Fortunately there was a good deal
of broken timber thrown up at “high-water”
mark, and with a stack of this at the mouth of the
little cave a pleasant fire was soon made by help
of a flint pebble and the steel back of my sword.
It was a hearty blaze and lit up all the near cliffs
with a ruddy jumping glow which gave their occupants
a marvellous appearance of life. The heat also
brought off the dull rime upon the side of my recess,
leaving it clear as polished glass, and I was a little
startled to see, only an inch or so back in the ice
and standing as erect as ever he had been in life,
the figure of an imposing grey clad man. His
arms were folded, his chin dropped upon his chest,
his robes of the finest stuff, the very flowers they
had decked his head with frozen with immortality,
and under them, round his crisp and iron-grey hair,
a simple band of gold with strange runes and figures
engraved upon it.
There was something very simple yet
stately about him, though his face was hidden and
as I gazed long and intently the idea got hold of me
that he had been a king over an undegenerate Martian
race, and had stood waiting for the Dawn a very, very
long time.
I wished a little that he had not
been quite so near the glassy surface of the ice down
which the warmth was bringing quick moisture drops.
Had he been back there in the blue depths where others
were sitting and crouching it would have been much
more comfortable. But I was a sailor, and misfortune
makes strange companions, so I piled up the fire again,
and lying down presently on the dry shingle with my
back to him stared moodily at the blaze till slowly
the fatigues of the day told, my eyelids dropped and,
with many a fitful start and turn, at length I slept.
It was an hour before dawn, the fire
had burnt low and I was dreaming of an angry discussion
with my tailor in New York as to the sit of my last
new trousers when a faint sound of moving shingle caught
my quick seaman ear, and before I could raise my head
or lift a hand, a man’s weight was on me a
heavy, strong man who bore me down with irresistible
force. I felt the slap of his ice-cold hand upon
my throat and his teeth in the back of my neck!
In an instant, though but half awake, with a yell
of surprise and anger I grappled with the enemy, and
exerting all my strength rolled him over. Over
and over we went struggling towards the fire, and
when I got him within a foot or so of it I came out
on top, and, digging my knuckles into his throttle,
banged his head upon the stony floor in reckless rage,
until all of a sudden it seemed to me he was done
for. I relaxed my grip, but the other man never
moved. I shook him again, like a terrier with
a rat, but he never resented it. Had I killed
him? How limp and cold he was! And then
all of a sudden an uneasy feeling came upon me.
I reached out, and throwing a handful of dried stuff
upon the embers the fire danced gaily up into the
air, and the blaze showed me I was savagely holding
down to the gravel and kneeling on the chest of that
long-dead king from my grotto wall!
It was the man out of the ice without
a doubt. There was the very niche he had fallen
from under the influence of the fire heat, the very
recess, exactly in his shape in every detail, whence
he had stood gazing into vacuity all those years.
I left go my hold, and after the flutter in my heart
had gone down, apologetically set him up against the
wall of the cavern whence he had fallen; then built
up the fire until twirling flames danced to the very
roof in the blue light of dawn, and hobgoblin shadows
leapt and capered about us. Then once more I
sat down on the opposite side of the blaze, resting
my chin upon my hands, and stared into the frozen
eyes of that grim stranger, who, with his chin upon
his knees, stared back at me with irresistible, remorseless
steadfastness.
He was as fresh as if he had died
but yesterday, yet by his clothing and something in
his appearance, which was not that of the Martian of
to-day, I knew he might be many thousand years old.
What things he had seen, what wonders he knew!
What a story might be put into his mouth if I were
a capable writer gifted with time and imagination instead
of a poor outcast, ill-paid lieutenant whose literary
wit is often taxed hardly to fill even a log-book
entry! I stared at him so long and hard, and
he at me through the blinking flames, that again I
dozed and dozed and dozed again
until at last when I woke in good earnest it was daylight.
By this time hunger was very aggressive.
The fire was naught but a circlet of grey ashes;
the dead king, still sitting against the cave-side,
looked very blue and cold, and with an uncomfortable
realisation of my position I shook myself together,
picked up and pocketed without much thought the queer
gold circlet that had dropped from his forehead, and
went outside to see what prospect of escape the new
day had brought.
It was not much. Upriver there
was not the remotest chance. Not even a Niagara
steamer could have forged back against the sluice coming
down from the gulch there. Looking round, the
sides of the icy amphitheatre just lighting
up now with glorious gold and crimson glimmers of
morning were as steep as a wall face; only
back towards the falls was there a possibility of
getting out of the dreadful trap, so thither I went,
after a last look at the poor old king, along my narrow
beach with all the eagerness begotten of a final chance.
Up to the very brink it looked hopeless enough, but,
looking downwards when that was reached, instead of
a sheer drop the slope seemed to be a wild “staircase”
of rocks and icy ledges with here and there a little
patch of sand on a cornice, and far below, five hundred
feet or so, a good big spread of gravel an acre or
two in extent close by where the river plunged out
of sight into the nethermost cavern mouth.
It was so hopeless up above it, it
could not possibly be worse further down, and there
was the ugly black flood running into the hole to trust
myself to as a last resource; so slipping and sliding
I began the descent.
