It was a two-masted felucca with lateen
sails! The craft was long and low. In it
were more than fifty men, twenty or thirty of whom
were at oars with which the craft was being propelled
from the lee of the land. I was dumbfounded.
Could it be that the savage, painted
natives I had seen on shore had so perfected the art
of navigation that they were masters of such advanced
building and rigging as this craft proclaimed?
It seemed impossible! And as I looked I saw another
of the same type swing into view and follow its sister
through the narrow strait out into the ocean.
Nor were these all. One after
another, following closely upon one another’s
heels, came fifty of the trim, graceful vessels.
They were cutting in between Hooja’s fleet
and our little dugout.
When they came a bit closer my eyes
fairly popped from my head at what I saw, for in the
eye of the leading felucca stood a man with a sea-glass
leveled upon us. Who could they be? Was
there a civilization within Pellucidar of such wondrous
advancement as this? Were there far-distant lands
of which none of my people had ever heard, where a
race had so greatly outstripped all other races of
this inner world?
The man with the glass had lowered
it and was shouting to us. I could not make
out his words, but presently I saw that he was pointing
aloft. When I looked I saw a pennant fluttering
from the peak of the forward lateen yard - a
red, white, and blue pennant, with a single great white
star in a field of blue.
Then I knew. My eyes went even
wider than they had before. It was the navy!
It was the navy of the empire of Pellucidar which I
had instructed Perry to build in my absence.
It was my navy!
I dropped my paddle and stood up and
shouted and waved my hand. Juag and Dian looked
at me as if I had gone suddenly mad. When I could
stop shouting I told them, and they shared my joy
and shouted with me.
But still Hooja was coming nearer,
nor could the leading felucca overhaul him before
he would be along-side or at least within bow-shot.
Hooja must have been as much mystified
as we were as to the identity of the strange fleet;
but when he saw me waving to them he evidently guessed
that they were friendly to us, so he urged his men
to redouble their efforts to reach us before the felucca
cut him off.
He shouted word back to others of
his fleet - word that was passed back until
it had reached them all - directing them to
run alongside the strangers and board them, for with
his two hundred craft and his eight or ten thousand
warriors he evidently felt equal to over-coming the
fifty vessels of the enemy, which did not seem to carry
over three thousand men all told.
His own personal energies he bent
to reaching Dian and me first, leaving the rest of
the work to his other boats. I thought that there
could be little doubt that he would be successful in
so far as we were concerned, and I feared for the
revenge that he might take upon us should the battle
go against his force, as I was sure it would; for I
knew that Perry and his Mezops must have brought with
them all the arms and ammunition that had been contained
in the prospector. But I was not prepared for
what happened next.
As Hooja’s canoe reached a point
some twenty yards from us a great puff of smoke broke
from the bow of the leading felucca, followed almost
simultaneously by a terrific explosion, and a solid
shot screamed close over the heads of the men in Hooja’s
craft, raising a great splash where it clove the water
just beyond them.
Perry had perfected gunpowder and
built cannon! It was marvelous! Dian and
Juag, as much surprised as Hooja, turned wondering
eyes toward me. Again the cannon spoke.
I suppose that by comparison with the great guns
of modern naval vessels of the outer world it was a
pitifully small and inadequate thing; but here in Pellucidar,
where it was the first of its kind, it was about as
awe-inspiring as anything you might imagine.
With the report an iron cannonball
about five inches in diameter struck Hooja’s
dugout just above the water-line, tore a great splintering
hole in its side, turned it over, and dumped its occupants
into the sea.
The four dugouts that had been abreast
of Hooja had turned to intercept the leading felucca.
Even now, in the face of what must have been a withering
catastrophe to them, they kept bravely on toward the
strange and terrible craft.
In them were fully two hundred men,
while but fifty lined the gunwale of the felucca to
repel them. The commander of the felucca, who
proved to be Ja, let them come quite close and then
turned loose upon them a volley of shots from small-arms.
