There was nothing for it now other
than to fight; nor did I have any advantage as I sprang,
sword in hand, into the corridor before the two therns,
for my untimely sneeze had warned them of my presence
and they were ready for me.
There were no words, for they would
have been a waste of breath. The very presence
of the two proclaimed their treachery. That
they were following to fall upon me unawares was all
too plain, and they, of course, must have known that
I understood their plan.
In an instant I was engaged with both,
and though I loathe the very name of thern, I must
in all fairness admit that they are mighty swordsmen;
and these two were no exception, unless it were that
they were even more skilled and fearless than the average
among their race.
While it lasted it was indeed as joyous
a conflict as I ever had experienced. Twice
at least I saved my breast from the mortal thrust
of piercing steel only by the wondrous agility with
which my earthly muscles endow me under the conditions
of lesser gravity and air pressure upon Mars.
Yet even so I came near to tasting
death that day in the gloomy corridor beneath Mars’s
southern pole, for Lakor played a trick upon me that
in all my experience of fighting upon two planets I
never before had witnessed the like of.
The other thern was engaging me at
the time, and I was forcing him back touching
him here and there with my point until he was bleeding
from a dozen wounds, yet not being able to penetrate
his marvelous guard to reach a vulnerable spot for
the brief instant that would have been sufficient
to send him to his ancestors.
It was then that Lakor quickly unslung
a belt from his harness, and as I stepped back to
parry a wicked thrust he lashed one end of it about
my left ankle so that it wound there for an instant,
while he jerked suddenly upon the other end, throwing
me heavily upon my back.
Then, like leaping panthers, they
were upon me; but they had reckoned without Woola,
and before ever a blade touched me, a roaring embodiment
of a thousand demons hurtled above my prostrate form
and my loyal Martian calot was upon them.
Imagine, if you can, a huge grizzly
with ten legs armed with mighty talons and an enormous
froglike mouth splitting his head from ear to ear,
exposing three rows of long, white tusks. Then
endow this creature of your imagination with the agility
and ferocity of a half-starved Bengal tiger and the
strength of a span of bulls, and you will have some
faint conception of Woola in action.
Before I could call him off he had
crushed Lakor into a jelly with a single blow of one
mighty paw, and had literally torn the other thern
to ribbons; yet when I spoke to him sharply he cowed
sheepishly as though he had done a thing to deserve
censure and chastisement.
Never had I had the heart to punish
Woola during the long years that had passed since
that first day upon Mars when the green jed of the
Tharks had placed him on guard over me, and I had won
his love and loyalty from the cruel and loveless masters
of his former life, yet I believe he would have submitted
to any cruelty that I might have inflicted upon him,
so wondrous was his affection for me.
The diadem in the center of the circlet
of gold upon the brow of Lakor proclaimed him a Holy
Thern, while his companion, not thus adorned, was
a lesser thern, though from his harness I gleaned that
he had reached the Ninth Cycle, which is but one below
that of the Holy Therns.
As I stood for a moment looking at
the gruesome havoc Woola had wrought, there recurred
to me the memory of that other occasion upon which
I had masqueraded in the wig, diadem, and harness of
Sator Throg, the Holy Thern whom Thuvia of Ptarth
had slain, and now it occurred to me that it might
prove of worth to utilize Lakor’s trappings
for the same purpose.
A moment later I had torn his yellow
wig from his bald pate and transferred it and the
circlet, as well as all his harness, to my own person.
Woola did not approve of the metamorphosis.
He sniffed at me and growled ominously, but when
I spoke to him and patted his huge head he at length
became reconciled to the change, and at my command
trotted off along the corridor in the direction we
had been going when our progress had been interrupted
by the therns.
We moved cautiously now, warned by
the fragment of conversation I had overheard.
I kept abreast of Woola that we might have the benefit
of all our eyes for what might appear suddenly ahead
to menace us, and well it was that we were forewarned.
