As we advanced up the river which
winds beneath the Golden Cliffs out of the bowels
of the Mountains of Otz to mingle its dark waters
with the grim and mysterious Iss the faint glow which
had appeared before us grew gradually into an all-enveloping
radiance.
The river widened until it presented
the aspect of a large lake whose vaulted dome, lighted
by glowing phosphorescent rock, was splashed with
the vivid rays of the diamond, the sapphire, the ruby,
and the countless, nameless jewels of Barsoom which
lay incrusted in the virgin gold which forms the major
portion of these magnificent cliffs.
Beyond the lighted chamber of the
lake was darkness what lay behind the darkness
I could not even guess.
To have followed the thern boat across
the gleaming water would have been to invite instant
detection, and so, though I was loath to permit Thurid
to pass even for an instant beyond my sight, I was
forced to wait in the shadows until the other boat
had passed from my sight at the far extremity of the
lake.
Then I paddled out upon the brilliant
surface in the direction they had taken.
When, after what seemed an eternity,
I reached the shadows at the upper end of the lake
I found that the river issued from a low aperture,
to pass beneath which it was necessary that I compel
Woola to lie flat in the boat, and I, myself, must
need bend double before the low roof cleared my head.
Immediately the roof rose again upon
the other side, but no longer was the way brilliantly
lighted. Instead only a feeble glow emanated
from small and scattered patches of phosphorescent
rock in wall and roof.
Directly before me the river ran into
this smaller chamber through three separate arched
openings.
Thurid and the therns were nowhere
to be seen into which of the dark holes
had they disappeared? There was no means by which
I might know, and so I chose the center opening as
being as likely to lead me in the right direction
as another.
Here the way was through utter darkness.
The stream was narrow so narrow that in
the blackness I was constantly bumping first one rock
wall and then another as the river wound hither and
thither along its flinty bed.
Far ahead I presently heard a deep
and sullen roar which increased in volume as I advanced,
and then broke upon my ears with all the intensity
of its mad fury as I swung round a sharp curve into
a dimly lighted stretch of water.
Directly before me the river thundered
down from above in a mighty waterfall that filled
the narrow gorge from side to side, rising far above
me several hundred feet as magnificent a
spectacle as I ever had seen.
But the roar the awful,
deafening roar of those tumbling waters penned in
the rocky, subterranean vault! Had the fall not
entirely blocked my further passage and shown me that
I had followed the wrong course I believe that I should
have fled anyway before the maddening tumult.
Thurid and the therns could not have
come this way. By stumbling upon the wrong course
I had lost the trail, and they had gained so much
ahead of me that now I might not be able to find them
before it was too late, if, in fact, I could find
them at all.
It had taken several hours to force
my way up to the falls against the strong current,
and other hours would be required for the descent,
although the pace would be much swifter.
With a sigh I turned the prow of my
craft down stream, and with mighty strokes hastened
with reckless speed through the dark and tortuous
channel until once again I came to the chamber into
which flowed the three branches of the river.
Two unexplored channels still remained
from which to choose; nor was there any means by which
I could judge which was the more likely to lead me
to the plotters.
Never in my life, that I can recall,
have I suffered such an agony of indecision.
So much depended upon a correct choice; so much depended
upon haste.
The hours that I had already lost
might seal the fate of the incomparable Dejah Thoris
were she not already dead to sacrifice
other hours, and maybe days in a fruitless exploration
of another blind lead would unquestionably prove fatal.
Several times I essayed the right-hand
entrance only to turn back as though warned by some
strange intuitive sense that this was not the way.
At last, convinced by the oft-recurring phenomenon,
I cast my all upon the left-hand archway; yet it was
with a lingering doubt that I turned a parting look
at the sullen waters which rolled, dark and forbidding,
from beneath the grim, low archway on the right.
And as I looked there came bobbing
out upon the current from the Stygian darkness of
the interior the shell of one of the great, succulent
fruits of the sorapus tree.
I could scarce restrain a shout of
elation as this silent, insensate messenger floated
past me, on toward the Iss and Korus, for it told
me that journeying Martians were above me on that very
stream.
They had eaten of this marvelous fruit
which nature concentrates within the hard shell of
the sorapus nut, and having eaten had cast the husk
overboard. It could have come from no others
than the party I sought.
Quickly I abandoned all thought of
the left-hand passage, and a moment later had turned
into the right. The stream soon widened, and
recurring areas of phosphorescent rock lighted my way.
I made good time, but was convinced
that I was nearly a day behind those I was tracking.
Neither Woola nor I had eaten since the previous
day, but in so far as he was concerned it mattered
but little, since practically all the animals of the
dead sea bottoms of Mars are able to go for incredible
periods without nourishment.
