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<h2> 3. A RIVAL NAVY </h2>
<p>Now, when we came up with the coasts of Atlantis, though Tob, with the aid
of his modern instruments, had made his landfall with most marvellous
skill and nearness, there still remained some ten days’ more journey in
which we had to retrace our course, till we came to that arm of the sea up
which lies the great city of Atlantis, the capital.</p>
<p>The sight of the land, and the breath of earth and herbage which came off
from it with the breezes, were, I believe, under the Gods, the means of
saving the lives of all of us. For, as is necessary with long cross-ocean
voyages, many of our ships’ companies had died, and still more were sick
with scurvy through the unnatural tossing, or (as some have it) through
the salt, unnatural food inseparable from shipboard. But these last, the
sight and the smells of land heartened up in extraordinary fashion, and
from being helpless logs, unable to move even under blows of the scourge,
they became active again, able to help in the shipwork, and lusty (when
the time came) to fight for their lives and their vessels.</p>
<p>From the moment that I was deposed in Yucatan, despite Tatho’s assurances,
there had been doubts in my mind as to what nature would be my reception
in Atlantis. But I had faced this event of the future without concern: it
was in the hands of the Gods. The Empress Phorenice might be supreme on
earth; she might cause my head to be lopped from its proper shoulders the
moment I set foot ashore; but my Lord the Sun was above Phorenice, and if
my head fell, it would be because He saw best that it should be so. On
which account, therefore, I had not troubled myself about the matter
during the voyage, but had followed out my calm study of the higher
mysteries with an unloaded mind.</p>
<p>But when our navy had retraced sufficiently the course that had been
overrun, and came up with the two vast headlands which marked the entrance
to the inland waters, there, a bare two days from the Atlantis capital, we
met with another navy which was, beyond doubt, waiting to give us a
reception. The ships were riding at anchor in a bay which lent them
shelter, but they had scouts on the high land above, who cried the alarm
of our approach, and when we rounded the headland, they were standing out
to dispute our passage.</p>
<p>Of us there were now but five ships, the rest having been lost in storms,
or fallen behind because all their crews were dead from the scurvy; and of
the strangers there were three fine ships, and three galleys of many oars
apiece. They were clean and bright and black; our ships were storm-ragged
and weather-worn, and had bottoms that were foul with trailing ocean weed.
Our ships hung out the colours and signs of Tatho and Deucalion openly and
without shame, so that all who looked might know their origin and errand;
but the other navy came on without banner or antient, as though they were
some low creatures feeling shame for their birth.</p>
<p>Clear it seemed also that they would not let us pass without a fight, and
in this there was nothing uncommon; for no law carries out over the seas,
and a brother in one ship feels quite free to harry his brother in another
vessel if he meets him out of earshot of the beach—more especially
if that other brother be coming home laden from foray or trading tour. So
Tob, with system and method, got our vessel into fighting trim, and the
other four captains did the like with theirs, and drew close in to us to
form a compact squadron. They had no wish to smell slavery, now that the
voyage had come so near to its end.</p>
<p>Our Lord the Sun shone brilliantly, giving full speed to the machines, as
though He was fully willing for the affair to proceed, and the two navies
approached one another with quickness, the three galleys holding back to
stay in line with their consorts. But when some bare hundred ship-lengths
separated us, the other navy halted, and one of the galleys, drawing
ahead, flew green branches from her masts, seeking for a parley.</p>
<p>The course was unusual, but we, in our sea-battered state, were no navy to
invite a fight unnecessarily. So in hoarse sea-bawls word was passed, and
we too halted, and Tob hoisted a withered stick (which had to do duty for
greenery), to show that we were ready for talk, and would respect the
person of an ambassador.</p>
<p>The galley drew on, swung round, and backed till its stern rasped on our
