All went well and we fled down the
bitter stream of the Martian gulf at a pace leaving
me little to do but guide our course just clear of
snags and promontories on the port shore. Just
before dawn, however, with a thin mist on the water
and flocks of a flamingo-like bird croaking as they
flew southward overhead, we were nearly captured again.
Drifting silently down on a rocky
island, I was having a drink at the water-pitcher
at the moment, while Heru, her hair beaded with prismatic
moisture and looking more ethereal than ever, sat in
the bows timorously inhaling the breath of freedom,
when all on a sudden voices invisible in the mist,
came round a corner. It was one of Ar-hap’s
war-canoes toiling up-stream. Heru and I ducked
down into the haze like dab-chicks and held our breath.
Straight on towards us came the toiling
ship, the dip of oars resonant in the hollow fog and
a ripple babbling on her cutwater plainly discernible.
Oh, oh!
Hoo, hoo!
How high, how high!”
sounded the sleepy song of the rowers
till they were looming right abreast and we could
smell their damp hides in the morning air. Then
they stopped suddenly and some one asked,
“Is there not something like a boat away on
the right?”
“It is nothing,” said
another, “but the lees of last night’s
beer curdling in your stupid brain.”
“But I saw it move.”
“That must have been in dreams.”
“What is all that talking about?”
growled a sleepy voice of authority from the stern.
“Bow man, sir, says he can see a boat.”
“And what does it matter if
he can? Are we to delay every time that lazy
ruffian spying a shadow makes it an excuse to stop
to yawn and scratch? Go on, you plankful of lubbers,
or I’ll give you something worth thinking about!”
And joyfully, oh, so joyfully, we heard the sullen
dip of oars commence again.
Nothing more happened after that till
the sun at length shone on the little harbour town
at the estuary mouth, making the masts of fishing
craft clustering there like a golden reed-bed against
the cool, clean blue of the sea beyond.
Right glad we were to see it, and
keeping now in shadow of the banks, made all haste
while light was faint and mist hung about to reach
the town, finally pushing through the boats and gaining
a safe hiding-place without hostile notice before
it was clear daylight.
Covering Heru up and knowing well
all our chances of escape lay in expedition, I went
at once, in pursuance of a plan made during the night,
to the good dame at what, for lack of a better name,
must still continue to be called the fish-shop, and
finding her alone, frankly told her the salient points
of my story. When she learned I had “robbed
the lion of his prey” and taken his new wife
singlehanded from the dreaded Ar-hap her astonishment
was unbounded. Nothing would do but she must
look upon the princess, so back we went to the hiding-place,
and when Heru knew that on this woman depended our
lives she stepped ashore, taking the rugged Martian
hand in her dainty fingers and begging her help so
sweetly that my own heart was moved, and, thrusting
hands in pocket, I went aside, leaving those two to
settle it in their own female way.
And when I looked back in five minutes,
royal Seth had her arms round the woman’s neck,
kissing the homely cheeks with more than imperial
fervour, so I knew all was well thus far, and stopped
expectorating at the little fishes in the water below
and went over to them. It was time! We
had hardly spoken together a minute when a couple of
war-canoes filled with men appeared round the nearest
promontory, coming down the swift water with arrow-like
rapidity.
“Quick!” said the fishwife,
“or we are all lost. Into your canoe and
paddle up this creek. It runs out to the sea
behind the town, and at the bar is my man’s
fishing-boat amongst many others. Lie hidden
there till he comes if you value your lives.”
So in we got, and while that good Samaritan went
back to her house we cautiously paddled through a
deserted backwater to where it presently turned through
low sandbanks to the gulf. There were the boats,
and we hid the canoe and lay down amongst them till,
soon after, a man, easily recognised as the husband
of our friend, came sauntering down from the village.
At first he was sullen, not unreasonably
alarmed at the danger into which his good woman was
running him. But when he set eyes on Heru he
softened immediately. Probably that thick-bodied
fellow had never seen so much female loveliness in
so small a bulk in all his life, and, being a man,
he surrendered at discretion.
“In with you, then,” he
growled, “since I must needs risk my neck for
a pair of runaways who better deserve to be hung than
I do. In with you both into this fishing-cobble
of mine, and I will cover you with nets while I go
for a mast and sail, and mind you lie as still as logs.
The town is already full of soldiers looking for you,
and it will be short shrift for us all if you are
seen.”
Well aware of the fact and now in
the hands of destiny, the princess and I lay down
as bidden in the prow, and the man covered us lightly
over with one of those fine meshed seines used by these
people to catch the little fish I had breakfasted
on more than once.
Materially I could have enjoyed the
half-hour which followed, since such rest after exertion
was welcome, the sun warm, the lapping of sea on shingle
infinitely soothing, and, above all, Heru was in my
arms! How sweet and childlike she was!
