A deadening quiet fell over the huge
room where Maya’s and Ato’s little armies
were making their last stand. The flames were
dying out in the tunnels and on the stairway.
They fed more fuel to the fires and waited.
Maya was at Odin’s side now.
They clung together. Jack Odin kissed her and
swore that they would never be parted again.
“Until death ” Maya said and
raised her lips to his.
He shivered. It was a promise
and an assurance that might be kept too soon.
The fires could not burn much longer. Grim Hagen’s
power over the Lorens might be questioned after the
havoc that had been wreaked in the city above.
But Hagen and his white-skinned soldiers could still
fight. And Grim Hagen’s hate was hotter
than the fires that were now dying out in the tunnels.
Ato joined them. He had proven
himself a general. Outnumbered all the way, he
had broken Grim Hagen’s lines time and again
during that awful night.
“I think we had better wait
behind the barricades and make our last stand upon
the balcony,” he said. “We can’t
defend five entrances at the same time.”
Odin agreed.
“Some of Maya’s people
are unarmed. We still have a few of the Lorens
who joined us. They are good fighters. Better
than the Lorens who are with Grim Hagen. Apparently,
he drew his following from the weakest among them.”
“Aye,” Val the Loren agreed.
He had fought near Ato’s side all through the
night, and his lean left hand was rubbing two deep
cuts across his chest. “They have already
had enough. But they have asked the wild things
of the moss-country to dine with them, and now they
can’t get rid of their guests. If Grim
Hagen and his soldiers should die, they would give
up in a minute.”
“Are your men still armed, Val?” Odin
asked.
“Aye. They know to hang on to their weapons.”
“Not all of Maya’s people
are,” Odin said. “I don’t like
the idea of the children and old men fighting.”
“Children and old men have fought
before,” Ato answered simply. “If
this should be the last time, then the battle would
be worth the blood. Anyway, I have set them to
fashioning lances and staves from wood that we saved
from the fires.”
They waited. All the troops and
all the weapons were moved behind the barricade.
Some of the best throwers were mounted
upon the improvised balcony. They had rigged
up a rude catapult from some lumber and ropes.
They had barrels of nails and spikes for ammunition.
Odin wished for some good bowmen, but the bow was
as foreign to the Lorens as it was to the Brons.
There was nothing left to do except move all the workshop’s
water-pails and sand-buckets behind the barricade
in case of fire.
Soon they heard the sound of war-cries
and the splashing of water from the tunnels.
Smoke poured into the room from the quenched and dying
fires. It disappeared almost as fast as it came.
Evidently the Lorens were masters of air-conditioning.
Odin was thankful. Knowing Grim Hagen, he had
been fearful of gas. Now that seemed unlikely.
Even as Gunnar had predicted, this last fight would
be with knife and sword and spear. Or, if it lasted
long, with clubs and bare hands.
They had spanned space and had mocked
at time. Now time was triumphant as always.
Would they end up as pre-stone-age men throwing sticks
at one another? And was this a sample of the
end of all the thinking men who would follow after
into space? If so, what a hollow, foolish end
to such high endeavor. Odin remembered an old
professor who had said that all races carry their
own seeds of destruction with them wherever they go.
The bees who steal the honey soon die, the old man
had said, but the flowers are pollinated anew and
life goes on forever.
But such bleak thoughts were short-lasting.
For as soon as the tunnels and the stairway were cleared
of smoke, Grim Hagen’s army came pouring into
the room. Grim Hagen had mustered at least two-thousand
men. He had divided these into five groups, and
they came through the five entrances at the same time.
Yelling and brandishing swords and flares, they rushed
the barricade.
Jack Odin had underestimated the catapult.
The crew released it. And a shower of spikes
tore the invading ranks apart. Odin saw a white-skinned
warrior go to his knees and scream as he tried to pull
a six-inch spike from his eye.
Ato had ordered his men to try for
Grim Hagen’s trained soldiers first. Odin
saw an old Bron cast a home-made spear with as much
ease as a trained javelin-thrower back home.
A soldier tried to pull it out of his chest until
his legs buckled beneath him and he tumbled over backwards.
Then a white-skinned warrior leaped
at the barricade and Odin thrust him through.
Torches began to rain down upon them.
Half the defending forces were now busy with water
and sand, beating out the flames.
Then, after what seemed to be hours,
the catapult crew cranked their awkward weapon to
the trigger-point again and sent another rain of spikes
into Grim Hagen’s ranks.
The floor beyond the barrier was littered
with dead and slippery with blood before Grim Hagen’s
men broke the barrier.
There were only two hundred to meet
the charge of two thousand. The end was inevitable.
As the barrier went down, Jack Odin
and Maya urged their men to climb upon the balcony.
Odin was the last to retreat. A soldier caught
at him as he scrambled upward and Odin turned and
slashed him across the face.
Ato was calling his men around him.
They drew back to a corner where two thick walls met.
Ato had placed one bench there. This he stood
upon, calling out orders and cheering them on as the
attackers climbed the unsteady tiers of benches and
tables to reach them. The defenders gathered
around. There were not over fifty of them left
now. Odin thrust Maya behind him. A body
fell at his feet. He bent and lifted up a twelve-year-old
boy who was streaming from wounds. He handed
the lad to Maya.
Grim Hagen led the attack. Odin
braced himself. He took one step forward and
waited. Seeing him, Grim Hagen veered toward him,
screaming a mad battle-cry his eyes wild
with hate. Even in what appeared to be the last
moment, Jack Odin saw that only three or four of the
white-skinned soldiers were left; and not over a dozen
of the Brons who had stayed with Grim Hagen during
all those wasting years remained.
He did not take his eyes from Grim
Hagen. He was conscious only of a sudden flickering,
as of many lights twinkling on and off. But he
did not know what was happening. Maya told him
later.
Ato was already bleeding badly from
a deep slash in his shoulder. As he rallied his
men around him, someone threw a knife that buried itself
in the right side of his chest. He stumbled and
went down to his knees. Then he struggled up,
and as he stood straight he reached down to his waist
and clutched the little slug-horn of moon-metal that
his father had given him. His head went back
as he raised the horn to his lips. Like Childe
Roland, who came at last to the Dark Tower, he blew
one unheard blast.
Suddenly the room was filled with
lights, flashing and dancing everywhere. Whispering.
A stillness fell upon the room and
the shambles. Men paused as they lifted their
knives or braced themselves for a last thrust.
For a single breath, all was in silence.
Then a light began to whisper.
“Ato, it is I, your father, Wolden. We have
learned the secret of time and space and we have come
for you, my son. But before we go, we must rid
ourselves of the mischief-makers.”
The lights darted down upon Grim Hagen’s
men. And as they touched them, the cold of space
came flowing through. They fell one by one.
And the hoar-frost covered them like spiderwebs across
the faces and bodies of long-dead mummies.
There was a spattering sound, as of
sleet falling against a distant roof. A strange
smell filled the air.
And one by one Grim Hagen’s men went down.