In the outer gardens to which the
guard now escorted me, I found Xodar surrounded by
a crowd of noble blacks. They were reviling and
cursing him. The men slapped his face.
The woman spat upon him.
When I appeared they turned their attentions toward
me.
“Ah,” cried one, “so
this is the creature who overcame the great Xodar
bare-handed. Let us see how it was done.”
“Let him bind Thurid,”
suggested a beautiful woman, laughing. “Thurid
is a noble Dator. Let Thurid show the dog what
it means to face a real man.”
“Yes, Thurid! Thurid!” cried a dozen
voices.
“Here he is now,” exclaimed
another, and turning in the direction indicated I
saw a huge black weighed down with resplendent ornaments
and arms advancing with noble and gallant bearing toward
us.
“What now?” he cried. “What
would you of Thurid?”
Quickly a dozen voices explained.
Thurid turned toward Xodar, his eyes narrowing to
two nasty slits.
“Calot!” he hissed.
“Ever did I think you carried the heart of a
sorak in your putrid breast. Often have you
bested me in the secret councils of Issus, but now
in the field of war where men are truly gauged your
scabby heart hath revealed its sores to all the world.
Calot, I spurn you with my foot,” and
with the words he turned to kick Xodar.
My blood was up. For minutes
it had been boiling at the cowardly treatment they
had been according this once powerful comrade because
he had fallen from the favour of Issus. I had
no love for Xodar, but I cannot stand the sight of
cowardly injustice and persecution without seeing
red as through a haze of bloody mist, and doing things
on the impulse of the moment that I presume I never
should do after mature deliberation.
I was standing close beside Xodar
as Thurid swung his foot for the cowardly kick.
The degraded Dator stood erect and motionless as a
carven image. He was prepared to take whatever
his former comrades had to offer in the way of insults
and reproaches, and take them in manly silence and
stoicism.
But as Thurid’s foot swung so
did mine, and I caught him a painful blow upon the
shin bone that saved Xodar from this added ignominy.
For a moment there was tense silence,
then Thurid, with a roar of rage sprang for my throat;
just as Xodar had upon the deck of the cruiser.
The results were identical. I ducked beneath
his outstretched arms, and as he lunged past me planted
a terrific right on the side of his jaw.
The big fellow spun around like a
top, his knees gave beneath him and he crumpled to
the ground at my feet.
The blacks gazed in astonishment,
first at the still form of the proud Dator lying there
in the ruby dust of the pathway, then at me as though
they could not believe that such a thing could be.
“You asked me to bind Thurid,”
I cried; “behold!” And then I stooped
beside the prostrate form, tore the harness from it,
and bound the fellow’s arms and legs securely.
“As you have done to Xodar,
now do you likewise to Thurid. Take him before
Issus, bound in his own harness, that she may see with
her own eyes that there be one among you now who is
greater than the First Born.”
“Who are you?” whispered
the woman who had first suggested that I attempt to
bind Thurid.
“I am a citizen of two worlds;
Captain John Carter of Virginia, Prince of the House
of Tardos Mors, Jeddak of Helium. Take
this man to your goddess, as I have said, and tell
her, too, that as I have done to Xodar and Thurid,
so also can I do to the mightiest of her Dators.
With naked hands, with long-sword or with short-sword,
I challenge the flower of her fighting-men to combat.”
“Come,” said the officer
who was guarding me back to Shador; “my orders
are imperative; there is to be no delay. Xodar,
come you also.”
There was little of disrespect in
the tone that the man used in addressing either Xodar
or myself. It was evident that he felt less
contempt for the former Dator since he had witnessed
the ease with which I disposed of the powerful Thurid.
That his respect for me was greater
than it should have been for a slave was quite apparent
from the fact that during the balance of the return
journey he walked or stood always behind me, a drawn
short-sword in his hand.
The return to the Sea of Omean was
uneventful. We dropped down the awful shaft
in the same car that had brought us to the surface.
There we entered the submarine, taking the long dive
to the tunnel far beneath the upper world. Then
through the tunnel and up again to the pool from which
we had had our first introduction to the wonderful
passageway from Omean to the Temple of Issus.
From the island of the submarine we
were transported on a small cruiser to the distant
Isle of Shador. Here we found a small stone prison
and a guard of half a dozen blacks. There was
no ceremony wasted in completing our incarceration.
One of the blacks opened the door of the prison with
a huge key, we walked in, the door closed behind us,
the lock grated, and with the sound there swept over
me again that terrible feeling of hopelessness that
I had felt in the Chamber of Mystery in the Golden
Cliffs beneath the gardens of the Holy Therns.
Then Tars Tarkas had been with me,
but now I was utterly alone in so far as friendly
companionship was concerned. I fell to wondering
about the fate of the great Thark, and of his beautiful
companion, the girl, Thuvia. Even should they
by some miracle have escaped and been received and
spared by a friendly nation, what hope had I of the
succour which I knew they would gladly extend if it
lay in their power.
They could not guess my whereabouts
or my fate, for none on all Barsoom even dream of
such a place as this. Nor would it have advantaged
me any had they known the exact location of my prison,
for who could hope to penetrate to this buried sea
in the face of the mighty navy of the First Born?
