Although Princess Sira had promised
to keep out of the way, she could not resist the powerful
attraction of the executive hall, in which, on this
day, the fate of two planets was to be decided.
As the crowds of people began to drift toward the
hall, she joined them, still dressed in her laboring
man’s shapeless garments, the broad sun-helmet
hiding her face effectively. Her long, black
hair was concealed under the clothing. Having
nearly been drawn into a brawl the day before, she
now carried a stained but still very serviceable short
sword that she had purloined from a merclite-drunken
reveler in a gutter.
Thousands were already on the terraces
surrounding the government buildings. They were
milling about, for it was still too soon after the
night’s chill to sit down or lie on the rubbery
red sward. Taxis were bringing swarms over the
canal from North Tarog, and water vehicles were crossing
over in almost unbroken lines.
Already the merclite vendors were
busy, making their surreptitious way from group to
group, selling the highly intoxicating and legally
proscribed gum that would lift the users from the sordid,
miserable plane of their daily existence to exalted,
reckless heights.
War vessels now began to course overhead,
their solid, heavily plated hulls glinting dully in
the sun. Their levitator helices moaned dismally,
and as their long, slanting shadows slid over the assembled
thousands, it seemed that they cast a prophetic pall;
that there was a hush of foreboding.
But the psychological expert high
in a nearby tower immediately noted the slump in the
psycho-radiation meter whose trumpet-shaped antenna
pointed downward. At the turn of the dial the
air was filled with throbbing martial music, and the
expert noted with contemptuous satisfaction that the
needle now stood even higher than before.
Sira, caught like all the rest of
the people in that stirring flood of music, felt her
own pulse leap. But she thought:
“This is the day! Wasil, could I only be
with you!”
She thought sadly of Joro, whose shrewd
observations and counsel she missed more than she
had ever thought possible.
“Poor, dear Joro! You would
be a better king than any man you could ever find!
I wish I could have done as you wished me to.”
There was a stir near the main entrance
of the hall. A large private yacht was slowly
descending. She was bedecked with the green and
gold bunting of the terrestrial government, the green
and orange of Mars. Her hull glittered goldenly.
“Back!” shouted the captain
of a Martian guard detail, the soldiers running with
pennant-decked ropes looping after them. The crowd
surged against the barrier, but more guards were sent
out as reinforcements, until they had cleared a space
for the ship and a lane to the hall entrance.
“Mars greets the distinguished
guests from our sister planet!” boomed the giant
loudspeaker in the tower. Immediately afterward
came the strains of the song “Terrestria Fair
Green Terrestria” in a rushing torrent
of sound. But the frank and fluent melody was
strangely distorted, with unpleasant minor turns and
harsh whisperings of menace, and the tower psychologist
noted a further rise of the needle.
There was a diversion of interest
now. The mob of first arrivals, as well as the
ever-freshening stream of newcomers, was moving toward
the teletabloids and the more conservative stereo-screens.
On this occasion they were both carrying the same
message, however. Sira heard the propaganda division’s
latest fabrication about her alleged kidnaping by
terrestrial agents. She needed no radiation meter
to tell her of the intense wave of hatred for the
Earth that swept over the densely packed area.
And this was followed by another emotion a
wave of cupidity set up by the offer of
100,000 I. P. dollars reward for her return.
She saw about her faces greedy, faces wistful, even
compassionate faces. But outnumbering them by
far were faces set in truculent mold.
Sira moved restlessly from place to
place, feeling more deeply depressed with every moment.
She felt as if she had been left entirely out of life,
friendless, alone. Among all these thousands she
had no friend. It seemed to her that never before
had there been such a paucity of monarchists.
Sharp-featured, with a wire-drawn manner of efficiency
and resolution about them, they had constituted almost
another race among this practically enslaved people,
maintaining for themselves a tolerable position despite
the opposition of the oligarchy. Now, however,
they seemed to have vanished. All that morning
Sira had not seen one. She would not have disclosed
her identity, but it would have been comforting to
see one of those friends of old.
She was stopped by a jam. Looking
between the bodies of two large and sweaty men, she
realized that someone was standing on a surveyor’s
marking block, delivering a speech.
“The great Pantheus has so decreed
it,” the speaker was shouting in a cracked voice
that at times dribbled into a whine. “We
must shake off forever this menace from the green
planet this planet dominated by wicked
women.
“Oh, my friends, last night
they came to me in dreams, these pale women of the
green star. They tempted me and they mocked me.
They laid their cold hands on my throbbing brow, and
their cold hands burned me!
“Oh great Pantheus! How
I have suffered! The creatress who in her malice
created this wicked world beyond the gulf ”
The Martians were entertained by the
quavering denunciation. Some grinned broadly
at one another; others placed their thumbs in their
ears and wiggled their fingers. But the old man
continued. Finally, two of the foremost spectators,
sensing the tiny body crowded between them, stepped
aside.
