The public houses of Barsoom, I have
found, vary but little. There is no privacy
for other than married couples.
Men without their wives are escorted
to a large chamber, the floor of which is usually
of white marble or heavy glass, kept scrupulously
clean. Here are many small, raised platforms
for the guest’s sleeping silks and furs, and
if he have none of his own clean, fresh ones are furnished
at a nominal charge.
Once a man’s belongings have
been deposited upon one of these platforms he is a
guest of the house, and that platform his own until
he leaves. No one will disturb or molest his
belongings, as there are no thieves upon Mars.
As assassination is the one thing
to be feared, the proprietors of the hostelries furnish
armed guards, who pace back and forth through the
sleeping-rooms day and night. The number of guards
and gorgeousness of their trappings quite usually
denote the status of the hotel.
No meals are served in these houses,
but generally a public eating place adjoins them.
Baths are connected with the sleeping chambers, and
each guest is required to bathe daily or depart from
the hotel.
Usually on a second or third floor
there is a large sleeping-room for single women guests,
but its appointments do not vary materially from the
chamber occupied by men. The guards who watch
the women remain in the corridor outside the sleeping
chamber, while female slaves pace back and forth among
the sleepers within, ready to notify the warriors
should their presence be required.
I was surprised to note that all the
guards with the hotel at which we stopped were red
men, and on inquiring of one of them I learned that
they were slaves purchased by the proprietors of the
hotels from the government. The man whose post
was past my sleeping platform had been commander of
the navy of a great Martian nation; but fate had carried
his flagship across the ice-barrier within the radius
of power of the magnetic shaft, and now for many tedious
years he had been a slave of the yellow men.
He told me that princes, jeds, and
even jeddaks of the outer world, were among the menials
who served the yellow race; but when I asked him if
he had heard of the fate of Mors Kajak or Tardos
Mors he shook his head, saying that he never had heard
of their being prisoners here, though he was very
familiar with the reputations and fame they bore in
the outer world.
Neither had he heard any rumor of
the coming of the Father of Therns and the black dator
of the First Born, but he hastened to explain that
he knew little of what took place within the palace.
I could see that he wondered not a little that a
yellow man should be so inquisitive about certain
red prisoners from beyond the ice-barrier, and that
I should be so ignorant of customs and conditions among
my own race.
In fact, I had forgotten my disguise
upon discovering a red man pacing before my sleeping
platform; but his growing expression of surprise warned
me in time, for I had no mind to reveal my identity
to any unless some good could come of it, and I did
not see how this poor fellow could serve me yet, though
I had it in my mind that later I might be the means
of serving him and all the other thousands of prisoners
who do the bidding of their stern masters in Kadabra.
Thuvan Dihn and I discussed our plans
as we sat together among our sleeping silks and furs
that night in the midst of the hundreds of yellow
men who occupied the apartment with us. We spoke
in low whispers, but, as that is only what courtesy
demands in a public sleeping place, we roused no suspicion.
At last, determining that all must
be but idle speculation until after we had had a chance
to explore the city and attempt to put into execution
the plan Talu had suggested, we bade each other good
night and turned to sleep.
After breakfasting the following morning
we set out to see Kadabra, and as, through the generosity
of the prince of Marentina, we were well supplied
with the funds current in Okar we purchased a handsome
ground flier. Having learned to drive them while
in Marentina, we spent a delightful and profitable
day exploring the city, and late in the afternoon
at the hour Talu told us we would find government
officials in their offices, we stopped before a magnificent
building on the plaza opposite the royal grounds and
the palace.
Here we walked boldly in past the
armed guard at the door, to be met by a red slave
within who asked our wishes.
“Tell Sorav, your master, that
two warriors from Illall wish to take service in the
palace guard,” I said.
Sorav, Talu had told us, was the commander
of the forces of the palace, and as men from the further
cities of Okar and especially Illall were
less likely to be tainted with the germ of intrigue
which had for years infected the household of Salensus
Oll, he was sure that we would be welcomed and few
questions asked us.
He had primed us with such general
information as he thought would be necessary for us
to pass muster before Sorav, after which we would
have to undergo a further examination before Salensus
Oll that he might determine our physical fitness and
our ability as warriors.
The little experience we had had with
the strange hooked sword of the yellow man and his
cuplike shield made it seem rather unlikely that either
of us could pass this final test, but there was the
chance that we might be quartered in the palace of
Salensus Oll for several days after being accepted
by Sorav before the Jeddak of Jeddaks would find time
to put us to the final test.
After a wait of several minutes in
an ante-chamber we were summoned into the private
office of Sorav, where we were courteously greeted
by this ferocious-appearing, black-bearded officer.
He asked us our names and stations in our own city,
and having received replies that were evidently satisfactory
to him, he put certain questions to us that Talu had
foreseen and prepared us for.
The interview could not have lasted
over ten minutes when Sorav summoned an aid whom he
instructed to record us properly, and then escort
us to the quarters in the palace which are set aside
for aspirants to membership in the palace guard.
