Engrossed with each other the Very
Young Man and Aura sailed close up to the water-front
of Orlog before they remembered their situation.
It was the Very Young Man who first became aware of
the danger. Without explanation he suddenly pulled
Aura into the bottom of the boat, leaving it to flutter
up into the wind unguided.
“They might see us from here,”
he said hurriedly. “We must decide what
is best for us to do now.”
They were then less than a quarter
of a mile from the stone quay that marked the city’s
principal landing-place. Nearer to them was a
broad, sandy beach behind which, in a long string
along the lake shore, lay the city. Its houses
were not unlike those of Arite, although most of them
were rather smaller and less pretentious. On a
rise of ground just beyond the beach, and nearly in
front of them, stood an elaborate building that was
Targo’s palace.
“We daren’t go much closer,”
the Very Young Man said. “They’d recognize
us.”
“You they would know for one
of the strangers,” said Aura. “But
if I should steer and you were hidden no one would
notice.”
The Very Young Man realized a difficulty.
“We’ve got to be very small when we go
into the city.”
“How small would you think?” asked Aura.
The Very Young Man held his hands
about a foot apart. “You see, the trouble
is, we must be small enough to get around without too
much danger of being seen; but if we get too small
it would be a terrible walk up there to Targo’s
palace.”
“We cannot sail this boat if
we are such a size,” Aura declared. “Too
large it would be for us to steer.”
“That’s just it, but we can’t go
any closer this way.”
Aura thought a moment. “If
you lie there,” she indicated the bottom of
the boat under a forward seat, “no one can see.
And I will steer-there to the beach ahead;
me they will not notice. Then at the beach we
will take the drug.”
“We’ve got to take a chance,”
said the Very Young Man. “Some one may
come along and see us getting small.”
They talked it over very carefully
for some time. Finally they decided to follow
Aura’s plan and run the boat to the beach under
her guidance; then to take the drug. There were
few people around the lake front at this hour; the
beach itself, as far as they could see, was entirely
deserted, and the danger of discovery seemed slight.
Aura pointed out, however, that once on shore, if
their stature were so great as a foot they would be
even more conspicuous than when of normal size even
allowing for the strangeness of the Very Young Man’s
appearance. The Very Young Man made a calculation
and reached the conclusion that with a height of six
or seven inches they would have to walk about a mile
from the landing-place to reach Targo’s palace.
They decided to become as near that size as they conveniently
could.
When both fully understood what they
intended to do, the Very Young Man gave Aura one of
the pellets of the drug and lay down in the bow of
the boat. Without a word the girl took her seat
in the stern and steered for the beach. When
they were close inshore Aura signalled her companion
and at the same moment both took the drug. Then
she left her seat and lay down beside the Very Young
Man. The boat, from the momentum it had gained,
floated inshore and grounded gently on the beach.
As they lay there, the Very Young
Man could see the sides of the boat growing up steadily
above their heads. The gunwale was nearly six
feet above them before he realized a new danger.
Scrambling to his feet he pulled the girl up with
him; even when standing upright their heads came below
the sides of the vessel.
“We’ve got to get out
right now,” the Very Young Man said in an excited
whisper. “We’d be too small.”
He led the girl hastily into the bow and with a running
leap clambered up and sat astride the gunwale.
Then, reaching down he pulled Aura up beside him.
In a moment they had dropped overboard
up to their shoulders in the water. High overhead
loomed the hull of the boat-a large sailing
vessel it seemed to them now. They started wading
towards shore immediately, but, because they were
so rapidly diminishing in size, it was nearly five
minutes before they could get there.
Once on shore they lay prone upon
the sand, waiting for the drug to cease its action.
When, by proper administering of both chemicals, they
had reached approximately their predetermined stature,
which, in itself, required considerable calculation
on the Very Young Man’s part, they stood up
near the water’s edge and looked about them.
The beach to them now, with its coarse-grained
sand, seemed nearly a quarter of a mile wide; in length
it extended as far as they could see in both directions.
Beyond the beach, directly in front of them on a hill
perhaps a thousand feet above the lake level, and about
a mile or more away, stood Targo’s palace.
To the Very Young Man it looked far larger than any
building he had ever seen.
The boat in which they had landed
lay on the water with its bow on the beach beside
them. It was now a vessel some two hundred and
fifty feet in length, with sides twenty feet high
and a mast towering over a hundred feet in the air.
There was no one in sight from where
they stood. “Come on, Aura,” said
the Very Young Man, and started off across the beach
towards the hill.
It was a long walk through the heavy
sand to the foot of the hill. When they arrived
they found themselves at the beginning of a broad stone
roadway-only a path to those of normal Oroid
size-that wound back and forth up the hill
to the palace. They walked up this road, and as
they progressed, saw that it was laid through a grassy
lawn that covered the entire hillside-a
lawn with gray-blue blades of grass half as high as
their bodies.
After walking about ten minutes they
came to a short flight of steps. Each step was
twice as high as their heads-impossible
of ascent-so they made a detour through
the grass.
Suddenly Aura clutched the Very Young
Man by the arm with a whispered exclamation, and they
both dropped to the ground. A man was coming down
the roadway; he was just above the steps when they
first saw him-a man so tall that, standing
beside him, they would have reached hardly above his
ankles. The long grass in which they were lying
hid them effectually from his sight and he passed
them by unnoticed. When he was gone the Very
Young Man drew a long breath. “We must watch
that,” he said apprehensively. “If
any one sees us now it’s all off. We must
be extremely careful.”
It took the two adventurers over an
hour to get safely up the hill and into the palace.