shield rail, and one of her people clambered up and jumped down upon our
decks. He was a dandily rigged-out fellow, young and lusty, and all
healthy from the land and land victual, and he looked round him with a
sneer at our sea-tatteredness, and with a fine self-confidence. Then,
seeing Tob, he nodded as one meets an acquaintance. “Old pot-mate,” he
said, “your woman waits for you up by the quay-side in Atlantis yonder,
with four youngsters at her heels. I saw her not half a month ago.”</p>
<p>“You didn’t come out here to tell me home news,” said Tob; “that I’ll be
sworn. I’ve drunk enough pots with you, Dason, to know your pleasantries
thoroughly.”</p>
<p>“I wanted to point out to you that your home is still there, with your
wife and children ready to welcome you.”</p>
<p>“I am not a man that ever forgets it,” said Tob grimly; “and because I’ve
got them always at the back of my mind, I’ve sailed this ship over the top
of more than one pirate, when, if I’d been a single man, I might have been
e’en content to take the hap of slavery.”</p>
<p>“Oh, I know you’re a desperate enough fellow,” said Dason, “and I’m free
to confess that if it does come to blows we are like to lose a few men
before we get you and your cripples here, and your crazy ships comfortably
sunk. Our navy has its orders to carry out, and the cause of my embassage
is this: we wish to see if you will act the sensible part and give us what
we want, and so be permitted to go on your way home, with a skin that is
unslit and dry?”</p>
<p>“You have come to the wrong bird here for a plucking,” said Tob with a
heavy laugh. “We took no treasure or merchandise on board in Yucatan. We
stayed in harbour long enough to cure our sea victual and fill with food
and water, and no longer. We sail back as we sailed out, barren ships. You
will not believe me, of course; I would not have believed you had our
places been changed; but you may go into the holds and search if you
choose. You will find there nothing but a few poor sailormen half in
pieces with the scurvy. No, you can steal nothing here but blows, Dason,
and we will give you those with but little asking.”</p>
<p>“I am glad to see that you state your cargo at such slender value,” said
the envoy, “for it is the cargo I must take back with me on the galley, if
you are to earn your safe conduct to home.”</p>
<p>Tob knit his brows. “You had better speak more plain,” he said. “I am a
common sailor, and do not understand fancy talk.”</p>
<p>“It is clear to see,” said Dason, “that you have been set to bring
Deucalion back to Atlantis as a prop for Phorenice. Well, we others find
Phorenice hard enough to fight against without further reinforcements, and
so we want Deucalion in our own custody to deal with after our own
fashion.”</p>
<p>“And if I do the miser, and deny you this piece of my freight?”</p>
<p>The spruce envoy looked round at the splintered ship, and the battered
navy beside her. “Why, then, Tob, we shall send you all to the fishes in
very short time, and instead of Deucalion standing before the Gods alone,
he will go down with a fine ragged company limping at his heels.”</p>
<p>“I doubt it,” said Tob, “but we shall see. As for letting you have my Lord
Deucalion, that is out of the question. For see here, pot-mate Dason; in
the first place, if I went to Atlantis without Deucalion, my other lord,
Tatho, would come back one of these days, and in his hands I should die by
the slowest of slow inches; in the second, I have seen my Lord Deucalion
kill a great sea lizard, and he showed himself such a proper man that day
that I would not give him up against his will, even to Tatho himself; and
in the third place, you owe me for your share in our last wine-bout
ashore, and I’ll see you with the nether Gods before I give you aught till
you’ve settled that score.”</p>
<p>“Well, Tob, I hope you’ll drown easy. As for that wife of yours, I’ve
always had a fancy for her myself, and I shall know how to find a use for
the woman.”</p>
<p>“I’ll draw your neck for that, you son of a European,” said Tob; “and if
you do not clear off this deck I’ll draw it here. Go,” he cried, “you
father of monkey children! Get away, and let me fight you fairly, or by my
honour I’ll stamp the inwards out of you, and make your silly crew wear
them as necklaces.”</p>
<p>Upon which Dason went to his galley.</p>
<p>Promptly Tob set going the machine on our own “Bear,” and bawled his
orders right and left to the other ships. The crew might be weak with