At the bottom of a flight of narrow
steps the corridor turned sharply back upon itself,
immediately making another turn in the original direction,
so that at that point it formed a perfect letter S,
the top leg of which debouched suddenly into a large
chamber, illy lighted, and the floor of which was
completely covered by venomous snakes and loathsome
reptiles.
To have attempted to cross that floor
would have been to court instant death, and for a
moment I was almost completely discouraged. Then
it occurred to me that Thurid and Matai Shang with
their party must have crossed it, and so there was
a way.
Had it not been for the fortunate
accident by which I overheard even so small a portion
of the therns’ conversation we should have blundered
at least a step or two into that wriggling mass of
destruction, and a single step would have been all-sufficient
to have sealed our doom.
These were the only reptiles I had
ever seen upon Barsoom, but I knew from their similarity
to the fossilized remains of supposedly extinct species
I had seen in the museums of Helium that they comprised
many of the known prehistoric reptilian genera, as
well as others undiscovered.
A more hideous aggregation of monsters
had never before assailed my vision. It would
be futile to attempt to describe them to Earth men,
since substance is the only thing which they possess
in common with any creature of the past or present
with which you are familiar even their
venom is of an unearthly virulence that, by comparison,
would make the cobra de capello seem quite as
harmless as an angleworm.
As they spied me there was a concerted
rush by those nearest the entrance where we stood,
but a line of radium bulbs inset along the threshold
of their chamber brought them to a sudden halt evidently
they dared not cross that line of light.
I had been quite sure that they would
not venture beyond the room in which I had discovered
them, though I had not guessed at what deterred them.
The simple fact that we had found no reptiles in
the corridor through which we had just come was sufficient
assurance that they did not venture there.
I drew Woola out of harm’s way,
and then began a careful survey of as much of the
Chamber of Reptiles as I could see from where I stood.
As my eyes became accustomed to the dim light of its
interior I gradually made out a low gallery at the
far end of the apartment from which opened several
exits.
Coming as close to the threshold as
I dared, I followed this gallery with my eyes, discovering
that it circled the room as far as I could see.
Then I glanced above me along the upper edge of the
entrance to which we had come, and there, to my delight,
I saw an end of the gallery not a foot above my head.
In an instant I had leaped to it and called Woola
after me.
Here there were no reptiles the
way was clear to the opposite side of the hideous
chamber and a moment later Woola and I dropped
down to safety in the corridor beyond.
Not ten minutes later we came into
a vast circular apartment of white marble, the walls
of which were inlaid with gold in the strange hieroglyphics
of the First Born.
From the high dome of this mighty
apartment a huge circular column extended to the floor,
and as I watched I saw that it slowly revolved.
I had reached the base of the Temple of the Sun!
Somewhere above me lay Dejah Thoris,
and with her were Phaidor, daughter of Matai Shang,
and Thuvia of Ptarth. But how to reach them,
now that I had found the only vulnerable spot in their
mighty prison, was still a baffling riddle.
Slowly I circled the great shaft,
looking for a means of ingress. Part way around
I found a tiny radium flash torch, and as I examined
it in mild curiosity as to its presence there in this
almost inaccessible and unknown spot, I came suddenly
upon the insignia of the house of Thurid jewel-inset
in its metal case.
I am upon the right trail, I thought,
as I slipped the bauble into the pocket-pouch which
hung from my harness. Then I continued my search
for the entrance, which I knew must be somewhere about;
nor had I long to search, for almost immediately thereafter
I came upon a small door so cunningly inlaid in the
shaft’s base that it might have passed unnoticed
by a less keen or careful observer.
There was the door that would lead
me within the prison, but where was the means to open
it? No button or lock were visible. Again
and again I went carefully over every square inch of
its surface, but the most that I could find was a
tiny pinhole a little above and to the right of the
door’s center a pinhole that seemed
only an accident of manufacture or an imperfection
of material.
