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<h2> 7. THE BITERS OF THE WALLS (FURTHER ACCOUNT) </h2>
<p>“You will set me free,” she said, regarding me from under her brows,
“without any further exactions or treaty?”</p>
<p>“I will set you free exactly on those terms,” I answered, “unless indeed
we here decide that it is better for Atlantis that I should die, in which
case the freedom will be of your own taking.”</p>
<p>“My lord plays a bold game.”</p>
<p>“Tut, tut,” I said.</p>
<p>“But I shall not hesitate to take the full of my bond, unless my theories
are most clearly disproved to me.”</p>
<p>“Tut,” I said, “you women, how you can play out the time needlessly. Show
me sufficient cause, and you shall kill me where and how you please. Come,
begin the accusation.”</p>
<p>“You are a tyrant.”</p>
<p>“At least I have not paraded my tyrannies in Atlantis these twenty years.
Why, Nais, I did but land yesterday.”</p>
<p>“You will not deny you came back from Yucatan for a purpose.”</p>
<p>“I came back because I was sent for. The Empress gives no reasons for her
recalls. She states her will; and we who serve her obey without question.”</p>
<p>“Pah, I know that old dogma.”</p>
<p>“If you discredit my poor honesty at the outset like this, I fear we shall
not get far with our unravelling.”</p>
<p>“My lord must be indeed simple,” said this strange woman scornfully, “if
he is ignorant of what all Atlantis knows.”</p>
<p>“Then simple you must write me down. Over yonder in Yucatan we were too
well wrapped up in our own parochial needs and policies to have leisure to
ponder much over the slim news which drifted out to us from Atlantis—and,
in truth, little enough came. By example, Phorenice (whose office be
adored) is a great personage here at home; but over there in the colony we
barely knew so much as her name. Here, since I have been ashore, I have
seen many new wonders; I have been carried by a riding mammoth; I have sat
at a banquet; but in what new policies there are afoot, I have yet to be
schooled.”</p>
<p>“Then, if truly you do not know it, let me repeat to you the common tale.
Phorenice has tired of her unmated life.”</p>
<p>“Stay there. I will hear no word against the Empress.”</p>
<p>“Pah, my lord, your scruples are most decorous. But I did no more than
repeat what the Empress had made public by proclamation. She is minded to
take to herself a husband, and nothing short of the best is good enough
for Phorenice. One after another has been put up in turn as favourite—and
been found wanting. Oh, I tell you, we here in Atlantis have watched her
courtship with jumping hearts. First it was this one here, then it was
that one there; now it was this general just returned from a victory, and
a day later he had been packed back to his camp, to give place to some
dashing governor who had squeezed increased revenues from his province.
But every ship that came from the West said that there was a stronger man
than any of these in Yucatan, and at last the Empress changed the wording
of her vow. ‘I’ll have Deucalion for my husband,’ said she, ‘and then we
will see who can stand against my wishes.’”</p>
<p>“The Empress (whose name be adored) can do as she pleases in such
matters,” I said guardedly; “but that is beside the argument. I am here to
know how it would be better for Atlantis that I should die?”</p>
<p>“You know you are the strongest man in the kingdom.”</p>
<p>“It pleases you to say so.”</p>
<p>“And Phorenice is the strongest woman.”</p>
<p>“That is beyond doubt.”</p>
<p>“Why, then, if the Empress takes you in marriage, we shall be under a
double tyranny. And her rule alone is more cruelly heavy than we can bear
already.”</p>
<p>“I pass no criticism on Phorenice’s rule. I have not seen it. But I crave
your mercy, Nais, on the newcomer into this kingdom. I am strong, say you,
and therefore I am a tyrant, say you. Now to me this sequence is faulty.”</p>
<p>“Who should a strong man use strength for, if not for himself? And if for
himself, why that spells tyranny. You will get all your heart’s desires,
my lord, and you will forget that many a thousand of the common people
will have to pay for them.”</p>
<p>“And this is all your accusation?”</p>
<p>“It seems to be black enough. I am one that has a compassion for my
fellow-men, my lord, and because of that compassion you see me what I am
to-day. There was a time, not long passed, when I slept as soft and ate as
dainty as any in Atlantis.”</p>
<p>I smiled. “Your speech told me that much from the first.”</p>
<p>“Then I would I had cast the speech off, too, if that is also a livery of
the tyrant’s class. But I tell you I saw all the oppression myself from
the oppressor’s side. I was high in Phorenice’s favour then.”</p>
<p>“That, too, is easy of credence. Ylga is the fan-girl to the Empress now,
and second lady in the kingdom, and those who have seen Ylga could make an
easy guess at the parentage of Nais.”</p>
<p>“We were the daughters of one birth; but I do not count with either Zaemon
or Ylga now. Ylga is the creature of Phorenice, and Phorenice would have
all the people of Atlantis slaves and in chains, so that she might crush
them the easier. And as for Zaemon, he is no friend of Phorenice’s; he
fights with brain and soul to drag the old authority to those on the
Sacred Mountain; and that, if it come down on us again, would only be the
exchange of one form of slavery for another.”</p>
<p>“It seems to me you bite at all authority.”</p>
<p>“In fact,” she said simply, “I do. I have seen too much of it.”</p>
<p>“And so you think a rule of no-rule would be best for the country?”</p>
<p>“You have put it plainly in words for me. That is my creed to-day. That is
the creed of all those yonder, who sit in the camp and besiege this city.