scurvy, but they were quick to obey. Instantly the five vessels were all
started, and because our Lord the Sun was shining brightly, got soon to
the full of their pace. The whole of our small navy converged, singling
out one ship of their opponents, and she, not being ready for so swift an
attack, got flurried, and endeavoured to turn and run for room, instead of
trying to meet us bows on. As a consequence, the whole of our five ships
hit her together on the broadside, tearing her planking with their
underwater beaks, and sinking her before we had backed clear from the
engage.</p>
<p>But if we thus brought the enemy’s number down to five, and so equal to
our own, the advantage did not remain with us for long. The three nimble
galleys formed into line: their boatswains’ whips cracked as the slaves
bent to their oars, and presently one of our own ships was gored and sunk,
the men on her being killed in the water without hope of rescue.</p>
<p>And then commenced a tight-locked melee that would have warmed the heart
of the greatest warrior alive. The ships and the galleys were forced
together and lay savagely grinding one another upon the swells, as though
they had been sentient animals. The men on board them shot their arrows,
slashed with axes, thrust and hacked with swords, and hurled the throwing
fire. But in every way the fight converged upon the “Bear.” It was on her
that the enemy spent the fiercest of their spite; it was to the “Bear,”
that the other crews of Tatho’s navy rallied as their own vessels caught
fire, or were sunk or taken.</p>
<p>Battle is an old acquaintance with us of the Priestly Clan, and for those
of us who have had to carve out territories for the new colonies, it comes
with enough frequency to cloy even the most chivalrous appetite. So I can
speak here as a man of experience. Up till that time, for half a
life-span, I had heard men shout “Deucalion” as a battlecry, and in my day
had seen some lusty encounters. But this sea-fight surprised even me in
its savage fierceness. The bleak, unstable element which surrounded us;
the swaying decks on which we fought; the throwing fire, which burnt flesh
and wood alike with its horrid flame; the great gluttonous man-eating
birds that hovered in the sky overhead; the man-eating fish that swarmed
up from the seas around, gnawing and quarrelling over those that fell into
the waters, all went to make up a circumstance fit to daunt the bravest
men-at-arms ever gathered for an army.</p>
<p>But these tarry shipmen faced it all with an indomitable courage, and
never a cry of quailing. Life on the seas is so hard, and (from the beasts
that haunt the great waters) so full of savage dangers, that Death has
lost half his terrors to them through sheer familiarity. They were fellows
who from pure lust for a fray would fight to a finish amongst themselves
in the taverns ashore; and so here, in this desperate sea-battle, the
passion for killing burned in them, as a fire stone from Heaven rages in a
forest; and they took even their death-wounds laughing.</p>
<p>On our side the battle-cry was “Tob!” and the name of this obscure
ship-captain seemed to carry a confidence with it for our own crews that
many a well-known commander might have envied. The enemy had a dozen
rallying cries, and these confused them. But as their other
ship-commanders one by one were killed, and Dason remained, active with
mischief, “Dason!” became the shout which was thrown back at us in
response to our “Tob!”</p>
<p>However, I will not load my page with farther long account of this obscure
sea-fight, whose only glory was its ferocity. One by one all the ships of
either side were sunk or lay with all their people killed, till finally
only Dason’s galley and our own “Bear” were left. For the moment we were
being mastered. We had a score of men remaining out of all those that
manned the navy when it sailed from Yucatan, and the enemy had boarded us
and made the decks of the “Bear” the field of battle. But they had been
over busy with the throwing fire, and presently, as we raged at one
another, the smoke and the flame from the sturdy vessel herself let us
very plainly know that she was past salvation.</p>
<p>But Tob was nothing daunted. “They may stay here and fry if they choose,”
he shouted with his great boisterous laugh, “but for ourselves the galley
is good enough now. Keep a guard on Deucalion, and come with me,
shipmates!”</p>
<p>“Tob!” our fellows shouted in their ecstasy of fighting madness, and I too