The aid took us to his own office
first, where he measured and weighed and photographed
us simultaneously with a machine ingeniously devised
for that purpose, five copies being instantly reproduced
in five different offices of the government, two of
which are located in other cities miles distant.
Then he led us through the palace grounds to the
main guardroom of the palace, there turning us over
to the officer in charge.
This individual again questioned us
briefly, and finally despatched a soldier to guide
us to our quarters. These we found located upon
the second floor of the palace in a semi-detached tower
at the rear of the edifice.
When we asked our guide why we were
quartered so far from the guardroom he replied that
the custom of the older members of the guard of picking
quarrels with aspirants to try their metal had resulted
in so many deaths that it was found difficult to maintain
the guard at its full strength while this custom prevailed.
Salensus Oll had, therefore, set apart these quarters
for aspirants, and here they were securely locked
against the danger of attack by members of the guard.
This unwelcome information put a sudden
check to all our well-laid plans, for it meant that
we should virtually be prisoners in the palace of
Salensus Oll until the time that he should see fit
to give us the final examination for efficiency.
As it was this interval upon which
we had banked to accomplish so much in our search
for Dejah Thoris and Thuvia of Ptarth, our chagrin
was unbounded when we heard the great lock click behind
our guide as he had quitted us after ushering us into
the chambers we were to occupy.
With a wry face I turned to Thuvan
Dihn. My companion but shook his head disconsolately
and walked to one of the windows upon the far side
of the apartment.
Scarcely had he gazed beyond them
than he called to me in a tone of suppressed excitement
and surprise. In an instant I was by his side.
“Look!” said Thuvan Dihn,
pointing toward the courtyard below.
As my eyes followed the direction
indicated I saw two women pacing back and forth in
an enclosed garden.
At the same moment I recognized them they
were Dejah Thoris and Thuvia of Ptarth!
There were they whom I had trailed
from one pole to another, the length of a world.
Only ten feet of space and a few metal bars separated
me from them.
With a cry I attracted their attention,
and as Dejah Thoris looked up full into my eyes I
made the sign of love that the men of Barsoom make
to their women.
To my astonishment and horror her
head went high, and as a look of utter contempt touched
her finely chiseled features she turned her back full
upon me. My body is covered with the scars of
a thousand conflicts, but never in all my long life
have I suffered such anguish from a wound, for this
time the steel of a woman’s look had entered
my heart.
With a groan I turned away and buried
my face in my arms. I heard Thuvan Dihn call
aloud to Thuvia, but an instant later his exclamation
of surprise betokened that he, too, had been repulsed
by his own daughter.
“They will not even listen,”
he cried to me. “They have put their hands
over their ears and walked to the farther end of the
garden. Ever heard you of such mad work, John
Carter? The two must be bewitched.”
Presently I mustered the courage to
return to the window, for even though she spurned
me I loved her, and could not keep my eyes from feasting
upon her divine face and figure, but when she saw me
looking she again turned away.
I was at my wit’s end to account
for her strange actions, and that Thuvia, too, had
turned against her father seemed incredible.
Could it be that my incomparable princess still clung
to the hideous faith from which I had rescued her
world? Could it be that she looked upon me with
loathing and contempt because I had returned from the
Valley Dor, or because I had desecrated the temples
and persons of the Holy Therns?
To naught else could I ascribe her
strange deportment, yet it seemed far from possible
that such could be the case, for the love of Dejah
Thoris for John Carter had been a great and wondrous
love far above racial distinctions, creed,
or religion.
As I gazed ruefully at the back of
her haughty, royal head a gate at the opposite end
of the garden opened and a man entered. As he
did so he turned and slipped something into the hand
of the yellow guardsman beyond the gate, nor was the
distance too great that I might not see that money
had passed between them.
Instantly I knew that this newcomer
had bribed his way within the garden. Then he
turned in the direction of the two women, and I saw
that he was none other than Thurid, the black dator
of the First Born.
He approached quite close to them
before he spoke, and as they turned at the sound of
his voice I saw Dejah Thoris shrink from him.
There was a nasty leer upon his face
as he stepped close to her and spoke again.
I could not hear his words, but her answer came clearly.
“The granddaughter of Tardos
Mors can always die,” she said, “but she
could never live at the price you name.”
Then I saw the black scoundrel go
upon his knees beside her, fairly groveling in the
dirt, pleading with her. Only part of what he
said came to me, for though he was evidently laboring
under the stress of passion and excitement, it was
equally apparent that he did not dare raise his voice
for fear of detection.
“I would save you from Matai
Shang,” I heard him say. “You know
the fate that awaits you at his hands. Would
you not choose me rather than the other?”
“I would choose neither,”
replied Dejah Thoris, “even were I free to choose,
as you know well I am not.”
“You are free!” he
cried. “John Carter, Prince of Helium,
is dead.”
“I know better than that; but
even were he dead, and I must needs choose another
mate, it should be a plant man or a great white ape
in preference to either Matai Shang or you, black
calot,” she answered with a sneer of contempt.
