The Martian told me of a merchant
boat with ten rowers which was going up to the capital
in a couple of hours, and as the skipper was a friend
of his they would no doubt take me as supercargo, thereby
saving the necessity of passenger fees, which was
obviously a consideration with me. It was not
altogether a romantic approach to the dungeon of an
imprisoned beauty, but it was practical, which is often
better if not so pleasant. So the offer was gladly
closed with, and curling myself in a rug of foxskins,
for I was tired with much walking, sailors never being
good foot-gangers, I slept soundly fill they came to
tell me it was time to go on board.
The vessel was more like a canal barge
than anything else, lean and long, with the cargo
piled in a ridge down the centre as farmers store
their winter turnips, the rowers sitting on either
side of this plying oars like dessert-spoons with
long handles, while they chanted a monotonous cadence
of monosyllables:
Oh, ho, oh,
Oh, ho, oh,
How high, how high.
and then again after a pause
How high, how high
Oh, ho, oh,
Oh, ho, oh.
the which was infinitely sleep-provoking
if not a refrain of a high intellectual order.
I shut my eyes as we pulled away from
the wharfs of that nameless emporium and picked a
passage through a crowd of quaint shipping, wondering
where I was, and asking myself whether I was mentally
rising equal to my extraordinary surroundings, whether
I adequately appreciated the immensity of my remove
from those other seas on which I had last travelled,
tiller-ropes in hand, piloting a captain’s galley
from a wharf. Good heavens, what would my comrades
on my ship say if they could see me now steering a
load of hairy savages up one of those waterways which
our biggest telescopes magnify but to the thickness
of an indication? No, I was not rising equal
to the occasion, and could not. The human mind
is of but limited capacity after all, and such freaks
of fortune are beyond its conception. I knew
I was where I was, but I knew I should probably never
get the chance of telling of it, and that no one would
ever believe me if I did, and I resigned myself to
the inevitable with sullen acquiescence, smothering
the wonder that might have been overwhelming in passing
interests of the moment.
There is little to record of that
voyage. We passed through a fleet of Ar-hap’s
warships, empty and at anchor in double line, serviceable
half-decked cutters, built of solid timber, not pumpkin
rind it was pleasant to notice, and then the town
dropped away as we proceeded up a stream about as
broad as the Hudson at its widest, and profusely studded
with islands. This water was bitterly salt and
joined another sea on the other side of the Martian
continent. Yet it had a pronounced flow against
us eastward, this tide running for three spring months
and being followed, I learned, as ocean temperatures
varied, by a flow in the opposite direction throughout
the summer.
Just at present the current was so
strong eastwards, the moisture beaded upon my rowers’
tawny hides as they struggled against it, and their
melancholy song dawdled in “linked sweetness
long drawn out,” while the swing of their oars
grew longer and longer. Truly it was very hot,
far hotter than was usual for the season, these men
declared, and possibly this robbed me of my wonted
energy, and you, gentle reader, of a description of
all the strange things we passed upon that highway.
Suffice it to say we spent a scorching
afternoon, the greater part of a stifling night moored
under a mud-bank with a grove of trees on top from
which gigantic fire-flies hung as though the place
were illuminated for a garden fête, and then, rowing
on again in the comparatively cool hours before dawn,
turned into a backwater at cock-crow.
The skipper of our cargo boat roused
me just as we turned, putting under my sleepy nostrils
a handful of toasted beans on a leaf, and a small
cup full of something that was not coffee, but smelt
as good as that matutinal beverage always does to
the tired traveller.
Over our prow was an immense arch
of foliage, and underneath a long arcade of cool black
shadows, sheltering still water, till water and shadow
suddenly ended a quarter of a mile down in a patch
of brilliant colour. It was as peaceful as could
be in the first morning light, and to me over all
there was the inexpressible attraction of the unknown.
