occupied by the air patrol.
In less than a minute I was settling safely upon the
roof of our apartment beside the astonished Kantos
Kan.
I lost no time in explanation, but
plunged immediately into a discussion of our plans
for the immediate future. It was decided that
I was to try to make Helium while Kantos Kan was to
enter the palace and dispatch Sab Than. If successful
he was then to follow me. He set my compass
for me, a clever little device which will remain steadfastly
fixed upon any given point on the surface of Barsoom,
and bidding each other farewell we rose together and
sped in the direction of the palace which lay in the
route which I must take to reach Helium.
As we neared the high tower a patrol
shot down from above, throwing its piercing searchlight
full upon my craft, and a voice roared out a command
to halt, following with a shot as I paid no attention
to his hail. Kantos Kan dropped quickly into
the darkness, while I rose steadily and at terrific
speed raced through the Martian sky followed by a
dozen of the air-scout craft which had joined the pursuit,
and later by a swift cruiser carrying a hundred men
and a battery of rapid-fire guns. By twisting
and turning my little machine, now rising and now
falling, I managed to elude their search-lights most
of the time, but I was also losing ground by these
tactics, and so I decided to hazard everything on
a straight-away course and leave the result to fate
and the speed of my machine.
Kantos Kan had shown me a trick of
gearing, which is known only to the navy of Helium,
that greatly increased the speed of our machines, so
that I felt sure I could distance my pursuers if I
could dodge their projectiles for a few moments.
As I sped through the air the screeching
of the bullets around me convinced me that only by
a miracle could I escape, but the die was cast, and
throwing on full speed I raced a straight course toward
Helium. Gradually I left my pursuers further
and further behind, and I was just congratulating
myself on my lucky escape, when a well-directed shot
from the cruiser exploded at the prow of my little
craft. The concussion nearly capsized her, and
with a sickening plunge she hurtled downward through
the dark night.
How far I fell before I regained control
of the plane I do not know, but I must have been very
close to the ground when I started to rise again,
as I plainly heard the squealing of animals below me.
Rising again I scanned the heavens for my pursuers,
and finally making out their lights far behind me,
saw that they were landing, evidently in search of
me.
Not until their lights were no longer
discernible did I venture to flash my little lamp
upon my compass, and then I found to my consternation
that a fragment of the projectile had utterly destroyed
my only guide, as well as my speedometer. It
was true I could follow the stars in the general direction
of Helium, but without knowing the exact location
of the city or the speed at which I was traveling my
chances for finding it were slim.
Helium lies a thousand miles southwest
of Zodanga, and with my compass intact I should have
made the trip, barring accidents, in between four
and five hours. As it turned out, however, morning
found me speeding over a vast expanse of dead sea
bottom after nearly six hours of continuous flight
at high speed. Presently a great city showed
below me, but it was not Helium, as that alone of
all Barsoomian metropolises consists in two immense
circular walled cities about seventy-five miles apart
and would have been easily distinguishable from the
altitude at which I was flying.
Believing that I had come too far
to the north and west, I turned back in a southeasterly
direction, passing during the forenoon several other
large cities, but none resembling the description which
Kantos Kan had given me of Helium. In addition
to the twin-city formation of Helium, another distinguishing
feature is the two immense towers, one of vivid scarlet
rising nearly a mile into the air from the center of
one of the cities, while the other, of bright yellow
and of the same height, marks her sister.