And we number on our side, now, all in Atlantis save those in the city and
a handful on the priests’ Mountain.”</p>
<p>I shook my head. “A creed of desperation, if you like, Nais, but, believe
me, a silly creed. Since man was born out of the quakings and the fevers
of this earth, and picked his way amongst the cooler-places, he has been
dependent always on his fellow-men. And where two are congregated
together, one must be chief, and order how matters are to be governed—at
least, I speak of men who have a wish to be higher than the beasts. Have
you ever set foot in Europe?”</p>
<p>“No.”</p>
<p>“I have. Years back I sailed there, gathering slaves. What did I see? A
country without rule or order. Tyrants they were, to be sure, but they
were the beasts. The men and the women were the rudest savages, knowing
nothing of the arts, dressing in skins and uncleanness, harbouring in
caves and the tree-tops. The beasts roamed about where they would, and
hunted them unchecked.”</p>
<p>“Still, they fought you for their liberty?”</p>
<p>“Never once. They knew how disastrous was their masterless freedom. Even
to their dull, savage brains it was a sure thing that no slavery could be
worse; and to that state you, and your friends, and your theories, will
reduce Atlantis, if you get the upper hand. But, then, to argue in a
circle, you will never get it. For to conquer, you must set up leaders,
and once you have set them up, you will never pull them down again.”</p>
<p>“Aye,” she said with a sigh, “there is truth in that last.”</p>
<p>The torch had filled the captain’s room with a resinous smoke, but the
flame was growing pale. Dawn was coming in greyly through a slender
arrow-slit, and with it ever and again the glow from some mountain out of
sight, which was shooting forth spasmodic bursts of fire. With it also
were mutterings of distant falling rocks, and sullen tremblings, which had
endured all the night through, and I judged that earth was in one of her
quaking moods, and would probably during the forthcoming day offer us some
chastening discomforts.</p>
<p>On this account, perhaps, my senses were stilled to certain evidences
which would otherwise have given me a suspicion; and also, there is no
denying that my general wakefulness was sapped by another matter. This
woman, Nais, interested me vastly out of the common; the mere presence of
her seemed to warm the organs of my interior; and whilst she was there,
all my thoughts and senses were present in the room of the captain of the
gate in which we sat.</p>
<p>But of a sudden the floor of the chamber rocked and fell away beneath me,
and in a tumult of dust, and litter, and bales of the captain’s plunder, I
fell down (still seated on the flagstone) into a pit which had been digged
beneath it. With the violence of the descent, and the flutter of all these
articles about my head, I was in no condition for immediate action; and
whilst I was still half-stunned by the shock, and long before I could get
my eyes into service again, I had been seized, and bound, and
half-strangled with a noose of hide. Voices were raised that I should be
despatched at once out of the way; but one in authority cried out that,
killing me at leisure, and as a prisoner, promised more genteel sport; and
so I was thrust down on the floor, whilst a whole army of men trod in over
me to the attack.</p>
<p>What had happened was clear to me now, though I was powerless to do
anything in hindrance. The rebels with more craft than any one had
credited to them, had driven a galley from their camp under the ground,
intending so to make an entrance into the heart of the city. In their
clumsy ignorance, and having no one of sufficient talent in mensuration,
they had bungled sadly both in direction and length, and so had ended
their burrow under this chamber of the captain of the gate. The great
flagstone in its fall had, it appeared, crushed four of them to death, but
these were little noticed or lamented. Life was to them a bauble of the
slenderest price, and a horde of others pressed through the opening,
lusting for the fight, and recking nothing of their risks and perils.</p>
<p>Half-choked by the foul air of the galley, and trodden on by this great
procession of feet, it was little enough I could do to help my immediate
self much less the more distant city. But when the chief mass of the
attackers had passed through, and there came only here and there one eager
to take his share at storming the gate, a couple of fellows plucked me up
out of the mud on the floor, and began dragging me down through the
stinking darkness of the galley towards the pit that gave it entrance.</p>
<p>Twenty times we were jostled by others hastening to the attack, either
from hunger for fight, or from appetite for what they could steal. But we
came to the open at last, and half-suffocated though I was, I contrived to
do obeisance, and say aloud the prescribed prayer to the most High Gods in
gratitude for the fresh, sweet air which They had provided.</p>
<p>Our Lord the Sun was on the verge of rising for His day, and all things
were plainly shown. Before me were the monstrous walls of the capital,
with the heads of its pyramids and higher buildings showing above them.