As our boat slipped silently forward
up this leafy lane, a thin white “feather”
in her mouth alone breaking the steely surface of the
stream, the men rested from their work and began,
as sailors will, to put on their shore-going clothes,
the while they chatted in low tones over the profits
of the voyage. Overhead flying squirrels were
flitting to and fro like bats, or shelling fruit whereof
the husks fell with a pleasant splash about us, and
on one bank a couple of early mothers were washing
their babies, whose smothered protests were almost
the only sound in this morning world.
Another silent dip or two of the oars
and the colour ahead crystallised into a town.
If I said it was like an African village on a large
scale, I should probably give you the best description
in the fewest words. From the very water’s
edge up to the crown of a low hill inland, extended
a mass of huts and wooden buildings, embowered and
partly hidden in bright green foliage, with here and
there patches of millet, or some such food plant,
and the flowers that grow everywhere so abundantly
in this country. It was all Arcadian and peaceful
enough at the moment, and as we drew near the men
were just coming out to the quays along the harbour
front, the streets filling and the town waking to
busy life.
A turn to the left through a watergate
defended by towers of wood and mud, and we were in
the city harbour itself; boats of many kinds moored
on every side; quaint craft from the gulfs and bays
of Nowhere, full of unheard-of merchandise, and manned
by strange-faced crews, every vessel a romance of
nameless seas, an epitome of an undiscovered world,
and every moment the scene grew busier as the breakfast
smoke arose, and wharf and gangway set to work upon
the day’s labours.
Our boat loaded, as it
turned out, with spoil from Seth was run
to a place of honour at the bottom of the town square,
and was an object of much curiosity to a small crowd
which speedily collected and lent a hand with the
mooring ropes, the while chatting excitedly with the
crew about further tribute and the latest news from
overseas. At the same time a swarthy barbarian,
whose trappings showed him to be some sort of functionary,
came down to our “captain,” much wagging
of heads and counting of notched sticks taking place
between them.
I, indeed, was apparently the least
interesting item of the cargo, and this was embarrassing.
No hero likes to be neglected, it is fatal to his
part. I had said my prayers and steeled myself
to all sorts of fine endurance on the way up, and
here, when it came to the crisis, no one was anxious
to play the necessary villain. They just helped
me ashore civilly enough, the captain nodded his head
at me, muttering something in an indifferent tone
to the functionary about a ghost who had wandered
overseas and begged a passage up the canal; the group
about the quay stared a little, but that was all.
Once I remember seeing a squatting,
life-size heathen idol hoisted from a vessel’s
hold and deposited on a sugar-box on a New York quay.
Some ribald passer-by put a battered felt hat upon
Vishnu’s sacred curls, and there the poor image
sat, an alien in an indifferent land, a sack across
its shoulders, a “billycock” upon its head,
and honoured at most with a passing stare. I
thought of that lonely image as almost as lonely I
stood on the Thither men’s quay, without the
support of friends or heroics, wondering what to do
next.
However, a cheerful disposition is
sometimes better than a banking account, and not having
the one I cultivated the other, sunning myself amongst
the bales for a time, and then, since none seemed interested
in me, wandered off into the town, partly to satisfy
my curiosity, and partly in the vague hope of ascertaining
if my princess was really here, and, if possible,
getting sight of her.
Meanwhile it turned hot with a supernatural,
heavy sort of heat altogether, I overheard passersby
exclaiming, out of the common, and after wandering
for an hour through gardens and endless streets of
thatched huts, I was glad enough to throw myself down
in the shadow of some trees on the outskirts of the
great central pile of buildings, a whole village in
itself of beam-built towers and dwelling-place, suggesting
by its superior size that it might actually be Ar-hap’s
palace.
Hotter and hotter it grew, while a
curious secondary sunrise in the west, the like of
which I never saw before seemed to add to the heat,
and heavier and heavier my eyelids, till I dozed at
last, and finally slept uncomfortably for a time.
Rousing up suddenly, imagine my surprise
to see sitting, chin on knees, about a yard away,
a slender girlish figure, infinitely out of place in
that world of rough barbarians. Was it possible?