I could feel her little heart beating through her
scanty clothing, while every now and then she turned
her gazelle eyes to mine with a trust and admiration
infinitely alluring. Yes! as far as that went
I could have lain there with that slip of maiden royalty
for ever, but the fascination of the moment was marred
by the thought of our danger. What was to prevent
these new friends giving us away? They knew
we had no money to recompense them for the risk they
were running. They were poor, and a splendid
reward, wealth itself to them, would doubtless be
theirs if they betrayed us even by a look. Yet
somehow I trusted them as I have trusted the poor before
with the happiest results, and telling myself this
and comforting Heru, I listened and waited.
Minute by minute went by. It
seemed an age since the fisherman had gone, but presently
the sound of voices interrupted the sea’s murmur.
Cautiously stealing a glance through a chink imagine
my feelings on perceiving half a dozen of Ar-hap’s
soldiers coming down the beach straight towards us!
Then my heart was bitter within me, and I tasted
of defeat, even with Heru in my arms. Luckily
even in that moment of agony I kept still, and another
peep showed the men were now wandering about rather
aimlessly. Perhaps after all they did not know
of our nearness? Then they took to horseplay,
as idle soldiers will even in Mars, pelting each other
with bits of wood and dead fish, and thereon I breathed
again.
Nearer they came and nearer, my heart
beating fast as they strolled amongst the boats until
they were actually “larking” round the
one next to ours. A minute or two of this, and
another footstep crunched on the pebbles, a quick,
nervous one, which my instinct told me was that of
our returning friend.
“Hullo old sprat-catcher!
Going for a sail?” called out a soldier, and
I knew that the group were all round our boat, Heru
trembling so violently in my breast that I thought
she would make the vessel shake.
“Yes,” said the man gruffly.
“Let’s go with him,”
cried several voices. “Here, old dried
haddock, will you take us if we help haul your nets
for you?”
“No, I won’t. Your
ugly faces would frighten all the fish out of the
sea.”
“And yours, you old chunk of
dried mahogany, is meant to attract them no doubt.”
“Let’s tie him to a post
and go fishing in his boat ourselves,” some
one suggested. Meanwhile two of them began rocking
the cobble violently from side to side. This
was awful, and every moment I expected the net and
the sail which our friend had thrown down unceremoniously
upon us would roll off.
“Oh, stop that,” said
the Martian, who was no doubt quite as well aware
of the danger as we were. “The tide’s
full, the shoals are in the bay stop your
nonsense, and help me launch like good fellows.”
“Well, take two of us, then.
We will sit on this heap of nets as quiet as mice,
and stand you a drink when we get back.”
“No, not one of you,”
quoth the plucky fellow, “and here’s my
staff in my hand, and if you don’t leave my
gear alone I will crack some of your ugly heads.”
“That’s a pity,”
I thought to myself, “for if they take to fighting
it will be six to one long odds against
our chances.” There was indeed a scuffle,
and then a yell of pain, as though a soldier had been
hit across the knuckles; but in a minute the best
disposed called out, “Oh, cease your fun, boys,
and let the fellow get off if he wants to. You
know the fleet will be down directly, and Ar-hap has
promised something worth having to the man who can
find that lost bit of crackling of his. It’s
my opinion she’s in the town, and I for one would
rather look for her than go haddock fishing any day.”
“Right you are, mates,”
said our friend with visible relief. “And,
what’s more, if you help me launch this boat
and then go to my missus and tell her what you’ve
done, she’ll understand, and give you the biggest
pumpkinful of beer in the place. Ah, she will
understand, and bless your soft hearts and heads while
you drink it she’s a cute one is
my missus.”
“And aren’t you afraid to leave her with
us?”
“Not I, my daisy, unless it
were that a sight of your pretty face might give her
hysterics. Now lend a hand, your accursed chatter
has already cost me half an hour of the best fishing
time.”
“In with you, old buck!”
shouted the soldiers; I felt the fisherman step in,
as a matter of fact he stepped in on to my toes; a
dozen hands were on the gunwales: six soldier
yells resounded, it seemed, in my very ears:
there was the grit and rush of pebbles under the keel:
a sudden lurch up of the bows, which brought the fairy
lady’s honey-scented lips to mine, and then
the gentle lapping of deep blue waters underneath
us!
There is little more to be said of
that voyage. We pulled until out of sight of
the town, then hoisted sail, and, with a fair wind,
held upon one tack until we made an island where there
was a small colony of Hither folk.
Here our friend turned back.
I gave him another gold button from my coat, and
the princess a kiss upon either cheek, which he seemed
to like even more than the button. It was small
payment, but the best we had. Doubtless he got
safely home, and I can but hope that Providence somehow
or other paid him and his wife for a good deed bravely
done.
Those islanders in turn lent us another
boat, with a guide, who had business in the Hither
capital, and on the evening of the second day, the
direct route being very short in comparison, we were
under the crumbling marble walls of Seth.