I landed, stiff enough as you will
guess, but pleased to be on shore again. It
was a melancholy neighbourhood of low islands, overgrown
with rank grass and bushes, salt water encircling them,
and inside sandy dunes and hummocks with shallow pools,
gleaming ghostly in the retreating daylight, while
beyond these rose the black bosses of what looked
like a forest. Thither I made my way, plunging
uncomfortably through shallows, and tripping over
blackened branches which, lying just below the surface,
quivered like snakes as the evening breeze ruffled
each surface, until the ground hardened under foot,
and presently I was standing, hungry and faint but
safe, on dry land again.
The forest was so close to the sea,
one could not advance without entering it, and once
within its dark arcades every way looked equally gloomy
and hopeless. I struggled through tangles night
made more and more impenetrable each minute, until
presently I could go no further, and where a dense
canopy of trees overhead gave out for a minute on the
edge of a swampy hollow, I determined to wait for daylight.
Never was there a more wet or weary
traveller, or one more desperately lonely than he
who wrapped himself up in the miserable insufficiency
of his wet rags, and without fire or supper crept
amongst the exposed roots of a tree growing out of
a bank, and prepared to hope grimly for morning.
Round and round meanwhile was drawn
the close screen of night, till the clearing in front
was blotted out, and only the tree-tops, black as
rugged hills one behind the other, stood out against
the heavy purple of the circlet of sky above.
As the evening deepened the quaintest noises began
on every hand noises so strange and bewildering
that as I cowered down with my teeth chattering, and
stared hard into the impenetrable, they could be likened
to nothing but the crying of all the souls of dead
things since the beginning. Never was there such
an infernal chorus as that which played up the Martian
stars. Down there in front, where hummock grass
was growing, some beast squeaked continuously, till
I shouted at him, then he stopped a minute, and began
again in entirely another note. Away on the hills
two rival monsters were calling to each other in tones
so hollow they seemed as I listened to penetrate through
me, and echo out of my heart again. Far overhead,
gigantic bats were flitting, the shadow of their wings
dimming a dozen universes at once, and crying to each
other in shrill tones that rent the air like tearing
silk.
As I listened to those vampires discussing
their infernal loves under the stars, from a branch
right overhead broke such a deathly howl from the
throat of a wandering forest cat that everything else
was hushed for a moment. All about a myriad
insects were making night giddy with their ghostly
fires, while underground and from the labyrinths of
matted roots came quaint sounds of rustling snakes
and forest pigs, and all the lesser things that dig
and scratch and growl.
Yet I was desperately sleepy, my sword
hung heavy as lead at my side, my eyelids drooped,
and so at last I dozed uneasily for an hour or two.
Then, all on a sudden, I came wide awake with a shock.
The night was quieter now; away in the forest depth
strange noises still arose, but close at hand was
a strange hush, like the hush of expectation, and,
listening wonderingly, I was aware of slow, heavy footsteps
coming up from the river, now two or three steps together,
then a pause, then another step or two, and as I bent
towards the approaching thing, staring into the darkness,
my strained senses were conscious of another approach,
as like as could be, coming from behind me. On
they came, making the very ground quake with their
weight, till I judged that both were about on the
edge of the clearing, two vast rat-like shadows, but
as big as elephants, and bringing a most intolerable
smell of sour slime with them. There, on the
edge of the amphitheatre, each for the first time
appeared to become aware of the other’s presence the
footsteps stopped dead. I could hear the water
dripping from the fur of those giant brutes amongst
the shadows and the deep breathing of the one nearest
me, a scanty ten paces off, but not another sound in
the stillness.