And on the walls, the sentries walked calmly their appointed paces, or
took shelter against arrows in the casemates provided for them.</p>
<p>The din of fighting within the gate rose high into the air, and the heavy
roaring of the cave-tigers told that they too were taking their share of
the melee. But the massive stonework of the walls hid all the actual
engagement from our view, and which party was getting the upper hand we
could not even guess. But the sounds told how tight a fight was being
hammered out in those narrow boundaries, and my veins tingled to be once
more back at the old trade, and to be doing my share.</p>
<p>But there was no chivalry about the fellows who held me by my bonds. They
thrust me into a small temple near by, which once had been a fane in much
favour with travellers, who wished to show gratitude for the safe journey
to the capital, but which now was robbed and ruined, and they swung to the
stone entrance gate and barred it, leaving me to commune with myself.
Presently, they told me, I should be put to death by torments. Well, this
seemed to be the new custom of Atlantis, and I should have to endure it as
best I could. The High Gods, it appeared, had no further use for my
services in Atlantis, and I was not in the mood then to bite very much at
their decision. What I had seen of the country since my return had not
enamoured me very much with its new conditions.</p>
<p>The little temple in which I was gaoled had been robbed and despoiled of
all its furnishments. But the light-slits, where at certain hours of the
day the rays of our Lord the Sun had fallen upon the image of the God,
before this had been taken away, gave me vantage places from which I could
see over the camp of these rebel besiegers, and a dreary prospect it was.
The people seemed to have shucked off the culture of centuries in as many
months, and to have gone back for the most part to sheer brutishness. The
majority harboured on the bare ground. Few owned shelter, and these were
merely bowers of mud and branches.</p>
<p>They fought and quarrelled amongst themselves for food, eating their meat
raw, and their grain (when they had it) unground. Many who passed my
vision I saw were even gnawing the soft inside of tree bark.</p>
<p>The dead lay where they fell. The sick and the wounded found no hand to
tend them. Great man-eating birds hovered about the camp or skulked about,
heavy with gorging, amongst the hovels, and no one had public spirit
enough to give them battle. The stink of the place rose up to heaven as a
foul incense inviting a pestilence. There was no order, no trace of strong
command anywhere. With three hundred well-disciplined troops it seemed to
me that I could have sent those poor desperate hordes flying in panic to
the forest.</p>
<p>However, there was no very lengthy space of time granted me for thinking
out the policy of this matter to any great depth. The attack on the gate
had been delivered with suddenness; the repulse was not slow. Of what
desperate fighting took place in the galleries, and in the circus between
the two sets of gates, the detail will never be told in full.</p>
<p>At the first alarm the great cave-tigers were set loose, and these raged
impartially against keeper and foe. Of those that went in through the
tunnel, not one in ten returned, and there were few of these but what
carried a bloody wound. Some, with the ruling passion still strong in
them, bore back plunder; one trailed along with him the head of the
captain of the gate; and amongst them they dragged out two of the warders
who were wounded, and whom revenge had urged them to take as prisoners.</p>
<p>Over these two last a hubbub now arose, that seemed likely to boil over
into blows. Every voice shouted out for them what he thought the most
repulsive fate. Some were for burning, some for skinning, some for
impaling, some for other things: my flesh crept as I heard their ravenous
yells. Those that had been to the trouble of making them captive were
still breathless from the fight, and were readily thrust aside; and it
seemed to me that the poor wretches would be hustled into death before any
definite fate was agreed upon, which all would pass as sufficiently
terrific. Never had I seen such a disorderly tumult, never such a
leaderless mob. But, as always has happened, and always will, the stronger
men by dint of louder voices and more vigorous shoulders got their plans
agreed to at last, and the others perforce had to give way.</p>
<p>A band of them set off running, and presently returned at snails’ pace,
dragging with them (with many squeals from ungreased wheels) one of those
huge war engines with which besiegers are wont to throw great stones and
other missiles into the cities they sit down against. They ran it up just
beyond bowshot of the walls, and clamped it firmly down with stakes and
ropes to the earth. Then setting their lean arms to the windlasses, they
drew back the great tree which formed the spring till its tethering place
reached the ground, and in the cradle at its head they placed one of the
prisoners, bound helplessly, so that he could not throw himself over the
side.</p>
<p>Then the rude, savage, skin-clad mob stood back, and one who had appointed
himself engineer knocked back the catch that held the great spring in
place.</p>
<p>With a whir and a twang the elastic wood flung upwards, and the bound man
was shot away from its tip with the speed of a lightning flash. He sang
through the air, spinning over and over with inconceivable rapidity, and