“Don’t miss this, my little
man. Listen, and maybe you will laugh yourself
a little bigger.” He gave Sira a gentle
shove, so that she almost stumbled over the block
on which the speaker was standing.
And that old man suddenly stopped
talking, so that his toothless mouth sucked in, then
stood agape. The rheumy eyes rolled, and a wisp
of dirty gray hair strayed across his gnarled face.
He lifted a shaking hand, pointed a knotty finger.
“There she is!” he croaked. “There
she is! I claim ”
“There she is!” guffawed
a tipsy merclite chewer. “The creatress,
come to punish you! Cut off his nose, O creatress,
and stuff it into his mouth!”
There were shouts of laughter, a surge to see better.
“No! No! I, Deacon
Homms, claim the reward!” the old man screamed.
“She is the princess; I know her. She came
out of the canal to tempt me! She is the Princess
Sira. Now shall I at last enter the Palace of
Joys! I claim the 100,000 dollars!”
But he still had to catch Sira.
The crowd, suddenly sensing that this old fanatic
might be telling the truth, rushed in savagely, each
eager to seize the prize, or at least to establish
some claim to a share of the award. Men and women
went down, to be trampled mercilessly. Inevitably
they got in one another’s way, and soon swords
were rising redly, falling again.
“Guards! Guards! A
riot!” Some were fleeing the scene; others rushing
in, grateful for the opportunity to expend excess pugnacity.
A fresh platoon of soldiers tumbled out of a kiosk
leading to an underground barracks like ants out of
a disturbed nest. They deployed, holding their
neuro-pistols before them, focalizers set for maximum
dispersion, therefore non-fatal merely of
paralyzing intensity. Some of the rioters now
turned to run, but others persisted, willing to be
rendered unconscious, just so it would be near the
valuable princess.
A few moments later the captain of
the guard surveyed the mass of paralysed bodies and
the sword-slashed corpses, all intermingled.
“What’s this all about?”
he demanded of a scarred, evil-looking fellow who
was the first to rise to his elbow.
“The Princess Sira! I claim
the reward. In there! She stood right there!”
“Get out, you galoon!”
the captain growled, knocking the fellow unconscious
with the heavy barrel of his neuro. “Sort
’em out there. Moggins, Schkamitch.
On the double. You will share, according to rank.”
But eagerly as they searched, they
did not find Sira. Creeping between the legs
of the maddened reward seekers, she had fought clear,
had gained the shelter of a tall, red conical tree
whose closely laced branches pressed her to the ground,
clinging to the greasy trunk.
She realized that her sanctuary was
none too secure. There would surely be a methodical
search after the first excitement, and she would be
discovered. She had lost her sun-helmet, but nevertheless
she must risk making a break. A large proportion
of the people were wearing such helmets. Perhaps
she could snatch one.
But before such an opportunity came,
she saw a chance to dash to a nearby clump of shrubbery.
On the other side was a long hedge, leading to an
alley back of a group of warehouses. If she could
gain this alley, she felt sure she would be safe for
the time being.
All over the park, which was thirty
or forty acres in extent, there were minor riots,
as some unfortunate was mistaken for the princess
and blindly struggled for.
Sira lost no time. She scuttered
along the hedge like a frightened kangrat. But
as she crossed a small open space, a stentorian voice
shouted:
“There she is! That’s her! The
princess!”
Out of the corner of her eye she saw
him, running toward her lumberingly, his great arms
outspread. Tuman had been wrong in saying that
on all of Mars there was no man as big as Tolto.
This one was, and he looked more formidable.
Instead of Tolto’s normally good-natured face,
this one looked like an enraged terrestrial gorilla,
although at the moment it was really expressing joy
and eagerness.
Several other men joined the chase,
and then scores. They were fleeter of foot than
the ape-man, but as they passed him in the narrow alley
he smashed them to the pavement with casual blows of
his terrifying hands. Thereafter he was undisputedly
in the lead; the others content to follow in his rear,
although many were armed, and the giant was not.
This was an advantage to Sira.
The whole mob was slowed by the lumbering pace of
the ape-man, and she was able to keep in the lead
without difficulty. Several times some of her
pursuers ran ahead by other routes, intent on snatching
her into some doorway. But each time she slashed
at them with her sword, springing past.
She had not run very far when her
fear of another danger was realized. There was
a high, keen whistle overhead, and a scouting police
car flashed near. Under the neuro-pistols both
hounds and hare would be paralyzed, and she would
be easily taken. Sira longed for one of these
handy weapons herself, but they were too expensive:
she had been unable to secure one.
Now the police car was coming back.
The sliding forward door was drawn back, and a man
was leaning out, neuro alert. Judging the distance
expertly, he pulled the trigger, and a hundred men
fell unconscious.
“Got ’em!” he snapped
over his shoulder. “The princess as well.
Down quick!”