Minute after minute passed, yet neither
moved. A half-hour grew to a full hour, and
that hour lengthened amid the keenest tension till
my ears ached with listening, and my eyes were sore
with straining into the blackness. At last I
began to wonder whether those earth-shaking beasts
had not been an evil dream, and was just venturing
to stretch out a cramped leg, and rally myself upon
my cowardice, when, without warning, at my elbow rose
the most ear-piercing scream of rage that ever came
from a living throat. There was a sweeping rush
in the darkness which I could feel but not see, and
with a shock the two gladiators met in the midst of
the arena. Over and over they went screaming
and struggling, and slipping and plunging. I
could hear them tearing at each other, and the sharp
cries of pain, first one and then another gave as
claw or tooth got home, and all the time, though the
ground was quaking under their struggles and the air
full of horrible uproar, not a thing was to be seen.
I did not even know what manner of beasts they were
who rocked and rolled and tore at each other’s
throats, but I heard their teeth snapping, and their
fierce breath in the pauses of the struggle, and could
but wait in a huddle amongst the roots until it was
over. To and fro they went, now at the far side
of the dark clearing, now so close that hot drops
of blood from their jaws fell on my face like rain
in the darkness. It seemed as though the fight
would never end, but presently there was more of worrying
in it and less of snapping; it was clear one or the
other had had enough and as I marked this those black
shadows came gasping and struggling towards me.
There was a sudden sharp cry, a desperate final tussle before
which strong trees snapped and bushes were flattened
out like grass, not twenty yards away and
then for a minute all was silent.
One of them had killed, and as I sat
rooted to the spot I was forced to listen while his
enemy tore him up and ate him. Many a banquet
have I been at, but never an uglier one than that.
I sat in the darkness while the unknown thing at
my feet ripped the flesh from his half-dead rival
in strips, and across the damp night wind came the
reek of that abominable feast the reek
of blood and spilt entrails until I turned
away my face in loathing, and was nearly starting to
my feet to venture a rush into the forest shadows.
But I was spellbound, and remained listening to the
heavy munch of blood-stained jaws until presently I
was aware other and lesser feasters were coming.
There was a twinkle of hungry eyes all about the
limits of the area, the shine of green points of envious
fire that circled round in decreasing orbits, as the
little foxes and jackals came crowding in. One
fellow took me for a rock, so still I sat, putting
his hot, soft paws upon my knee for a space, and others
passed me so near I could all but touch them.
The big beast had taken himself off
by this time, and there must have been several hundreds
of these newcomers. A merry time they had of
it; the whole place was full of the green, hurrying
eyes, and amidst the snap of teeth and yapping and
quarrelling I could hear the flesh being torn from
the red bones in every direction. One wolf-like
individual brought a mass of hot liver to eat between
my feet, but I gave him a kick, and sent him away
much to his surprise. Gradually, however, the
sound of this unholy feast died away, and, though you
may hardly believe it, I fell off into a doze.
It was not sleep, but it served the purpose, and
when in an hour or two a draught of cool air roused
me, I awoke, feeling more myself again.
Slowly morning came, and the black
wall of forest around became full of purple interstices
as the east brightened. Those glimmers of light
between bough and trunk turned to yellow and red, the
day-shine presently stretched like a canopy from point
to point of the treetops on either side of my sleeping-place,
and I arose.
All my limbs were stiff with cold,
my veins emptied by hunger and wounds, and for a space
I had not even strength to move. But a little
rubbing softened my cramped muscles presently and limping
painfully down to the place of combat, I surveyed
the traces of that midnight fight. I will not
dwell upon it. It was ugly and grim; the trampled
grass, the giant footmarks, each enringing its pool
of curdled blood; the broken bushes, the grooved mud-slides
where the unknown brutes had slid in deadly embrace;
the hollows, the splintered boughs, their ragged points
tufted with skin and hair all was sickening
to me. Yet so hungry was I that when I turned
towards the odious remnants of the vanquished a
shapeless mass of abomination my thoughts
flew at once to breakfasting! I went down and
inspected the victim cautiously a huge
rat-like beast as far as might be judged from the bare
uprising ribs all that was left of him
looking like the framework of a schooner yacht.
His heart lay amongst the offal, and my knife came
out to cut a meal from it, but I could not do it.
Three times I essayed the task, hunger and disgust
contending for mastery; three times turned back in
loathing. At last I could stand the sight no
more, and, slamming the knife up again, turned on
my heels, and fairly ran for fresh air and the shore,
where the sea was beginning to glimmer in the light
a few score yards through the forest stems.