Its main entrance, approached by a long flight of
steps, was an impossible means of ingress, but Aura
fortunately knew of a smaller door at the side which
led into the basement of the building. This door
they found slightly ajar. It was open so little,
however, that they could not get past, and as they
were not strong enough even with their combined efforts,
to swing the door open, they were again brought to
a halt.
“We’d better get still
smaller,” the Very Young Man whispered somewhat
nervously. “There’s less danger that
way.”
They reduced their size, perhaps one
half, and when that was accomplished the crack in
the door had widened sufficiently to let them in.
Within the building they found themselves in a hallway
several hundred feet wide and half a mile or more
in length-its ceiling high as the roof
of some great auditorium. The Very Young Man looked
about in dismay. “Great Scott,” he
ejaculated, “this won’t do at all.”
“Many times I have been here,”
said Aura. “It looks so very different
now, but I think I know the way.”
“That may be,” agreed
the Very Young Man dubiously, “but we’d
have to walk miles if we stay as small as this.”
A heavy tread sounded far away in
the distance. The Very Young Man and Aura shrank
back against the wall, close by the door. In a
moment a man’s feet and the lower part of his
legs came into view. He stopped by the door,
pulling it inward. The Very Young Man looked up
into the air; a hundred and fifty feet, perhaps, above
their heads he saw the man’s face looking out
through the doorway.
In a moment another man joined him,
coming from outside, and they spoke together for a
time. Their roaring voices, coming down from this
great height, were nevertheless distinctly audible.
“In the audience room,”
Aura whispered, after listening an instant, “Targo’s
younger brother talks with his counsellors. Big
things they are planning.” The Very Young
Man did not answer; the two men continued their brief
conversation and parted.
When the Very Young Man and Aura were
left alone, he turned to the girl eagerly. “Did
they mention Loto? Is he here?”
“Of him they did not speak,”
Aura answered. “It is best that we go to
the audience room, where they are talking. Then,
perhaps, we will know.” The Very Young
Man agreed, and they started off.
For nearly half an hour they trudged
onward along this seemingly endless hallway.
Then again they were confronted with a flight of steps-this
time steps that were each more than three times their
own height.
“We’ve got to chance it,”
said the Very Young Man, and after listening carefully
and hearing no one about, they again took the drug,
making themselves sufficiently large to ascend these
steps to the upper story of the building.
It was nearly an hour before the two
intruders, after several narrow escapes from discovery,
and by alternating doses of both drugs, succeeded
in getting into the room where Targo’s brother
and his advisers were in conference.
They entered through the open door-a
doorway so wide that a hundred like them could have
marched through it abreast. A thousand feet away
across the vastness of the room they could see Targo’s
brother and ten of his men-sitting on mats
upon the floor, talking earnestly. Before them
stood a stone bench on which were a number of golden
goblets and plates of food.
The adventurers ran swiftly down the
length of the room, following its wall. It echoed
with their footfalls, but they knew that this sound,
so loud to their ears, would be inaudible to the huge
figures they were approaching.
“They won’t see us,”
whispered the Very Young Man, “let’s get
up close.” And in a few moments more they
were standing beside one of the figures, sheltered
from sight by a corner of the mat upon which the man
was sitting. His foot, bent sidewise under him
upon the floor, was almost within reach of the Very
Young Man’s hand. The fibre thong that fastened
its sandal looked like a huge rope thick as the Very
Young Man’s ankle, and each of its toes were
half as long as his entire body.
Targo’s brother, a younger man
than those with him, appeared to be doing most of
the talking. He it was beside whom Aura and the
Very Young Man were standing.
“You tell me if they mention
Loto,” whispered the Very Young Man. Aura
nodded and they stood silent, listening. The men
all appeared deeply engrossed with what their leader
was saying. The Very Young Man, watching his
companion’s face, saw an expression of concern
and fear upon it. She leaned towards him.
“In Arite, to-night,”
she whispered, “Targo is organizing men to attack
the palace of the king. Him will they kill-then
Targo will be proclaimed leader of all the Oroid nation.”
“We must get back,” the
Very Young Man answered in an anxious whisper.
“I wish we knew where Loto was; haven’t
they mentioned him-or any of us?”
Aura did not reply, and the Very Young
Man waited silent. Once one of the men laughed-a
laugh that drifted out into the immense distances of
the room in great waves of sound. Aura gripped
her companion by the arm.
“Then when Targo rules the land,
they will send a messenger to my brother. Him
they will tell that the drugs must be given to Targo,
or Loto will be killed-wait-when
they have the drugs,” Aura translated in a swift,
tense whisper, “then all of us they will kill.”
She shuddered. “And with the drugs they
will rule as they desire-for evil.”
“They’ll never get them,” the Very
Young Man muttered.
Targo’s brother leaned forward
and raised a goblet from the table. The movement
of his foot upon the floor made the two eavesdroppers
jump aside to avoid being struck.
Again Aura grasped her companion by
the arm. “He is saying Loto is upstairs,”
she whispered after a moment. “I know where.”
“I knew it,” said the
Very Young Man exultingly. “You take us
there. Come on-let’s get out
of here-we mustn’t waste a minute.”
They started back towards the wall
nearest them-some fifty feet away-and
following along its edge, ran down towards the doorway
through which they had entered the room. They
were still perhaps a hundred yards away from it, running
swiftly, when there appeared in the doorway the feet
and legs of two men who were coming in. The Very
Young Man and Aura stopped abruptly, shrinking up
against the side of the wall. Then there came
a heavy metallic clanging sound; the two men entered
the room, closing the door.