No: my case was hopeless.
Well, I would make the best of it,
and, rising, I swept aside the brooding despair that
had been endeavouring to claim me. With the idea
of exploring my prison, I started to look around.
Xodar sat, with bowed head, upon a
low stone bench near the centre of the room in which
we were. He had not spoken since Issus had degraded
him.
The building was roofless, the walls
rising to a height of about thirty feet. Half-way
up were a couple of small, heavily barred windows.
The prison was divided into several rooms by partitions
twenty feet high. There was no one in the room
which we occupied, but two doors which led to other
rooms were opened. I entered one of these rooms,
but found it vacant. Thus I continued through
several of the chambers until in the last one I found
a young red Martian boy sleeping upon the stone bench
which constituted the only furniture of any of the
prison cells.
Evidently he was the only other prisoner.
As he slept I leaned over and looked at him.
There was something strangely familiar about his
face, and yet I could not place him.
His features were very regular and,
like the proportions of his graceful limbs and body,
beautiful in the extreme. He was very light
in colour for a red man, but in other respects he seemed
a typical specimen of this handsome race.
I did not awaken him, for sleep in
prison is such a priceless boon that I have seen men
transformed into raging brutes when robbed by one of
their fellow-prisoners of a few precious moments of
it.
Returning to my own cell, I found
Xodar still sitting in the same position in which
I had left him.
“Man,” I cried, “it
will profit you nothing to mope thus. It were
no disgrace to be bested by John Carter. You
have seen that in the ease with which I accounted
for Thurid. You knew it before when on the cruiser’s
deck you saw me slay three of your comrades.”
“I would that you had dispatched
me at the same time,” he said.
“Come, come!” I cried.
“There is hope yet. Neither of us is dead.
We are great fighters. Why not win to freedom?”
He looked at me in amazement.
“You know not of what you speak,”
he replied. “Issus is omnipotent.
Issus is omniscient. She hears now the words you
speak. She knows the thoughts you think.
It is sacrilege even to dream of breaking her commands.”
“Rot, Xodar,” I ejaculated impatiently.
He sprang to his feet in horror.
“The curse of Issus will fall
upon you,” he cried. “In another
instant you will be smitten down, writhing to your
death in horrible agony.”
“Do you believe that, Xodar?” I asked.
“Of course; who would dare doubt?”
“I doubt; yes, and further,
I deny,” I said. “Why, Xodar, you
tell me that she even knows my thoughts. The
red men have all had that power for ages. And
another wonderful power. They can shut their
minds so that none may read their thoughts.
I learned the first secret years ago; the other I
never had to learn, since upon all Barsoom is none
who can read what passes in the secret chambers of
my brain.
“Your goddess cannot read my
thoughts; nor can she read yours when you are out
of sight, unless you will it. Had she been able
to read mine, I am afraid that her pride would have
suffered a rather severe shock when I turned at her
command to ’gaze upon the holy vision of her
radiant face.’”
“What do you mean?” he
whispered in an affrighted voice, so low that I could
scarcely hear him.
“I mean that I thought her the
most repulsive and vilely hideous creature my eyes
ever had rested upon.”
For a moment he eyed me in horror-stricken
amazement, and then with a cry of “Blasphemer”
he sprang upon me.
I did not wish to strike him again,
nor was it necessary, since he was unarmed and therefore
quite harmless to me.
As he came I grasped his left wrist
with my left hand, and, swinging my right arm about
his left shoulder, caught him beneath the chin with
my elbow and bore him backward across my thigh.
There he hung helpless for a moment,
glaring up at me in impotent rage.
“Xodar,” I said, “let
us be friends. For a year, possibly, we may be
forced to live together in the narrow confines of this
tiny room. I am sorry to have offended you,
but I could not dream that one who had suffered from
the cruel injustice of Issus still could believe her
divine.
“I will say a few more words,
Xodar, with no intent to wound your feelings further,
but rather that you may give thought to the fact that
while we live we are still more the arbiters of our
own fate than is any god.
“Issus, you see, has not struck
me dead, nor is she rescuing her faithful Xodar from
the clutches of the unbeliever who defamed her fair
beauty. No, Xodar, your Issus is a mortal old
woman. Once out of her clutches and she cannot
harm you.
“With your knowledge of this
strange land, and my knowledge of the outer world,
two such fighting-men as you and I should be able to
win our way to freedom. Even though we died
in the attempt, would not our memories be fairer than
as though we remained in servile fear to be butchered
by a cruel and unjust tyrant call her goddess
or mortal, as you will.”
As I finished I raised Xodar to his
feet and released him. He did not renew the
attack upon me, nor did he speak. Instead, he
walked toward the bench, and, sinking down upon it,
remained lost in deep thought for hours.
A long time afterward I heard a soft
sound at the doorway leading to one of the other apartments,
and, looking up, beheld the red Martian youth gazing
intently at us.
“Kaor,” I cried, after
the red Martian manner of greeting.
“Kaor,” he replied. “What
do you here?”