Nor did I suffer. The water
of the river was sweet and cold, for it was unpolluted
by decaying bodies like the Iss and
as for food, why the mere thought that I was nearing
my beloved princess raised me above every material
want.
As I proceeded, the river became narrower
and the current swift and turbulent so
swift in fact that it was with difficulty that I forced
my craft upward at all. I could not have been
making to exceed a hundred yards an hour when, at
a bend, I was confronted by a series of rapids through
which the river foamed and boiled at a terrific rate.
My heart sank within me. The
sorapus nutshell had proved a false prophet, and,
after all, my intuition had been correct it
was the left-hand channel that I should have followed.
Had I been a woman I should have wept.
At my right was a great, slow-moving eddy that circled
far beneath the cliff’s overhanging side, and
to rest my tired muscles before turning back I let
my boat drift into its embrace.
I was almost prostrated by disappointment.
It would mean another half-day’s loss of time
to retrace my way and take the only passage that yet
remained unexplored. What hellish fate had led
me to select from three possible avenues the two that
were wrong?
As the lazy current of the eddy carried
me slowly about the periphery of the watery circle
my boat twice touched the rocky side of the river
in the dark recess beneath the cliff. A third
time it struck, gently as it had before, but the contact
resulted in a different sound the sound
of wood scraping upon wood.
In an instant I was on the alert,
for there could be no wood within that buried river
that had not been man brought. Almost coincidentally
with my first apprehension of the noise, my hand shot
out across the boat’s side, and a second later
I felt my fingers gripping the gunwale of another
craft.
As though turned to stone I sat in
tense and rigid silence, straining my eyes into the
utter darkness before me in an effort to discover
if the boat were occupied.
It was entirely possible that there
might be men on board it who were still ignorant of
my presence, for the boat was scraping gently against
the rocks upon one side, so that the gentle touch
of my boat upon the other easily could have gone unnoticed.
Peer as I would I could not penetrate
the darkness, and then I listened intently for the
sound of breathing near me; but except for the noise
of the rapids, the soft scraping of the boats, and
the lapping of the water at their sides I could distinguish
no sound. As usual, I thought rapidly.
A rope lay coiled in the bottom of
my own craft. Very softly I gathered it up,
and making one end fast to the bronze ring in the
prow I stepped gingerly into the boat beside me.
In one hand I grasped the rope, in the other my keen
long-sword.
For a full minute, perhaps, I stood
motionless after entering the strange craft.
It had rocked a trifle beneath my weight, but it
had been the scraping of its side against the side
of my own boat that had seemed most likely to alarm
its occupants, if there were any.
But there was no answering sound,
and a moment later I had felt from stem to stern and
found the boat deserted.
Groping with my hands along the face
of the rocks to which the craft was moored, I discovered
a narrow ledge which I knew must be the avenue taken
by those who had come before me. That they could
be none other than Thurid and his party I was convinced
by the size and build of the boat I had found.
Calling to Woola to follow me I stepped
out upon the ledge. The great, savage brute,
agile as a cat, crept after me.
As he passed through the boat that
had been occupied by Thurid and the therns he emitted
a single low growl, and when he came beside me upon
the ledge and my hand rested upon his neck I felt his
short mane bristling with anger. I think he
sensed telepathically the recent presence of an enemy,
for I had made no effort to impart to him the nature
of our quest or the status of those we tracked.
This omission I now made haste to
correct, and, after the manner of green Martians with
their beasts, I let him know partially by the weird
and uncanny telepathy of Barsoom and partly by word
of mouth that we were upon the trail of those who
had recently occupied the boat through which we had
just passed.
A soft purr, like that of a great
cat, indicated that Woola understood, and then, with
a word to him to follow, I turned to the right along
the ledge, but scarcely had I done so than I felt
his mighty fangs tugging at my leathern harness.
As I turned to discover the cause
of his act he continued to pull me steadily in the
opposite direction, nor would he desist until I had
turned about and indicated that I would follow him
voluntarily.
Never had I known him to be in error
in a matter of tracking, so it was with a feeling
of entire security that I moved cautiously in the
huge beast’s wake. Through Cimmerian darkness
he moved along the narrow ledge beside the boiling
rapids.
As we advanced, the way led from beneath
the overhanging cliffs out into a dim light, and then
it was that I saw that the trail had been cut from
the living rock, and that it ran up along the river’s
side beyond the rapids.
For hours we followed the dark and
gloomy river farther and farther into the bowels of
Mars. From the direction and distance I knew
that we must be well beneath the Valley Dor, and possibly
beneath the Sea of Omean as well it could
not be much farther now to the Temple of the Sun.
Even as my mind framed the thought,
Woola halted suddenly before a narrow, arched doorway
in the cliff by the trail’s side. Quickly
he crouched back away from the entrance, at the same
time turning his eyes toward me.