Into this minute aperture I attempted
to peer, but whether it was but a fraction of an inch
deep or passed completely through the door I could
not tell at least no light showed beyond
it. I put my ear to it next and listened, but
again my efforts brought negligible results.
During these experiments Woola had
been standing at my side gazing intently at the door,
and as my glance fell upon him it occurred to me to
test the correctness of my hypothesis, that this portal
had been the means of ingress to the temple used by
Thurid, the black dator, and Matai Shang, Father
of Therns.
Turning away abruptly, I called to
him to follow me. For a moment he hesitated,
and then leaped after me, whining and tugging at my
harness to draw me back. I walked on, however,
some distance from the door before I let him have
his way, that I might see precisely what he would
do. Then I permitted him to lead me wherever
he would.
Straight back to that baffling portal
he dragged me, again taking up his position facing
the blank stone, gazing straight at its shining surface.
For an hour I worked to solve the mystery of the
combination that would open the way before me.
Carefully I recalled every circumstance
of my pursuit of Thurid, and my conclusion was identical
with my original belief that Thurid had
come this way without other assistance than his own
knowledge and passed through the door that barred
my progress, unaided from within. But how had
he accomplished it?
I recalled the incident of the Chamber
of Mystery in the Golden Cliffs that time I had freed
Thuvia of Ptarth from the dungeon of the therns, and
she had taken a slender, needle-like key from the
keyring of her dead jailer to open the door leading
back into the Chamber of Mystery where Tars Tarkas
fought for his life with the great banths. Such
a tiny keyhole as now defied me had opened the way
to the intricate lock in that other door.
Hastily I dumped the contents of my
pocket-pouch upon the ground before me. Could
I but find a slender bit of steel I might yet fashion
a key that would give me ingress to the temple prison.
As I examined the heterogeneous collection
of odds and ends that is always to be found in the
pocket-pouch of a Martian warrior my hand fell upon
the emblazoned radium flash torch of the black dator.
As I was about to lay the thing aside
as of no value in my present predicament my eyes chanced
upon a few strange characters roughly and freshly
scratched upon the soft gold of the case.
Casual curiosity prompted me to decipher
them, but what I read carried no immediate meaning
to my mind. There were three sets of characters,
one below another:
3
| | 50 T
1
| | 1 X
9
| | 25 T
For only an instant my curiosity was
piqued, and then I replaced the torch in my pocket-pouch,
but my fingers had not unclasped from it when there
rushed to my memory the recollection of the conversation
between Lakor and his companion when the lesser thern
had quoted the words of Thurid and scoffed at them:
“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” ah,
there was the first line of characters upon the torch’s
metal case 3 50 T; “and
for one xat let it shine with the intensity of one
radium unit” there was the second
line; “and then for twenty-five tals with
nine units.”
The formula was complete; but what did
it mean?
I thought I knew, and, seizing a powerful
magnifying glass from the litter of my pocket-pouch,
I applied myself to a careful examination of the marble
immediately about the pinhole in the door. I
could have cried aloud in exultation when my scrutiny
disclosed the almost invisible incrustation of particles
of carbonized electrons which are thrown off by these
Martian torches.
It was evident that for countless
ages radium torches had been applied to this pinhole,
and for what purpose there could be but a single answer the
mechanism of the lock was actuated by light rays;
and I, John Carter, Prince of Helium, held the combination
in my hand scratched by the hand of my enemy
upon his own torch case.
In a cylindrical bracelet of gold
about my wrist was my Barsoomian chronometer a
delicate instrument that records the tals and
xats and zodes of Martian time, presenting them to
view beneath a strong crystal much after the manner
of an earthly odometer.
Timing my operations carefully, I
held the torch to the small aperture in the door,
regulating the intensity of the light by means of the
thumb-lever upon the side of the case.
For fifty tals I let three units
of light shine full in the pinhole, then one unit
for one xat, and for twenty-five tals nine units.
Those last twenty-five tals were the longest twenty-five
seconds of my life. Would the lock click at
the end of those seemingly interminable intervals
of time?