The cave men and Sagoths in the dugouts
seemed to wither before that blast of death like dry
grass before a prairie fire. Those who were
not hit dropped their bows and javelins and, seizing
upon paddles, attempted to escape. But the felucca
pursued them relentlessly, her crew firing at will.
At last I heard Ja shouting to the
survivors in the dugouts - they were all
quite close to us now - offer-ing them their
lives if they would surrender. Perry was standing
close behind Ja, and I knew that this merciful action
was prompted, perhaps commanded, by the old man; for
no Pellucidarian would have thought of showing leniency
to a defeated foe.
As there was no alternative save death,
the survivors surrendered and a moment later were
taken aboard the Amoz, the name that I could now see
printed in large letters upon the felucca’s bow,
and which no one in that whole world could read except
Perry and I.
When the prisoners were aboard, Ja
brought the felucca alongside our dugout. Many
were the willing hands that reached down to lift us
to her decks. The bronze faces of the Mezops
were broad with smiles, and Perry was fairly beside
himself with joy.
Dian went aboard first and then Juag,
as I wished to help Raja and Ranee aboard myself,
well knowing that it would fare ill with any Mezop
who touched them. We got them aboard at last,
and a great commotion they caused among the crew,
who had never seen a wild beast thus handled by man
before.
Perry and Dian and I were so full
of questions that we fairly burst, but we had to contain
ourselves for a while, since the battle with the rest
of Hooja’s fleet had scarce commenced.
From the small forward decks of the feluccas Perry’s
crude cannon were belching smoke, flame, thunder,
and death. The air trembled to the roar of them.
Hooja’s horde, intrepid, savage fighters that
they were, were closing in to grapple in a last death-struggle
with the Mezops who manned our vessels.
The handling of our fleet by the red
island warriors of Ja’s clan was far from perfect.
I could see that Perry had lost no time after the
completion of the boats in setting out upon this cruise.
What little the captains and crews had learned of
handling feluccas they must have learned principally
since they embarked upon this voyage, and while experience
is an excellent teacher and had done much for them,
they still had a great deal to learn. In maneuvering
for position they were continually fouling one another,
and on two occasions shots from our batteries came
near to striking our own ships.
No sooner, however, was I aboard the
flagship than I attempted to rectify this trouble
to some extent. By passing commands by word of
mouth from one ship to another I managed to get the
fifty feluccas into some sort of line, with the flag-ship
in the lead. In this formation we commenced
slowly to circle the position of the enemy. The
dugouts came for us right along in an attempt to board
us, but by keeping on the move in one direction and
circling, we managed to avoid getting in each other’s
way, and were enabled to fire our cannon and our small
arms with less danger to our own comrades.
When I had a moment to look about
me, I took in the felucca on which I was. I
am free to confess that I marveled at the excellent
construction and stanch yet speedy lines of the little
craft. That Perry had chosen this type of vessel
seemed rather remarkable, for though I had warned
him against turreted battle-ships, armor, and like
useless show, I had fully expected that when I beheld
his navy I should find considerable attempt at grim
and terrible magnificence, for it was always Perry’s
idea to overawe these ignorant cave men when we had
to contend with them in battle. But I had soon
learned that while one might easily astonish them
with some new engine of war, it was an utter impossibility
to frighten them into surrender.
I learned later that Ja had gone carefully
over the plans of various craft with Perry.
The old man had explained in detail all that the text
told him of them. The two had measured out dimensions
upon the ground, that Ja might see the sizes of different
boats. Perry had built models, and Ja had had
him read carefully and explain all that they could
find relative to the handling of sailing vessels.
The result of this was that Ja was the one who had
chosen the felucca. It was well that Perry had
had so excellent a balance wheel, for he had been
wild to build a huge frigate of the Nelsonian era - he
told me so himself.
One thing that had inclined Ja particularly
to the felucca was the fact that it included oars
in its equip-ment. He realized the limitations
of his people in the matter of sails, and while they
had never used oars, the implement was so similar
to a paddle that he was sure they quickly could master
the art - and they did. As soon as one
hull was completed Ja kept it on the water constantly,
first with one crew and then with another, until two
thousand red warriors had learned to row. Then
they stepped their masts and a crew was told off for
the first ship.