“I await my death, I presume,” I replied
with a wry smile.
He too smiled, a brave and winning smile.
“I also,” he said.
“Mine will come soon. I looked upon the
radiant beauty of Issus nearly a year since.
It has always been a source of keen wonder to me
that I did not drop dead at the first sight of that
hideous countenance. And her belly! By
my first ancestor, but never was there so grotesque
a figure in all the universe. That they should
call such a one Goddess of Life Eternal, Goddess of
Death, Mother of the Nearer Moon, and fifty other
equally impossible titles, is quite beyond me.”
“How came you here?” I asked.
“It is very simple. I
was flying a one-man air scout far to the south when
the brilliant idea occurred to me that I should like
to search for the Lost Sea of Korus which tradition
places near to the south pole. I must have inherited
from my father a wild lust for adventure, as well
as a hollow where my bump of reverence should be.
“I had reached the area of eternal
ice when my port propeller jammed, and I dropped to
the ground to make repairs. Before I knew it
the air was black with fliers, and a hundred of these
First Born devils were leaping to the ground all about
me.
“With drawn swords they made
for me, but before I went down beneath them they had
tasted of the steel of my father’s sword, and
I had given such an account of myself as I know would
have pleased my sire had he lived to witness it.”
“Your father is dead?” I asked.
“He died before the shell broke
to let me step out into a world that has been very
good to me. But for the sorrow that I had never
the honour to know my father, I have been very happy.
My only sorrow now is that my mother must mourn me
as she has for ten long years mourned my father.”
“Who was your father?” I asked.
He was about to reply when the outer
door of our prison opened and a burly guard entered
and ordered him to his own quarters for the night,
locking the door after him as he passed through into
the further chamber.
“It is Issus’ wish that
you two be confined in the same room,” said the
guard when he had returned to our cell. “This
cowardly slave of a slave is to serve you well,”
he said to me, indicating Xodar with a wave of his
hand. “If he does not, you are to beat
him into submission. It is Issus’ wish
that you heap upon him every indignity and degradation
of which you can conceive.”
With these words he left us.
Xodar still sat with his face buried
in his hands. I walked to his side and placed
my hand upon his shoulder.
“Xodar,” I said, “you
have heard the commands of Issus, but you need not
fear that I shall attempt to put them into execution.
You are a brave man, Xodar. It is your own
affair if you wish to be persecuted and humiliated;
but were I you I should assert my manhood and defy
my enemies.”
“I have been thinking very hard,
John Carter,” he said, “of all the new
ideas you gave me a few hours since. Little by
little I have been piecing together the things that
you said which sounded blasphemous to me then with
the things that I have seen in my past life and dared
not even think about for fear of bringing down upon
me the wrath of Issus.
“I believe now that she is a
fraud; no more divine than you or I. More I am willing
to concede that the First Born are no holier
than the Holy Therns, nor the Holy Therns more holy
than the red men.
“The whole fabric of our religion
is based on superstitious belief in lies that have
been foisted upon us for ages by those directly above
us, to whose personal profit and aggrandizement it
was to have us continue to believe as they wished
us to believe.
“I am ready to cast off the
ties that have bound me. I am ready to defy
Issus herself; but what will it avail us? Be
the First Born gods or mortals, they are a powerful
race, and we are as fast in their clutches as though
we were already dead. There is no escape.”
“I have escaped from bad plights
in the past, my friend,” I replied; “nor
while life is in me shall I despair of escaping from
the Isle of Shador and the Sea of Omean.”
“But we cannot escape even from
the four walls of our prison,” urged Xodar.
“Test this flint-like surface,” he cried,
smiting the solid rock that confined us. “And
look upon this polished surface; none could cling
to it to reach the top.”
I smiled.
“That is the least of our troubles,
Xodar,” I replied. “I will guarantee
to scale the wall and take you with me, if you will
help with your knowledge of the customs here to appoint
the best time for the attempt, and guide me to the
shaft that lets from the dome of this abysmal sea
to the light of God’s pure air above.”
“Night time is the best and
offers the only slender chance we have, for then men
sleep, and only a dozing watch nods in the tops of
the battleships. No watch is kept upon the cruisers
and smaller craft. The watchers upon the larger
vessels see to all about them. It is night now.”
“But,” I exclaimed, “it
is not dark! How can it be night, then?”
He smiled.
“You forget,” he said,
“that we are far below ground. The light
of the sun never penetrates here. There are
no moons and no stars reflected in the bosom of Omean.
The phosphorescent light you now see pervading this
great subterranean vault emanates from the rocks that
form its dome; it is always thus upon Omean, just
as the billows are always as you see them rolling,
ever rolling over a windless sea.
“At the appointed hour of night
upon the world above, the men whose duties hold them
here sleep, but the light is ever the same.”
“It will make escape more difficult,”
I said, and then I shrugged my shoulders; for what,
pray, is the pleasure of doing an easy thing?
“Let us sleep on it to-night,”
said Xodar. “A plan may come with our
awakening.”
So we threw ourselves upon the hard
stone floor of our prison and slept the sleep of tired
men.