Was I dreaming? No, there was no doubt about
it, she was a girl of the Hither folk, slim and pretty,
but with a wonderfully sad look in her gazelle eyes,
and scarcely a sign of the indolent happiness of Seth
in the pale little face regarding me so fixedly.
“Good gracious, miss,”
I said, still rubbing my eyes and doubting my senses,
“have you dropped from the skies? You are
the very last person I expected to see in this barbarian
place.”
“And you too, sir. Oh,
it is lovely to see one so newly from home, and free-seeming not
a slave.”
“How did you know I was from Seth?”
“Oh, that was easy enough,”
and with a little laugh she pointed to a pebble lying
between us, on which was a piece of battered sweetmeat
in a perforated bamboo box. Poor An had given
me something just like that in a playful mood, and
I had kept it in my pocket for her sake, being, as
you will have doubtless observed, a sentimental young
man, and now I clapped my hand where it should have
been, but it was gone.
“Yes,” said my new friend,
“that is yours. I smelt the sweetmeat
coming up the hill, and crossed the grass until I found
you here asleep. Oh, it was lovely! I took
it from your pocket, and white Seth rose up before
my swimming eyes, even at the scent of it. I
am Si, well named, for that in our land means sadness,
Si, the daughter of Prince Hath’s chief sweetmeat-maker,
so I should know something of such stuff. May
I, please, nibble a little piece?”
“Eat it all, my lass, and welcome.
How came you here? But I can guess. Do
not answer if you would rather not.”
“Ay, but I will. It is
not every day I can speak to ears so friendly as yours.
I am a slave, chosen for my luckless beauty as last
year’s tribute to Ar-hap.”
“And now?”
“And now the slave of Ar-hap’s
horse-keeper, set aside to make room for a fresher
face.”
“And do you know whose face that is?”
“Not I, a hapless maid sent
into this land of horrors, to bear ignominy and stripes,
to eat coarse food and do coarse work, the miserable
plaything of some brute in semi-human form, with but
the one consolation of dying early as we tribute-women
always die. Poor comrade in exile, I only know
her as yet by sympathy.”
“What if I said it was Heru, the princess?”
The Martian girl sprang to her feet, and clasping
her hands exclaimed,
“Heru, the Slender! Then
the end comes, for it is written in our books that
the last tribute is paid when the best is paid.
Oh, how splendid if she gave herself of free will
to this slavery to end it once for all. Was it
so?”
“I think, Si, your princess
could not have known of that tradition; she did not
come willingly. Besides, I am come to fetch her
back, if it may be, and that spoils the look of sacrifice.”
“You to fetch her back, and
from Ar-hap’s arms? My word, Sir Spirit,
you must know some potent charms; or, what is less
likely, my countrymen must have amazingly improved
in pluck since I left them. Have you a great
army at hand?”
But I only shook my head, and, touching
my sword, said that here was the only army coming
to rescue Heru. Whereon the lady replied that
she thought my valour did me more honour than my discretion.
How did I propose to take the princess from her captors?
“To tell the truth, damsel,
that is a matter which will have to be left to your
invention, or the kindness of such as you. I
am here on a hare-brained errand, playing knight-errant
in a way that shocks my common sense. But since
the matter has gone so far I will see it through,
or die in the attempt. Your bully lord shall
either give me Heru, stock, lock, and block, or hang
me from a yard-arm. But I would rather have
the lady. Come, you will help me; and, as a beginning,
if she is in yonder shanty get me speech with her.”
Poor Si’s eyes dilated at the
peril of the suggestion, and I saw the sluggish Martian
nature at war against her better feelings. But
presently the latter conquered. “I will
try,” she said. “What matter a few
stripes more or less?” pointing to her rosy shoulders
where red scars crisscross upon one another showed
how the Martian girls fared in Ar-hap’s palace
when their novelty wore off. “I will try
to help you; and if they kill me for it why,
that will not matter much.” And forthwith
in that blazing forenoon under the flickering shadow
of the trees we put our heads together to see what
we might do for Heru.