While the others were building they
learned to handle theirs. As each succeeding
boat was launched its crew took it out and practiced
with it under the tutorage of those who had graduated
from the first ship, and so on until a full complement
of men had been trained for every boat.
Well, to get back to the battle:
The Hoojans kept on coming at us, and as fast as they
came we mowed them down. It was little else than
slaughter. Time and time again I cried to them
to surrender, promising them their lives if they would
do so. At last there were but ten boatloads
left. These turned in flight. They thought
they could paddle away from us - it was pitiful!
I passed the word from boat to boat to cease firing - not
to kill another Hoojan unless they fired on us.
Then we set out after them. There was a nice
little breeze blowing and we bowled along after our
quarry as gracefully and as lightly as swans upon
a park lagoon. As we approached them I could
see not only wonder but admiration in their eyes.
I hailed the nearest dugout.
“Throw down your arms and come
aboard us,” I cried, “and you shall not
be harmed. We will feed you and return you to
the mainland. Then you shall go free upon your
promise never to bear arms against the Emperor of
Pellucidar again!”
I think it was the promise of food
that interested them most. They could scarce
believe that we would not kill them. But when
I exhibited the prisoners we already had taken, and
showed them that they were alive and unharmed, a great
Sagoth in one of the boats asked me what guarantee
I could give that I would keep my word.
“None other than my word,”
I replied. “That I do not break.”
The Pellucidarians themselves are
rather punctilious about this same matter, so the
Sagoth could understand that I might possibly be speaking
the truth. But he could not understand why we
should not kill them unless we meant to enslave them,
which I had as much as denied already when I had promised
to set them free. Ja couldn’t exactly see
the wisdom of my plan, either. He thought that
we ought to follow up the ten remaining dugouts and
sink them all; but I insisted that we must free as
many as possible of our enemies upon the mainland.
“You see,” I explained,
“these men will return at once to Hooja’s
Island, to the Mahar cities from which they come, or
to the countries from which they were stolen by the
Mahars. They are men of two races and of many
countries. They will spread the story of our
victory far and wide, and while they are with us,
we will let them see and hear many other wonderful
things which they may carry back to their friends
and their chiefs. It’s the finest chance
for free publicity, Perry,” I added to the old
man, “that you or I have seen in many a day.”
Perry agreed with me. As a matter
of fact, he would have agreed to anything that would
have restrained us from killing the poor devils who
fell into our hands. He was a great fellow to
invent gunpowder and fire-arms and cannon; but when
it came to using these things to kill people, he was
as tender-hearted as a chicken.
The Sagoth who had spoken was talking
to other Sagoths in his boat. Evidently they
were holding a council over the question of the wisdom
of surrender-ing.
“What will become of you if
you don’t surrender to us?” I asked.
“If we do not open up our batteries on you
again and kill you all, you will simply drift about
the sea helplessly until you die of thirst and starvation.
You cannot return to the islands, for you have seen
as well as we that the natives there are very numerous
and warlike. They would kill you the moment
you landed.”
The upshot of it was that the boat
of which the Sagoth speaker was in charge surrendered.
The Sagoths threw down their weapons, and we took
them aboard the ship next in line behind the Amoz.
First Ja had to impress upon the captain and crew
of the ship that the prisoners were not to be abused
or killed. After that the remaining dugouts paddled
up and surrendered. We distributed them among
the entire fleet lest there be too many upon any one
vessel. Thus ended the first real naval engagement
that the Pellucidarian seas had ever witnessed - though
Perry still insists that the action in which the Sari
took part was a battle of the first magnitude.
The battle over and the prisoners
disposed of and fed - and do not imagine
that Dian, Juag, and I, as well as the two hounds were
not fed also - I turned my attention to the
fleet. We had the feluccas close in about the
flag-ship, and with all the ceremony of a medieval
potentate on parade I received the commanders of the
forty-nine feluccas that accompanied the flag-ship - Dian
and I together - the empress and the emperor
of Pellucidar.