could not forbear sending out a “Tob!” for my battle-cry. It was a change
for me not to be leader, but it was a luxury for once to fight in the wake
of this Tob, despite his uncouthness of mien and plan. There was no
stopping this new rush, though progress still was slow. Tob with his
bloody axe cut the road in front, and we others, with the lust of battle
filling us to the chin, raged like furies in his wake. Gods! but it was a
fight.</p>
<p>Ten of us won to the galley, with the flames and the smoke from the poor
“Bear” spurting at our heels. We turned and stabbed madly at all who tried
to follow, and hacked through the grapples that held the vessels to their
embrace. The sea-swells spurned the “Bear” away.</p>
<p>The slaves chained to the rowing-galley’s benches had interest neither one
way nor the other, and looked on the contest with dull concern, save when
some stray missile found a billet amongst them. But a handful of the
fighting men had scrambled desperately on board the galley after us,
preferring any fate to a fiery death on the “Bear,” and these had to be
dealt with promptly. Three, with their fighting fury still red-hot in
them, had most wastefully to be killed out of mischief’s way; five, who
had pitched their weapons into the sea, were chained to oar looms, in
place of slaves who were dead; and there remained only Dason to have a
fate apportioned.</p>
<p>The fight had cooled out of him, and he had thrown his arms to the sea,
and stood sullenly ready for what might befall; and to him Tob went up
with an exulting face.</p>
<p>“Ho, pot-mate Dason,” cried he, “you made a lot of talk an hour ago about
that woman of mine, who lives with her brats on the quay-side in Atlantis
yonder. Now, I’ll give you a pleasant choice; either I’ll take you along
home, and tell her what you said before the whole ship’s company (that are
for the most part dead now, poor souls!), and I’ll leave her to perform on
your carcase as she sees fit by way of payment; or, as the other choice,
I’ll deal with you here now myself.”</p>
<p>“I thank you for the chance,” said Dason, and knelt and offered his neck
to the axe. So Tob cut off his head, sticking it on the galley’s beak as
an advertisement of what had been done. The body he threw over the side,
and one of the great man-eating birds that hovered near, picked it up and
flew away with it to its nest amongst the crags. And so we were free to
get a meal of the fruits and the fresh meats which the galley offered,
whilst the oar-slaves sent the galley rushing onwards towards the capital.</p>
<p>There was a wine-skin in the after-castle, and I filled a horn and poured
some out at Tob’s feet in salutation. “My man,” I said, “you have shown me
a fight.”</p>
<p>“Thanks,” said he, “and I know you are a judge. ‘Twas pretty whilst it
lasted; and, seeing that my lads were, for the most, scurvy-rotten, I will
say they fought with credit. I have lost my Lord Tatho’s navy, but I think
Phorenice will see me righted there. If those that are against her took so
much trouble to kill my Lord Deucalion before he could come to her aid, I
can fancy she will not be niggard in her joy when I put Deucalion safe, if
somewhat dented and blood-bespattered, on the quay.”</p>
<p>“The Gods know,” I said, for it is never my custom to discuss policies
with my inferiors, even though etiquette be for the moment loosened, as
ours was then by the thrill of battle. “The Gods will decide what is best
for you, Tob, even as they have decided that it is best that I should go
on to Atlantis.”</p>
<p>The sailor held a horn filled from the wine-skin in his hand, and I think
was minded to pour a libation at my feet, even as I had done at his. But
he changed his mind, and emptied it down his throat instead. “It is
thirsty work, this fighting,” he said, “and that drink comes very useful.”</p>
<p>I put my hand on his blood-smeared arm. “Tob,” I said, “whether I step
into power again, or whether I go to the block to-morrow, is another
matter which the Gods alone know, but hear me tell you now, that if a
chance is given me of showing my gratitude, I shall not forget the way you
have served me in this voyage, and the way you have fought this day.”</p>
<p>Tob filled another brimming horn from the wine-skin and splashed it at my
feet. “That’s good enough surety for me,” he said, “that my woman and
brats never want from this day onward. The Lord Deucalion for the block,
indeed!”</p>
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