There, once more out on the open, on a pebbly beach,
I stripped, spreading my things out to dry on the
stones, and laying myself down with the lapping of
the waves in my ears, and the first yellow sunshine
thawing my limbs, tried to piece together the hurrying
events of the last few days.
What were my gay Martians doing?
Lazy dogs to let me, a stranger, be the only one
to draw sword in defence of their own princess!
Where was poor Heru, that sweet maiden wife?
The thought of her in the hands of the ape-men was
odious. And yet was I not mad to try to rescue,
or even to follow her alone? If by any chance
I could get off this beast-haunted place and catch
up with the ravishers, what had I to look for from
them except speedy extinction, and that likely enough
by the most painful process they were acquainted with?
The other alternative of going back
empty handed was terribly ignominious. I had
lectured the amiable young manhood of Seth so soundly
on the subject of gallantry, and set them such a good
example on two occasions, that it would be bathos
to saunter back, hands in pockets, and confess I knew
nothing of the lady’s fate and had been daunted
by the first night alone in the forest. Besides,
how dull it would be in that beautiful, tumble-down
old city without Heru, with no expectation day by
day of seeing her sylph-like form and hearing the
merry tinkle of her fairy laughter as she scoffed at
the unknown learning collected by her ancestors in
a thousand laborious years. No! I would
go on for certain. I was young, in love, and
angry, and before those qualifications difficulties
became light.
Meanwhile, the first essential was
breakfast of some kind. I arose, stretched,
put on my half-dried clothes, and mounting a low hummock
on the forest edge looked around. The sun was
riding up finely into the sky, and the sea to the
eastward shone for leagues and leagues in the loveliest
azure. Where it rippled on my own beach and those
of the low islands noted over night, a wonderful fire
of blue and red played on the sands as though the
broken water were full of living gems. The sky
was full of strange gulls with long, forked tails,
and a lovely little flying lizard with transparent
wings of the palest green like those of
a grasshopper was flitting about picking
up insect stragglers.
All this was very charming, but what
I kept saying to myself was “Streaky rashers
and hot coffee: rashers and coffee and rolls,”
and, indeed, had the gates of Paradise themselves
opened at that moment I fear my first look down the
celestial streets within would have been for a restaurant.
They did not, and I was just turning away disconsolate
when my eye caught, ascending from behind the next
bluff down the beach, a thin strand of smoke rising
into the morning air.
It was nothing so much in itself a
thin spiral creeping upwards mast-high, then flattening
out into a mushroom head but it meant everything
to me. Where there was fire there must be humanity,
and where there was humanity ay, to the
very outlayers of the universe there must
be breakfast. It was a splendid thought; I rushed
down the hillock and went gaily for that blue thread
amongst the reeds. It was not two hundred yards
away, and soon below me was a tiny bay with bluest
water frilling a silver beach, and in the midst of
it a fire on a hearth dancing round a pot that simmered
gloriously. But of an owner there was nothing
to be seen. I peered here and there on the shore,
but nothing moved, while out to sea the water was shining
like molten metal with not a dot upon it! what
did it matter? I laughed as, pleased and hungry,
I slipped down the bank and strode across the sands;
it pleased Fate to play bandy with me, and if it sent
me supperless to bed, why, here was restitution in
the way of breakfast. I took up a morsel of the
stuff in the kettle on a handy stick and found it
good indeed, I knew it at once as a very
dainty mess made from the roots of a herb the Martians
greatly liked; An had piled my platter with it when
we supped that night in the market-place of Seth,
and the sweet white stuff had melted into my corporal
essence, it seemed, without any gross intermediate
process of digestion. And here I was again,
hungry, sniffing the fragrant breath of a full meal
and not a soul in sight I should have been
a fool not to have eaten. So thinking, down
I sat, taking the pot from its place, and when it was
a little cool plunging my hands into it and feasting
with as good an appetite as ever a man had before.