Words could not have more plainly
told me that danger of some sort lay near by, and
so I pressed quietly forward to his side, and passing
him looked into the aperture at our right.
Before me was a fair-sized chamber
that, from its appointments, I knew must have at one
time been a guardroom. There were racks for
weapons, and slightly raised platforms for the sleeping
silks and furs of the warriors, but now its only occupants
were two of the therns who had been of the party with
Thurid and Matai Shang.
The men were in earnest conversation,
and from their tones it was apparent that they were
entirely unaware that they had listeners.
“I tell you,” one of them
was saying, “I do not trust the black one.
There was no necessity for leaving us here to guard
the way. Against what, pray, should we guard
this long-forgotten, abysmal path? It was but
a ruse to divide our numbers.
“He will have Matai Shang leave
others elsewhere on some pretext or other, and then
at last he will fall upon us with his confederates
and slay us all.”
“I believe you, Lakor,”
replied the other, “there can never be aught
else than deadly hatred between thern and First Born.
And what think you of the ridiculous matter of the
light? ’Let the light shine with the intensity
of three radium units for fifty tals, and for
one xat let it shine with the intensity of one radium
unit, and then for twenty-five tals with nine
units.’ Those were his very words, and
to think that wise old Matai Shang should listen to
such foolishness.”
“Indeed, it is silly,”
replied Lakor. “It will open nothing other
than the way to a quick death for us all. He
had to make some answer when Matai Shang asked him
flatly what he should do when he came to the Temple
of the Sun, and so he made his answer quickly from
his imagination I would wager a hekkador’s
diadem that he could not now repeat it himself.”
“Let us not remain here longer,
Lakor,” spoke the other thern. “Perchance
if we hasten after them we may come in time to rescue
Matai Shang, and wreak our own vengeance upon the black
dator. What say you?”
“Never in a long life,”
answered Lakor, “have I disobeyed a single command
of the Father of Therns. I shall stay here until
I rot if he does not return to bid me elsewhere.”
Lakor’s companion shook his head.
“You are my superior,”
he said; “I cannot do other than you sanction,
though I still believe that we are foolish to remain.”
I, too, thought that they were foolish
to remain, for I saw from Woola’s actions that
the trail led through the room where the two therns
held guard. I had no reason to harbor any considerable
love for this race of self-deified demons, yet I would
have passed them by were it possible without molesting
them.
It was worth trying anyway, for a
fight might delay us considerably, or even put an
end entirely to my search better men than
I have gone down before fighters of meaner ability
than that possessed by the fierce thern warriors.
Signaling Woola to heel I stepped
suddenly into the room before the two men. At
sight of me their long-swords flashed from the harness
at their sides, but I raised my hand in a gesture of
restraint.
“I seek Thurid, the black dator,”
I said. “My quarrel is with him, not with
you. Let me pass then in peace, for if I mistake
not he is as much your enemy as mine, and you can
have no cause to protect him.”
They lowered their swords and Lakor spoke.
“I know not whom you may be,
with the white skin of a thern and the black hair
of a red man; but were it only Thurid whose safety
were at stake you might pass, and welcome, in so far
as we be concerned.
“Tell us who you be, and what
mission calls you to this unknown world beneath the
Valley Dor, then maybe we can see our way to let you
pass upon the errand which we should like to undertake
would our orders permit.”
I was surprised that neither of them
had recognized me, for I thought that I was quite
sufficiently well known either by personal experience
or reputation to every thern upon Barsoom as to make
my identity immediately apparent in any part of the
planet. In fact, I was the only white man upon
Mars whose hair was black and whose eyes were gray,
with the exception of my son, Carthoris.
To reveal my identity might be to
precipitate an attack, for every thern upon Barsoom
knew that to me they owed the fall of their age-old
spiritual supremacy. On the other hand my reputation
as a fighting man might be sufficient to pass me by
these two were their livers not of the right complexion
to welcome a battle to the death.
To be quite candid I did not attempt
to delude myself with any such sophistry, since I
knew well that upon war-like Mars there are few cowards,
and that every man, whether prince, priest, or peasant,
glories in deadly strife. And so I gripped my
long-sword the tighter as I replied to Lakor.
“I believe that you will see
the wisdom of permitting me to pass unmolested,”
I said, “for it would avail you nothing to die
uselessly in the rocky bowels of Barsoom merely to
protect a hereditary enemy, such as Thurid, Dator
of the First Born.
“That you shall die should you
elect to oppose me is evidenced by the moldering corpses
of all the many great Barsoomian warriors who have
gone down beneath this blade I am John Carter,
Prince of Helium.”
For a moment that name seemed to paralyze
the two men; but only for a moment, and then the younger
of them, with a vile name upon his lips, rushed toward
me with ready sword.