It was a great occasion. The
savage, bronze warriors entered into the spirit of
it, for as I learned later dear old Perry had left
no opportunity neglected for impressing upon them
that David was emperor of Pellucidar, and that all
that they were accomplishing and all that he was accomplishing
was due to the power, and redounded to the glory of
David. The old man must have rubbed it in pretty
strong, for those fierce warriors nearly came to blows
in their efforts to be among the first of those to
kneel before me and kiss my hand. When it came
to kissing Dian’s I think they enjoyed it more;
I know I should have.
A happy thought occurred to me as
I stood upon the little deck of the Amoz with the
first of Perry’s primi-tive cannon behind
me. When Ja kneeled at my feet, and first to
do me homage, I drew from its scabbard at his side
the sword of hammered iron that Perry had taught him
to fashion. Striking him lightly on the shoulder
I created him king of Anoroc. Each captain of
the forty-nine other feluccas I made a duke.
I left it to Perry to enlighten them as to the value
of the honors I had bestowed upon them.
During these ceremonies Raja and Ranee
had stood beside Dian and me. Their bellies had
been well filled, but still they had difficulty in
permitting so much edible humanity to pass unchallenged.
It was a good education for them though, and never
after did they find it difficult to associate with
the human race with-out arousing their appetites.
After the ceremonies were over we
had a chance to talk with Perry and Ja. The
former told me that Ghak, king of Sari, had sent my
letter and map to him by a runner, and that he and
Ja had at once decided to set out on the completion
of the fleet to ascertain the correctness of my theory
that the Lural Az, in which the Anoroc Islands lay,
was in reality the same ocean as that which lapped
the shores of Thuria under the name of Sojar Az, or
Great Sea.
Their destination had been the island
retreat of Hooja, and they had sent word to Ghak of
their plans that we might work in harmony with them.
The tempest that had blown us off the coast of the
continent had blown them far to the south also.
Shortly before discovering us they had come into
a great group of islands, from between the largest
two of which they were sailing when they saw Hooja’s
fleet pursuing our dugout.
I asked Perry if he had any idea as
to where we were, or in what direction lay Hooja’s
island or the continent. He replied by producing
his map, on which he had carefully marked the newly
discovered islands - there described as the
Unfriendly Isles - which showed Hooja’s
island northwest of us about two points West.
He then explained that with compass,
chronometer, log and reel, they had kept a fairly
accurate record of their course from the time they
had set out. Four of the feluccas were equipped
with these instruments, and all of the captains had
been instructed in their use.
I was very greatly surprised at the
ease with which these savages had mastered the rather
intricate detail of this unusual work, but Perry assured
me that they were a wonderfully intelligent race, and
had been quick to grasp all that he had tried to teach
them.
Another thing that surprised me was
the fact that so much had been accomplished in so
short a time, for I could not believe that I had been
gone from Anoroc for a sufficient period to permit
of building a fleet of fifty feluccas and mining iron
ore for the cannon and balls, to say nothing of manufacturing
these guns and the crude muzzle-loading rifles with
which every Mezop was armed, as well as the gunpowder
and ammunition they had in such ample quantities.
“Time!” exclaimed Perry.
“Well, how long were you gone from Anoroc before
we picked you up in the Sojar Az?”
That was a puzzler, and I had to admit
it. I didn’t know how much time had elapsed
and neither did Perry, for time is nonexistent in
Pellucidar.
“Then, you see, David,”
he continued, “I had almost unbelievable resources
at my disposal. The Mezops inhabiting the Anoroc
Islands, which stretch far out to sea beyond the three
principal isles with which you are familiar, number
well into the millions, and by far the greater part
of them are friendly to Ja. Men, women, and children
turned to and worked the moment Ja explained the nature
of our enterprise.
“And not only were they anxious
to do all in their power to hasten the day when the
Mahars should be overthrown, but - and this
counted for most of all - they are simply
ravenous for greater knowledge and for better ways
of doing things.