the great crowd of rebels held their breath in silence as they watched. He
passed high above the city wall, a tiny mannikin in the distance now, and
then the trajectory of his flight began to lower. The spike of a new-built
pyramid lay in the path of his terrific flight, and he struck it with a
thud whose sound floated out to us afterwards, and then he toppled down
out of our sight, leaving a red stain on the whiteness of the stone as he
fell.</p>
<p>With a roar the crowd acknowledged the success of their device, and
bellowed out insults to Phorenice, and insults to the Gods: a poor frantic
crowd they showed themselves. And then with ravening shouts, they fell
upon the other captive warder, binding him also into a compact helpless
missile, and meanwhile getting the engine in gear again for another shot.</p>
<p>But for my part I saw nothing of this disgusting scene. I heard the bolt
grate stealthily against the door of the little temple in which I was
imprisoned, and was minded to give these brutish rebels somewhat of a
surprise. I had rid myself of my bonds handily enough; I had rubbed my
limbs to that perfect suppleness which is always desirable before a fight;
and I had planned to rush out so soon as the door was swung, and kill
those that came first with fist blows on the brow and chin.</p>
<p>They had not suspected my name, it was clear, for my stature and garb were
nothing out of the ordinary; but if my bodily strength and fighting power
had been sufficient to raise me to a vice-royalty like that of Yucatan,
and let me endure alive in that government throughout twenty hard-battling
years, why, it was likely that this rabble of savages would see something
that was new and admirable in the practice of arms before the crude weight
of their numbers could drag me down. Nay, I did not even despair of
winning free altogether. I must find me a weapon from those that came up
to battle, with which I could write worthy signatures, and I must attempt
no standing fights. Gods! but what a glow the prospect did send through me
as I stood there waiting.</p>
<p>A vainer man, writing history, might have said that always, before
everything else, he held in mind the greater interests before the less.
But for me—I prefer to be honest, and own myself human. In my glee
at that forthcoming fight—which promised to be the greatest and most
furious I had known in all a long life of battling—I will confess
that Atlantis and her differing policies were clean forgot. I should go
out an unknown man from the little cell of a temple, I should do my work,
and then, whether I took freedom with me, or whether I came down at last
myself on a pile of slain, these people would guess without being told the
name, that here was Deucalion. Gods! what a fight we would have made!</p>
<p>But the door did not open wide to give me space for my first rush. It
creaked gratingly outwards on its pivots, and a slim hand and a white arm
slipped inside, beckoning me to quietude. Here was some woman. The door
creaked wider, and she came inside.</p>
<p>“Nais,” I said.</p>
<p>“Silence, or they will hear you, and remember. At present those who
brought you here are killed, and unless by chance some one blunders into
this robbed shrine, you will not be found.”</p>
<p>“Then, if that is so, let me go out and walk amongst these people as one
of themselves.”</p>
<p>She shook her head.</p>
<p>“But, Nais, I am not known here. I am merely a man in very plain and
mud-stained robe. I should be in no ways remarkable.”</p>
<p>A smile twitched her face. “My lord,” she said, “wears no beard; and his
is the only clean chin in the camp.”</p>
<p>I joined in her laugh. “A pest on my want of foppishness then. But I am
forgetting somewhat. It comes to my mind that we still have unfinished
that small discussion of ours concerning the length of my poor life. Have
you decided to cut it off from risk of further mischief, or do you propose
to give me further span?”</p>
<p>She turned to me with a look of sharp distress. “My lord,” she said, “I
would have you forget that silly talk of mine. This last two hours I
thought you were dead in real truth.”</p>
<p>“And you were not relieved?”</p>
<p>“I felt that the only man was gone out of the world—I mean, my lord,
the only man who can save Atlantis.”</p>
<p>“Your words give me a confidence. Then you would have me go back and
become husband to Phorenice?”</p>
<p>“If there is no other way.”</p>
<p>“I warn you I shall do that, if she still so desires it, and if it seems
to me that that course will be best. This is no hour for private likings
or dislikings.”</p>
<p>“I know it,” she said, “I feel it. I have no heart now, save only for
Atlantis. I have schooled myself once more to that.”</p>
<p>“And at present I am in this lone little box of a temple. A minute ago,
before you came, I had promised myself a pretty enough fight to signalise
my changing of abode.”</p>
<p>“There must be nothing of that. I will not have these poor people
slaughtered unnecessarily. Nor do I wish to see my lord exposed to a
hopeless risk. This poor place, such as it is, has been given to me as an
abode, and, if my lord can remain decorously till nightfall in a maiden’s
chamber, he may at least be sure of quietude. I am a person,” she added
simply, “that in this camp has some respect. When darkness comes, I will
take my lord down to the sea and a boat, and so he may come with ease to
the harbour and the watergate.”</p>
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