Twenty-three! Twenty-four! Twenty-five!
I shut off the light with a snap.
For seven tals I waited there had
been no appreciable effect upon the lock’s mechanism.
Could it be that my theory was entirely wrong?
Hold! Had the nervous strain
resulted in a hallucination, or did the door really
move? Slowly the solid stone sank noiselessly
back into the wall there was no hallucination
here.
Back and back it slid for ten feet
until it had disclosed at its right a narrow doorway
leading into a dark and narrow corridor that paralleled
the outer wall. Scarcely was the entrance uncovered
than Woola and I had leaped through then
the door slipped quietly back into place.
Down the corridor at some distance
I saw the faint reflection of a light, and toward
this we made our way. At the point where the
light shone was a sharp turn, and a little distance
beyond this a brilliantly lighted chamber.
Here we discovered a spiral stairway
leading up from the center of the circular room.
Immediately I knew that we had reached
the center of the base of the Temple of the Sun the
spiral runway led upward past the inner walls of the
prison cells. Somewhere above me was Dejah Thoris,
unless Thurid and Matai Shang had already succeeded
in stealing her.
We had scarcely started up the runway
when Woola suddenly displayed the wildest excitement.
He leaped back and forth, snapping at my legs and
harness, until I thought that he was mad, and finally
when I pushed him from me and started once more to
ascend he grasped my sword arm between his jaws and
dragged me back.
No amount of scolding or cuffing would
suffice to make him release me, and I was entirely
at the mercy of his brute strength unless I cared
to use my dagger upon him with my left hand; but, mad
or no, I had not the heart to run the sharp blade
into that faithful body.
Down into the chamber he dragged me,
and across it to the side opposite that at which we
had entered. Here was another doorway leading
into a corridor which ran directly down a steep incline.
Without a moment’s hesitation Woola jerked me
along this rocky passage.
Presently he stopped and released
me, standing between me and the way we had come, looking
up into my face as though to ask if I would now follow
him voluntarily or if he must still resort to force.
Looking ruefully at the marks of his
great teeth upon my bare arm I decided to do as he
seemed to wish me to do. After all, his strange
instinct might be more dependable than my faulty human
judgment.
And well it was that I had been forced
to follow him. But a short distance from the
circular chamber we came suddenly into a brilliantly
lighted labyrinth of crystal glass partitioned passages.
At first I thought it was one vast,
unbroken chamber, so clear and transparent were the
walls of the winding corridors, but after I had nearly
brained myself a couple of times by attempting to pass
through solid vitreous walls I went more carefully.
We had proceeded but a few yards along
the corridor that had given us entrance to this strange
maze when Woola gave mouth to a most frightful roar,
at the same time dashing against the clear partition
at our left.
The resounding echoes of that fearsome
cry were still reverberating through the subterranean
chambers when I saw the thing that had startled it
from the faithful beast.
Far in the distance, dimly through
the many thicknesses of intervening crystal, as in
a haze that made them seem unreal and ghostly, I discerned
the figures of eight people three females
and five men.
At the same instant, evidently startled
by Woola’s fierce cry, they halted and looked
about. Then, of a sudden, one of them, a woman,
held her arms out toward me, and even at that great
distance I could see that her lips moved it
was Dejah Thoris, my ever beautiful and ever youthful
Princess of Helium.
With her were Thuvia of Ptarth, Phaidor,
daughter of Matai Shang, and Thurid, and the Father
of Therns, and the three lesser therns that had accompanied
them.
Thurid shook his fist at me, and then
two of the therns grasped Dejah Thoris and Thuvia
roughly by their arms and hurried them on. A
moment later they had disappeared into a stone corridor
beyond the labyrinth of glass.
They say that love is blind; but so
great a love as that of Dejah Thoris that knew me
even beneath the thern disguise I wore and across
the misty vista of that crystal maze must indeed be
far from blind.