“The contents of the prospector
set their imaginations to working overtime, so that
they craved to own, themselves, the knowledge which
had made it possible for other men to create and build
the things which you brought back from the outer world.
“And then,” continued
the old man, “the element of time, or, rather,
lack of time, operated to my advantage. There
being no nights, there was no laying off from work - they
labored incessantly stopping only to eat and, on rare
occasions, to sleep. Once we had discovered iron
ore we had enough mined in an incredibly short time
to build a thousand cannon. I had only to show
them once how a thing should be done, and they would
fall to work by thousands to do it.
“Why, no sooner had we fashioned
the first muzzle-loader and they had seen it work
successfully, than fully three thousand Mezops fell
to work to make rifles. Of course there was
much confusion and lost motion at first, but eventually
Ja got them in hand, detailing squads of them under
competent chiefs to certain work.
“We now have a hundred expert
gun-makers. On a little isolated isle we have
a great powder-factory. Near the iron-mine, which
is on the mainland, is a smelter, and on the eastern
shore of Anoroc, a well equipped ship-yard.
All these industries are guarded by forts in which
several cannon are mounted and where warriors are always
on guard.
“You would be surprised now,
David, at the aspect of Anoroc. I am surprised
myself; it seems always to me as I compare it with
the day that I first set foot upon it from the deck
of the Sari that only a miracle could have worked
the change that has taken place.”
“It is a miracle,” I said;
it is nothing short of a miracle to transplant all
the wondrous possibilities of the twentieth century
back to the Stone Age. It is a miracle to think
that only five hundred miles of earth separate two
epochs that are really ages and ages apart.
“It is stupendous, Perry!
But still more stupendous is the power that you and
I wield in this great world. These people look
upon us as little less than supermen. We must
show them that we are all of that.
“We must give them the best that we have, Perry.”
“Yes,” he agreed; “we
must. I have been thinking a great deal lately
that some kind of shrapnel shell or explosive bomb
would be a most splendid innovation in their warfare.
Then there are breech-loading rifles and those with
magazines that I must hasten to study out and learn
to reproduce as soon as we get settled down again;
and -
“Hold on, Perry!” I cried.
“I didn’t mean these sorts of things at
all. I said that we must give them the best we
have. What we have given them so far has been
the worst. We have given them war and the munitions
of war. In a single day we have made their wars
infinitely more terrible and bloody than in all their
past ages they have been able to make them with their
crude, primitive weapons.
“In a period that could scarcely
have exceeded two outer earthly hours, our fleet practically
annihilated the largest armada of native canoes that
the Pellucidarians ever before had gathered together.
We butchered some eight thousand warriors with the
twentieth-century gifts we brought. Why, they
wouldn’t have killed that many warriors in the
entire duration of a dozen of their wars with their
own weapons! No, Perry; we’ve got to give
them something better than scientific methods of killing
one another.”
The old man looked at me in amazement.
There was reproach in his eyes, too.
“Why, David!” he said
sorrowfully. “I thought that you would
be pleased with what I had done. We planned
these things together, and I am sure that it was you
who suggested practically all of it. I have
done only what I thought you wished done and I have
done it the best that I know how.”
I laid my hand on the old man’s shoulder.
Bless your heart, Perry! I cried. Youve
accomplished miracles. You have done precisely what I should have done,
only youve done it better. Im not finding fault; but I dont wish to
lose sight myself, or let you lose sight, of the greater work which must grow
out of this preliminary and necessary carnage. First we must place the
empire upon a secure footing, and we can do so only by putting the fear of us in
the hearts of our enemies; but after that -
“Ah, Perry! That is the
day I look forward to! When you and I can build
sewing-machines instead of battle-ships, harvesters
of crops instead of harvesters of men, plow-shares
and telephones, schools and colleges, printing-presses
and paper! When our merchant marine shall ply
the great Pellucidarian seas, and cargoes of silks
and typewriters and books shall forge their ways where
only hideous saurians have held sway since time began!”
“Amen!” said Perry.
And Dian, who was standing at my side, pressed my
hand.