Sira, spared because of the officer’s
unwillingness to take a chance on injuring her, leaped
through a gap in a wall and sprinted through a garden
smothered with thick, leathery-leaved weeds, some of
them higher than her head. She almost laughed
with relief, but as she flitted around the corner
of a house toward the street she saw the gorilla faced
giant again in pursuit, and beyond the garden wall
the police ship was just settling to the ground.
It just seemed to be raining giants
that day. Sira ran out of a narrow gate at the
front of the house into the street, to be stopped by
a tremendous human framework as solid and unyielding
as a mountain. She stepped back, drew her sword
“Softly! Softly!”
a rumbling bass implored. “Doesn’t
the Princess Sira recognize her servant, Tolto?”
“Tolto!” All at once the
tautness went out of her, and Sira leaned against
the wall, divided between laughing and crying.
“Tolto and his good friends
were looking for you,” the big man rumbled anxiously.
“The teletabloids said there was a riot coming ”
He got no further. The gorilla-faced
pursuer catapulted himself sideways through the portal,
being too wide to go through in the regular way.
He emitted a raucous shout of triumph:
“I got her! It’s her, all right!
I claim ”
As he reached out his enormous sun-blackened
arm there was a thud that seemed to shake the ground.
Instantly enraged, the man’s little red-rimmed
eyes jerked quietly to the dealer of that shocking
blow. Then the conical little head sank between
the bulging shoulders, the long, thick arms bowed
outward, and the ape-man launched himself at Tolto.
That was a battle! On the one
side devotion, simple-minded loyalty and a fighting
heart in a body of such mechanical perfection as Mars
had never seen before or since. On the other
side a primal beast, just as huge, rage-driven, atavistic,
savage.
Fists as large as an average man’s
head, or larger, crashed against unprotected face
and body. Gigantic muscles rippled and crackled.
Blows echoed from wall to house and seemed to thud
against the hearts of the spectators.
It was as if time and memory had come
to a standstill. The present was not, nor present
ambitions and duties. The soldiers came plunging
out into the street, swords in their hands, but they
stopped to watch. Sime, Murray and Tuman, used
to instant and automatic battle, watched. A struggle
so titanic, by tacit, by unconsidered consent, must
be left to decide its own course.
Tolto seemed to be slowly gaining
an advantage. During his novitiate as a palace
guard the other men had instructed him in the science
of their pastime-fighting. Although he scorned
to guard against the blows of his savage antagonist,
he placed his own punches more shrewdly, more effectively.
The ape-faced one, through a red film, sensed that
he was being beaten, and that this fight would end
in death.
Suddenly he changed his tactics.
Rushing in, he threw his arms around Tolto’s
great torso. He opened his jaws, and his long
yellow fangs bit into the flesh of Tolto’s shoulder.
Tolto, taken slightly by surprise,
met this new menace promptly. Placing his powerful
forearm against the battered, hairy face, he attempted
to bend the head back. But it was so small, in
proportion, and so slippery with blood, that he was
unable to dislodge it.
So Tolto matched brute strength against
brute strength. His arms encircled his enemy’s
body, and the tremendous muscles of his shoulders
and body began to arch.
So they stood poised for a few seconds,
as if on the brink of eternity.
“Go-o-o-wie!” exclaimed one of the
soldiers, awed.
Slowly, like the agonizingly slow
plastic creep of metal under great pressure, the gorilla-faced
giant was yielding. His dark skin became mottled.
His breath came gaspingly. His rope-knotted arms
slipped a little.
But it was not in him to surrender,
which might still have saved his life. With a
vicious twisting motion of his head he tried to drag
his fangs through the thick muscles of Tolto’s
shoulder. The wound began to bleed more freely,
choking the savage at each labored breath.
Now Tolto began to walk forward.
Always his antagonist had to yield a little, unwillingly,
grudgingly, just enough to keep the paralyzing pressure
on his spine from becoming unbearable. And slowly,
inexorably, Tolto followed. His arms tightened.
His leg slipped suddenly between the ape-faced man’s
supports. Tolto grunted. The sound seemed
to labor upward from his innermost being, his body’s
protest as he called upon it for its last reserve of
strength.
Like an echo, there was a dull crack,
a brief, agonized moan from the ape-faced one; and
the savage, unknown giant slumped to the pavement,
dead with a broken back. Tolto staggered to the
wall, breathing deeply.
“Man, what a fight! What
a fight!” The young Martian captain passed
a shaking hand over his face. The battle had stirred
him more deeply than he wanted to admit. But
in a few seconds he came out of his mental maze.
“Attention! All right,
men, you’re under arrest. As for the girl ”
“As for the girl,” came
a clear feminine voice, as Sira stepped out from the
shelter of a buttress some dozen feet away, “ the
girl took advantage of your preoccupation to relieve
you of your neuros. As you see I have two of
them in my hand. The rest of them are over by
that wall. No! Don’t try to rush!
You are welcome to your swords, but they are useless
here.”