Of a sudden the vicious beast lost
all control of himself, as with a vile oath he leaped
at the slender woman, gripping her tender throat in
his brute clutch. Thuvia screamed and sprang
to aid her fellow-prisoner, and at the same instant
I, too, went mad, and tearing at the bars that spanned
my window I ripped them from their sockets as they
had been but copper wire.
Hurling myself through the aperture
I reached the garden, but a hundred feet from where
the black was choking the life from my Dejah Thoris,
and with a single great bound I was upon him.
I spoke no word as I tore his defiling fingers from
that beautiful throat, nor did I utter a sound as
I hurled him twenty feet from me.
Foaming with rage, Thurid regained
his feet and charged me like a mad bull.
“Yellow man,” he shrieked,
“you knew not upon whom you had laid your vile
hands, but ere I am done with you, you will know well
what it means to offend the person of a First Born.”
Then he was upon me, reaching for
my throat, and precisely as I had done that day in
the courtyard of the Temple of Issus I did here in
the garden of the palace of Salensus Oll. I ducked
beneath his outstretched arms, and as he lunged past
me I planted a terrific right upon the side of his
jaw.
Just as he had done upon that other
occasion he did now. Like a top he spun round,
his knees gave beneath him, and he crumpled to the
ground at my feet. Then I heard a voice behind
me.
It was the deep voice of authority
that marks the ruler of men, and when I turned to
face the resplendent figure of a giant yellow man
I did not need to ask to know that it was Salensus
Oll. At his right stood Matai Shang, and behind
them a score of guardsmen.
“Who are you,” he cried,
“and what means this intrusion within the precincts
of the women’s garden? I do not recall
your face. How came you here?”
But for his last words I should have
forgotten my disguise entirely and told him outright
that I was John Carter, Prince of Helium; but his
question recalled me to myself. I pointed to
the dislodged bars of the window above.
“I am an aspirant to membership
in the palace guard,” I said, “and from
yonder window in the tower where I was confined awaiting
the final test for fitness I saw this brute attack
the this woman. I could not stand
idly by, O Jeddak, and see this thing done within
the very palace grounds, and yet feel that I was fit
to serve and guard your royal person.”
I had evidently made an impression
upon the ruler of Okar by my fair words, and when
he had turned to Dejah Thoris and Thuvia of Ptarth,
and both had corroborated my statements it began to
look pretty dark for Thurid.
I saw the ugly gleam in Matai Shang’s
evil eyes as Dejah Thoris narrated all that had passed
between Thurid and herself, and when she came to that
part which dealt with my interference with the dator
of the First Born her gratitude was quite apparent,
though I could see by her eyes that something puzzled
her strangely.
I did not wonder at her attitude toward
me while others were present; but that she should
have denied me while she and Thuvia were the only
occupants of the garden still cut me sorely.
As the examination proceeded I cast
a glance at Thurid and startled him looking wide-eyed
and wonderingly at me, and then of a sudden he laughed
full in my face.
A moment later Salensus Oll turned toward the black.
“What have you to say in explanation
of these charges?” he asked in a deep and terrible
voice. “Dare you aspire to one whom the
Father of Therns has chosen one who might
even be a fit mate for the Jeddak of Jeddaks himself?”
And then the black-bearded tyrant
turned and cast a sudden greedy look upon Dejah Thoris,
as though with the words a new thought and a new desire
had sprung up within his mind and breast.
Thurid had been about to reply and,
with a malicious grin upon his face, was pointing
an accusing finger at me, when Salensus Oll’s
words and the expression of his face cut him short.
A cunning look crept into his eyes,
and I knew from the expression of his face that his
next words were not the ones he had intended to speak.
“O Mightiest of Jeddaks,”
he said, “the man and the women do not speak
the truth. The fellow had come into the garden
to assist them to escape. I was beyond and overheard
their conversation, and when I entered, the woman
screamed and the man sprang upon me and would have
killed me.
“What know you of this man?
He is a stranger to you, and I dare say that you
will find him an enemy and a spy. Let him be
put on trial, Salensus Oll, rather than your friend
and guest, Thurid, Dator of the First Born.”
Salensus Oll looked puzzled.
He turned again and looked upon Dejah Thoris, and
then Thurid stepped quite close to him and whispered
something in his ear what, I know not.
Presently the yellow ruler turned
to one of his officers.
“See that this man be securely
confined until we have time to go deeper into this
affair,” he commanded, “and as bars alone
seem inadequate to restrain him, let chains be added.”
Then he turned and left the garden,
taking Dejah Thoris with him his hand upon
her shoulder. Thurid and Matai Shang went also,
and as they reached the gateway the black turned and
laughed again aloud in my face.
What could be the meaning of his sudden
change toward me? Could he suspect my true identity?
It must be that, and the thing that had betrayed
me was the trick and blow that had laid him low for
the second time.
As the guards dragged me away my heart
was very sad and bitter indeed, for now to the two
relentless enemies that had hounded her for so long
another and a more powerful one had been added, for
I would have been but a fool had I not recognized the
sudden love for Dejah Thoris that had just been born
in the terrible breast of Salensus Oll, Jeddak of
Jeddaks, ruler of Okar.