Had I been a schoolboy with a good
breakfast ahead the incident might have been amusing
enough. The travelling was mostly done on the
seat of my trousers, which consequently became caked
with mud and glacial loam. Some was accomplished
on hands and knees, with now and then a bit down a
snow slope, in good, honest head-over-heels fashion.
The result was a fine appetite for the next meal
when it should please providence to send it, and an
abrupt arrival on the bottom beach about five minutes
after leaving the upper circles.
I came to behind a cluster of breast-high
rocks, and before moving took a look round.
Judge then of my astonishment and delight at the second
glance to perceive about a hundred yards away a brown
object, looking like an ape in the half light, meandering
slowly up the margin of the water towards me.
Every now and then it stopped, stooping down to pick
up something or other from the scum along the torrent,
and it was the fact that these trifles, whatever they
were, were put into a wallet by the vision’s
side not into his mouth which
first made me understand with a joyful thrill that
it was a man before me a real, living
man in this huge chamber of dead horrors! Then
again it flashed across my mind in a luminous moment
that where one man could come, or go, or live, another
could do likewise, and never did cat watch mouse with
more concentrated eagerness than I that quaint, bent-shouldered
thing hobbling about in the blue morning shadows where
all else was silence.
Nearer and nearer he came, till so close face and garb were
discernible, and then there could no longer be any doubt, it was a woodman, an
old man, with grizzled monkey-face, stooping gait, and a shaggy fur cloak,
utterly unlike the airy garments of my Hither folk, who now stood before me.
It gave me quite a start to recognise him there, for it showed I was in a new
land, and since he was going so cheerfully about his business, whatever it might
chance to be, there must be some way out of this accursed pit in which I had
fallen. So very cautiously I edged out, taking advantage of all the cover
possible until we were only twenty yards apart, and then suddenly standing up,
and putting on the most affable smile, I called out
“Hullo, mess-mate!”
The effect was electrical. That
quaint old fellow sprang a yard into air as though
a spring had shot him up. Then, coming down,
he stood transfixed at his full height as stiff as
a ramrod, staring at me with incredible wonder.
He looked so funny that in spite of hunger and loneliness
I burst out laughing, whereat the woodman, suddenly
recovering his senses, turned on his heels and set
off at his best pace in the opposite direction.
This would never do! I wanted him to be my
guide, philosopher, and friend. He was my sole
visible link with the outside world, so after him
I went at tip-top speed, and catching him up in fifty
yards along the shingle laid hold of his nether garments.
Whereat the old fellow stopping suddenly I shot clean
over his back, coming down on my shoulder in the gravel.
But I was much younger than he, and
in a minute was in chase again. This time I laid
hold of his cloak, and the moment he felt my grip he
slipped the neck-thongs and left me with only the mangy
garment in my hands. Again we set off, dodging
and scampering with all our might upon that frozen
bit of beach. The activity of that old fellow
was marvellous, but I could not and would not lose
him. I made a rush and grappled him, but he
tossed his head round and slipped away once more under
my arm, as though he had been brought up by a Chinese
wrestler. Then he got on one side of a flat rock,
I the other, and for three or four minutes we waltzed
round that slab in the most insane manner.
But by this time we were both pretty
well spent he with age and I with faintness
from my long fast, and we came presently to a standstill.
After glaring at me for a time, the woodman gasped out as he
struggled for breath
“Oh, mighty and dreadful spirit!
Oh, dweller in primordial ice, say from which niche
of the cliffs has the breath of chance thawed you?”
“Never a niche at all, Mr. Hunter-for-Haddocks’-Eyes,”
I answered as soon as I could speak. “I
am just a castaway wrecked last night on this shore
of yours, and very grateful indeed will I be if you
can show me the way to some breakfast first, and afterwards
to the outside world.”
But the old fellow would not believe.
“Spirits such as you,” he said sullenly,
“need no food, and go whither they will by wish
alone.”
“I tell you I am not a spirit,
and as hungry as I don’t particularly want to
be again. Here, look at the back of my trousers,
caked three inches deep in mud. If I were a
spirit, do you think I would slide about on my coat-tails
like that? Do you think that if I could travel
by volition I would slip down these infernal cliffs
on my pants’ seat as I have just done?
And as for materialism look at this fist;
it punched you just now! Surely there was nothing
spiritual in that knock?’’
“No,” said the savage,
rubbing his head, “it was a good, honest rap,
so I must take you at your word. If you are
indeed man, and hungry, it will be a charity to feed
you; if you are a spirit, it will at least be interesting
to watch you eat; so sit down, and let’s see
what I have in my wallet.”
So cross-legged we squatted opposite
each other on the table rock, and, feeling like another
Sindbad the Sailor, I watched my new friend fumble
in his bag and lay out at his side all sorts of odds
and ends of string, fish-hooks, chewing-gum, material
for making a fire, and so on, until at last he came
to a package (done up, I noted with delight, in a
broad, green leaf which had certainly been growing
that morning), and unrolling it, displayed a lump
of dried meat, a few biscuits, much thicker and heavier
than the honey-cakes of the Hither folk, and something
that looked and smelt like strong, white cheese.