It was gloriously ambrosial, and deeper
and deeper I went, with the tall stalk of the smoke
in front growing from the hearth-stones like some
strange new plant, the pleasant sunshine on my back,
and never a thought for anything but the task in hand.
Deeper and deeper, oblivious of all else, until to
get the very last drops I lifted the pipkin up and
putting back my head drank in that fashion.
It was only when with a sigh of pleasure
I lowered it slowly again that over the rim as it
sank there dawned upon me the vision of a Martian
standing by an empty canoe on the edge of the water
and regarding me with calm amazement. I was,
in fact, so astonished that for a minute the empty
pot stood still before my face, and over its edge we
stared at each other in mute surprise, then with all
the dignity that might be I laid the vessel down between
my feet and waited for the newcomer to speak.
She was a girl by her yellow garb, a fisherwoman,
it seemed, for in the prow of her craft was piled
a net upon which the scales of fishes were twinkling a
Martian, obviously, but something more robust than
most of them, a savour of honest work about her sunburnt
face which my pallid friends away yonder were lacking
in, and when we had stared at each other for a few
moments in silence she came forward a step or two
and said without a trace of fear or shyness, “Are
you a spirit, sir?
“Why,” I answered, “about
as much, no more and no less, than most of us.”
“Aye,” she said.
“I thought you were, for none but spirits live
here upon this island; are you for good or evil?”
“Far better for the breakfast
of which I fear I have robbed you, but wandering along
the shore and finding this pot boiling with no owner,
I ventured to sample it, and it was so good my appetite
got the better of manners.”
The girl bowed, and standing at a
respectful distance asked if I would like some fish
as well; she had some, but not many, and if I would
eat she would cook them for me in a minute it
was not often, she added lightly, she had met one
of my kind before. In fact, it was obvious that
simple person did actually take me for a being of another
world, and was it for me to say she was wrong?
So adopting a dignity worthy of my reputation I nodded
gravely to her offer. She fetched from the boat
four little fishes of the daintiest kind imaginable.
They were each about as big as a hand and pale blue
when you looked down upon them, but so clear against
the light that every bone and vein in their bodies
could be traced. These were wrapped just as they
were in a broad, green leaf and then the Martian,
taking a pointed stick, made a hollow in the white
ashes, laid them in side by side, and drew the hot
dust over again.
While they cooked we chatted as though
the acquaintance were the most casual thing in the
world, and I found it was indeed an island we were
on and not the mainland, as I had hoped at first.
Seth, she told me, was far away to the eastward,
and if the woodmen had gone by in their ships they
would have passed round to the north-west of where
we were.
I spent an hour or two with that amiable
individual, and, it is to be hoped, sustained the
character of a spiritual visitant with considerable
dignity. In one particular at least, that, namely,
of appetite, I did honour to my supposed source, and
as my entertainer would not hear of payment in material
kind, all I could do was to show her some conjuring
tricks, which greatly increased her belief in my supernatural
origin, and to teach her some new hitches and knots,
using her fishing-line as a means of illustration,
a demonstration which called from her the natural
observation that we must be good sailors “up
aloft” since we knew so much about cordage, then
we parted.
She had seen nothing of the woodmen,
though she had heard they had been to Seth and thought,
from some niceties of geographical calculation which
I could not follow, they would have crossed to the
north, as just stated, of her island. There
she told me, with much surprise at my desire for the
information, how I might, by following the forest track
to the westward coast, make my way to a fishing village,
where they would give me a canoe and direct me, since
such was my extraordinary wish, to the place where,
if anywhere, the wild men had touched on their way
home.
She filled my wallet with dried honey-cakes
and my mouth with sugar plums from her little store,
then down on her knees went that poor waif of a worn-out
civilisation and kissed my hands in humble farewell,
and I, blushing to be so saluted, and after all but
a sailor, got her by the rosy fingers and lifted her
up shoulder high, and getting one hand under her chin
and the other behind her head kissed her twice upon
her pretty cheeks; and so, I say, we parted.