It was not much for the moment.
Try what we would that afternoon, I could not persuade
those who had charge of the princess to let me even
approach her place of imprisonment, but Si, as a woman,
was more successful, actually seeing her for a few
moments, and managed to whisper in her ear that I
had come, the Spirit-with-the-gold-buttons-down-his
front, afterwards describing to me in flowing Martian
imagery but doubtless not more highly coloured
than poor Heru’s emotion warranted how
delightedly that lady had received the news.
Si also did me another service, presenting
me to the porter’s wife, who kept a kind of
boarding-house at the gates of Ar-hap’s palace
for gentlemen and ladies with grievances. I
had heard of lobbying before, and the presentation
of petitions, though I had never indulged myself in
the pastime; but the crowd of petitioners here, with
petitions as wild and picturesque as their own motley
appearances, was surely the strangest that ever gathered
round a seat of supreme authority.
Si whispered in the ear of that good
woman the nature of my errand, with doubtless some
blandishment of her own; and my errand being one so
much above the vulgar and so nearly touching the sovereign,
I was at once accorded a separate room in the gate-house,
whence I could look down in comparative peace on the
common herd of suitors, and listen to the buzz of
their invective as they practised speeches which I
calculated it would take Ar-hap all the rest of his
reign to listen to, without allowing him any time
for pronouncing verdicts on them.
Here I made myself comfortable, and
awaited the return of the sovereign as placidly as
might be. Meanwhile fate was playing into my
feeble hands.
I have said it was hot weather.
At first this seemed but an outcome of the Martian
climate, but as the hours went by the heat developed
to an incredible extent. Also that red glare
previously noted in the west grew in intensity, till,
as the hours slipped by, all the town was staring
at it in panting horror. I have seen a prairie
on fire, luckily from the far side of a comfortably
broad river, and have ridden through a pine-forest
when every tree for miles was an uplifted torch, and
pungent yellow smoke rolled down each corrie side in
grey rivers crested with dancing flame. But that
Martian glare was more sombre and terrible than either.
“What is it?” I asked
of poor Si, who came out gasping to speak to me by
the gate-house.
“None of us know, and unless
the gods these Thither folk believe in are angry,
and intend to destroy the world with yonder red sword
in the sky, I cannot guess. Perhaps,”
she added, with a sudden flash of inspiration, “it
comes by your machinations for Heru’s help.”
“No!”
“If not by your wish, then,
in the name of all you love, set your wish against
it. If you know any incantations suitable for
the occasion, oh, practise them now at once, for look,
even the very grass is withering; birds are dropping
from trees; fishes, horribly bloated, are beginning
to float down the steaming rills; and I, with all others,
have a nameless dread upon me.”
Hotter and hotter it grew, until about
sunset the red blaze upon the sky slowly opened, and
showed us for about half an hour, through the opening
a lurid, flame-coloured meteor far out in space beyond;
then the cleft closed again, and through that abominable
red curtain came the very breath of Hades.
What was really happening I am not
astronomer enough to say, though on cooler consideration
I have come to the conclusion that our planet, in
going out to its summer pastures in the remoter fields
of space, had somehow come across a wandering lesser
world and got pretty well singed in passing.
This is purely my own opinion, and I have not yet
submitted it to the kindly authorities of the Lick
Observatory for verification. All I can say for
certain is that in an incredibly short space of time
the face of the country changed from green to sear,
flowers drooped; streams (there were not many in the
neighbourhood apparently) dried up; fishes died; a
mighty thirst there was nothing to quench settled
down on man and beast, and we all felt that unless
Providence listened to the prayers and imprecations
which the whole town set to work with frantic zeal
to hurl at it, or that abominable comet in the sky
sheered off on another tack with the least possible
delay, we should all be reduced to cinders in a very
brief space of time.