He signed to me to eat, and you may
depend upon it I was not slow in accepting the invitation.
That tough biltong tasted to me like the tenderest
steak that ever came from a grill; the biscuits were
ambrosial; the cheese melted in my mouth as butter
melts in that of the virtuous; but when the old man
finished the quaint picnic by inviting me to accompany
him down to the waterside for a drink, I shook my head.
I had a great respect for dead queens and kings, I
said, but there were too many of them up above to
make me thirsty this morning; my respect did not go
to making me desire to imbibe them in solution!
Afterwards I chanced to ask him what he had been picking up
just now along the margin, and after looking at me suspiciously for a minute he
asked
“You are not a thief?”
On being reassured on that point he continued:
“And you will not attempt to rob me of the harvest
for which I venture into this ghost-haunted glen,
which you and I alone of living men have seen?”
“No.” Whatever they
were, I said, I would respect his earnings.
“Very well, then,” said
the old man, “look here! I come hither
to pick up those pretty trifles which yonder lords
and ladies have done with,” and plunging his
hand into another bag he brought out a perfect fistful
of splendid gems and jewels, some set and some unset.
“They wash from the hands and wrists of those
who have lodgings in the crevices of the falls above,”
he explained. “After a time the beach here
will be thick with them. Could I get up whence
you came down, they might be gathered by the sackful.
Come! there is an eddy still unsearched, and I will
show you how they lie.”
It was very fascinating, and I and that old man set to work
amongst the gravels, and, to be brief, in half an hour found enough glittering
stuff to set up a Fifth Avenue jewellers shop. But to tell the truth, now
that I had breakfasted, and felt manhood in my veins again, I was eager to be
off, and out of the close, death-tainted atmosphere of that valley.
Consequently I presently stood up and said
“Look here, old man, this is
fine sport no doubt, but just at present I have a
big job on hand one which will not wait,
and I must be going. See, luck and young eyes
have favoured me; here is twice as much gold and stones
as you have got together it is all yours
without a question if you will show me the way out
of this den and afterwards put me on the road to your
big city, for thither I am bound with an errand to
your king, Ar-hap.”
The sight of my gems, backed, perhaps,
with the mention of Ar-hap’s name, appealed
to the old fellow; and after a grunt or two about
“losing a tide” just when spoil was so
abundant, he accepted the bargain, shouldered his
belongings, and led me towards the far corner of the
beach.
It looked as if we were walking right
against the towering ice wall, but when we were within
a yard or two of it a narrow cleft, only eighteen
inches wide, and wonderfully masked by an ice column,
showed to the left, and into this we squeezed ourselves,
the entrance by which we had come appearing to close
up instantly we had gone a pace or two, so perfectly
did the ice walls match each other.
It was the most uncanny thoroughfare
conceivable a sheer, sharp crack in the
blue ice cliffs extending from where the sunlight shone
in a dazzling golden band five hundred feet overhead
to where bottom was touched in blue obscurity of the
ice-foot. It was so narrow we had to travel
sideways for the most part, a fact which brought my
face close against the clear blue glass walls, and
enabled me from time to time to see, far back in those
translucent depths, more and more and evermore frozen
Martians waiting in stony silence for their release.
But the fact of facts was that slowly
the floor of the cleft trended upwards, whilst the
sky strip appeared to come downwards to meet it.
A mile, perhaps, we growled and squeezed up that wonderful
gully; then with a feeling of incredible joy I felt
the clear, outer air smiting upon me.
In my hurry and delight I put my head
into the small of the back of the puffing old man
who blocked the way in front and forced him forward,
until at last before we expected it the
cleft suddenly ended, and he and I tumbled headlong
over each other on to a glittering, frozen snowslope;
the sky azure overhead, the sunshine warm as a tepid
bath, and a wide prospect of mountain and plain extending
all around.
So delightful was the sudden change
of circumstances that I became quite boyish, and seizing
the old man in my exuberance by the hands, dragged
him to his feet, and danced him round and round in
a circle, while his ancient hair flapped about his
head, his skin cloak waved from his shoulders like
a pair of dusky wings and half-eaten cakes, dried
flesh, glittering jewels, broken diadems, and golden
finger-rings were flung in an arc about us.
We capered till fairly out of breath, and then, slapping
him on the back shoulder, I asked whose land all this
was about us.
He replied that it was no one’s,
all waste from verge to verge.
“What!” was my exclamation.
“All ownerless, and with so much treasure hidden
hereabout! Why, I shall annex it to my country,
and you and I will peg out original settlers’
claims!” And, still excited by the mountain
air, I whipped out my sword, and in default of a star-spangled
banner to plant on the newly-acquired territory, traced
in gigantic letters on the snow-crust U.S.A.
“And now,” I added, wiping
the rime off my blade with the lappet of my coat,
“let us stop capering about here and get to business.
You have promised to put me on the way to your big
city.”
“Come on then,” said the
little man, gathering up his property. “This
white hillside leads to nowhere; we must get into the
valley first, and then you shall see your road.”
And right well that quaint barbarian kept his promise.