He had been standing a little behind
his companion, Lakor, during our parley, and now,
ere he could engage me, the older man grasped his
harness and drew him back.
“Hold!” commanded Lakor.
“There will be plenty of time to fight if we
find it wise to fight at all. There be good reasons
why every thern upon Barsoom should yearn to spill
the blood of the blasphemer, the sacrilegist; but
let us mix wisdom with our righteous hate. The
Prince of Helium is bound upon an errand which we ourselves,
but a moment since, were wishing that we might undertake.
“Let him go then and slay the
black. When he returns we shall still be here
to bar his way to the outer world, and thus we shall
have rid ourselves of two enemies, nor have incurred
the displeasure of the Father of Therns.”
As he spoke I could not but note the
crafty glint in his evil eyes, and while I saw the
apparent logic of his reasoning I felt, subconsciously
perhaps, that his words did but veil some sinister
intent. The other thern turned toward him in
evident surprise, but when Lakor had whispered a few
brief words into his ear he, too, drew back and nodded
acquiescence to his superior’s suggestion.
“Proceed, John Carter,”
said Lakor; “but know that if Thurid does not
lay you low there will be those awaiting your return
who will see that you never pass again into the sunlight
of the upper world. Go!”
During our conversation Woola had
been growling and bristling close to my side.
Occasionally he would look up into my face with a
low, pleading whine, as though begging for the word
that would send him headlong at the bare throats before
him. He, too, sensed the villainy behind the
smooth words.
Beyond the therns several doorways
opened off the guardroom, and toward the one upon
the extreme right Lakor motioned.
“That way leads to Thurid,” he said.
But when I would have called Woola
to follow me there the beast whined and held back,
and at last ran quickly to the first opening at the
left, where he stood emitting his coughing bark, as
though urging me to follow him upon the right way.
I turned a questioning look upon Lakor.
“The brute is seldom wrong,”
I said, “and while I do not doubt your superior
knowledge, Thern, I think that I shall do well to listen
to the voice of instinct that is backed by love and
loyalty.”
As I spoke I smiled grimly that he
might know without words that I distrusted him.
“As you will,” the fellow
replied with a shrug. “In the end it shall
be all the same.”
I turned and followed Woola into the
left-hand passage, and though my back was toward my
enemies, my ears were on the alert; yet I heard no
sound of pursuit. The passageway was dimly lighted
by occasional radium bulbs, the universal lighting
medium of Barsoom.
These same lamps may have been doing
continuous duty in these subterranean chambers for
ages, since they require no attention and are so compounded
that they give off but the minutest of their substance
in the generation of years of luminosity.
We had proceeded for but a short distance
when we commenced to pass the mouths of diverging
corridors, but not once did Woola hesitate. It
was at the opening to one of these corridors upon my
right that I presently heard a sound that spoke more
plainly to John Carter, fighting man, than could the
words of my mother tongue it was the clank
of metal the metal of a warrior’s
harness and it came from a little distance
up the corridor upon my right.
Woola heard it, too, and like a flash
he had wheeled and stood facing the threatened danger,
his mane all abristle and all his rows of glistening
fangs bared by snarling, backdrawn lips. With
a gesture I silenced him, and together we drew aside
into another corridor a few paces farther on.
Here we waited; nor did we have long
to wait, for presently we saw the shadows of two men
fall upon the floor of the main corridor athwart the
doorway of our hiding place. Very cautiously
they were moving now the accidental clank
that had alarmed me was not repeated.
Presently they came opposite our station;
nor was I surprised to see that the two were Lakor
and his companion of the guardroom.
They walked very softly, and in the
right hand of each gleamed a keen long-sword.
They halted quite close to the entrance of our retreat,
whispering to each other.
“Can it be that we have distanced
them already?” said Lakor.
“Either that or the beast has
led the man upon a wrong trail,” replied the
other, “for the way which we took is by far the
shorter to this point for him who knows
it. John Carter would have found it a short
road to death had he taken it as you suggested to him.”
“Yes,” said Lakor, “no
amount of fighting ability would have saved him from
the pivoted flagstone. He surely would have stepped
upon it, and by now, if the pit beneath it has a bottom,
which Thurid denies, he should have been rapidly approaching
it. Curses on that calot of his that warned
him toward the safer avenue!”
“There be other dangers ahead
of him, though,” spoke Lakor’s fellow,
“which he may not so easily escape should
he succeed in escaping our two good swords.
Consider, for example, what chance he will have, coming
unexpectedly into the chamber of ”
I would have given much to have heard
the balance of that conversation that I might have
been warned of the perils that lay ahead, but fate
intervened, and just at the very instant of all other
instants that I would not have elected to do it, I
sneezed.