<h2 id="c15"><i>15</i> <br/><span class="small">a new game</span></h2>
<p>But with Lilla’s love and trust, I could not
despair. As I kissed her good night, with
her warm throbbing girlish body held fast
in my arms, a single star shone down upon us for an instant,
through a rift in the circumambient clouds. Was it my own
planet, the earth? I wondered.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_111">111</div>
<p>During the succeeding days I saw much of Lilla and nothing
of Bthuh. And ever I racked my brains for an idea which
would point the way out of my difficulties. My only hope was
to perform such a distinguished service for my adopted country
that the king would relent, would forgive me, and would promote
me to the rank of sarkar.</p>
<p>The most distinguished service which a Cupian can render
is to invent a new and popular game, so I set about to do something
in that line. And at last the idea came, a whiz of an
idea! As Hah Babbuh, head of the Department of Mechanics,
had advised me to seek this means of distinction, so it was to
him that I first confided my plans.</p>
<p>At my request, Prince Toron, who had aided me so efficiently
in devising my radio set in the laboratories of Mooni, was detailed
to assist me in this new endeavor. He and a young draftsman
and a young chemist set to work with me to build the
new game.</p>
<p>And what was this new game? Target shooting with army
rifles. Explosives were already known on Poros, being used
for blasting and for airplane bombs. With the aid of the young
chemist, I adapted these explosives to be sufficiently slow
burning to drive a rifle-bullet without injuring the gun.</p>
<p>In a surprisingly short time we had turned out a crude rifle
which would actually shoot. The heads of the Mathematics
and Astronomy Departments, Ja Babbuh and Buh Tedn, were
then let in on the secret, for the purpose of computing trajectories
and designing the sights and wind leaf, which they did
by an adaption of the principles employed in computing the
orbits of celestial bodies.</p>
<p>A hundred and forty-seven rifles were then turned out and
presented to my athletic club.</p>
<p>My club tried out the rifles; and, when at last they began to
get bull’s-eyes, they went wild over the new sport. The king
heard, and relented sufficiently to send for me and compliment
me.</p>
<p>After being thoroughly tried out in my hundred, rifle shooting
was next introduced into the clubs to which my three
assistants belonged, and became popular there, as well. The
idea spread, and soon all the clubs throughout the kingdom
were clamoring for guns. The mechanical laboratory at Kuana
was made over into a huge arsenal, and the chemical laboratory
into a huge munitions factory, while the athletic clubs of
Kuana and the vicinity detailed some of their members to work
overtime in my two plants. The Cupians will always work
overtime in the cause of play.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_112">112</div>
<p>Target practice soon became the national sport of Cupia. The
craze even reached such dimensions that Queen Formis finally
dispatched a special mission to Kuana to study the movement
and report whether it could not be put to some practical use.
The report of that mission is now one of my most treasured
possessions, and a framed reproduction of their conclusions now
hangs upon my office wall.</p>
<p>The ant mission concluded, and so reported to their queen,
that the new game had absolutely no practical application, but
that if it kept the crazy Cupians quiet and took their minds
off their troubles, it might prove a valuable contribution toward
simplifying the enforcement of the treaty of Mooni. And so,
indeed, it seemed. Toron neglected politics to become a proficient
shot, and his anti-Formian movement rapidly subsided.
All of which was exactly as I had planned.</p>
<p>The collapse of the Toron movement so pleased the exiled
Prince Yuri that he sent a special ambassador to his brother,
offering to assist in introducing the new sport to the Cupians
at Mooni. But “I fear the Greeks even when ferrying doughnuts,”
as we used to say at Harvard. So Yuri’s kind offer was
declined. We did, however, present a sample rifle and some
of our powder to the authorities of the Imperial University of
the ant-men at their request, for we could not very well refuse.</p>
<p>Finally King Kew himself condescended to sit in at the
conferences between Hah Babbuh, Bub Tedn, Ja Babbuh,
Toron, and myself. He had been brooding a good deal recently
on the indignities inflicted on his people by Queen Formis,
with whom he had had several disputes lately; and the committee-work
seemed to divert and cheer him up greatly. But
still I was not made a sarkar, although I learned from Lilla
that Hah Babbuh had urged this on the king. The influence
of Bthuh Sarkari was still too strong. In fact, it was rumored
that she now aspired to make herself Queen of Cupia.</p>
<p>Well, I did not mind. Better even one of <i>her</i> sons on the
throne than Yuri!</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_113">113</div>
<p>Having got the new game well under way, I next turned to
my old love, radio. First I obtained some stones from the
Howling Valley, which was easy, because of my deafness to
radio-waves; but I was unable to put them to any practical use.
Then I devised a simple wave trap for absorbing the ordinary
carrying waves of Porovian speech. Also I arranged a variable
condenser, which could so alter the capacity of the Cupian antennae
that selective sending and reception were possible.</p>
<p>These two devices were combined in a small box which
could easily be carried on a man’s head and be coupled to his
antennae. My third invention on these lines was a broadcasting
set, whereby the normal Cupian sending range of four parastads—about
fifty yards—was increased to half a stad—about
half a mile.</p>
<p>And now, in my frantic quest for a sarkarship, I introduced
a still further new game, namely marching evolutions on an
extended scale. Strictly speaking, this was really an adaptation
of an old game, rather than the creation of a new, for marching
formations had always been popular in Cupia; but my
three new radio devices made it possible to perform these
evolutions by twelves of thousands.</p>
<p>We tried it out in our own twelve thousand. The commander
broadcast his orders to the selectively tuned headsets of the
eklats, and they in turn to the pootahs, each of whom then
directed his hundred at ordinary wave length. The regimental
evolutions went through like clockwork, and <i>this</i> idea spread
to the other twelve thousands of the country.</p>
<p>But still I was not made a sarkar.</p>
<p>I then turned my attention to the construction of two huge
engines, one of which we mounted on a kerkool and one on a
concrete base in the courtyard of the university machine shop.
The purpose of these engines was for the present kept secret.
But I had a feeling that they would win me the sarkarship, even
if everything else failed.</p>
<p>As a result of my inventions, King Kew sufficiently unbent
to invite me to occupy the reviewing stand with him on Peace
Day, when the annual athletic prize-giving was to take place.
This was a signal honor which even sarkars might envy, but it
was not a sarkarship.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_114">114</div>
<p>The morning of the five hundredth anniversary of the Peace
of Mooni—three hundred and fifty-eight in Porovian notation—dawned
clear and dazzling. By 460 o’clock—9:00 o’clock in
earth time—the whole plaza and the fields beyond were
jammed with marching clubs.</p>
<p>The Minister of Play, who stood with me on the reviewing
platform at the crest of University Hill—along with the rest
of the cabinet, Prince Toron, and a few leading nobles and
professors—sadly remarked that he was afraid the maneuvers
would have to be given up.</p>
<p>I replied with a smile that I guessed not; though he was
unable to figure out how evolutions could be possible with that
huge crowd.</p>
<p>Pistol shooting had recently been introduced as a tentative
subject for next year’s games, and our committee of five all
wore revolvers strapped to our sides, as a special badge in
recognition of our responsibility for the gala occasion.</p>
<p>The housetops and roads were crowded with Cupian femininity.
All was ready for the grand opening. I adjusted the
controls of the big sending set, and dispatched Poblath, who
had been detailed as my aide for the day, to inform the king
that the time had arrived for his address.</p>
<p>As King Kew XII stepped up on the stand, at just 500 o’clock—10:00
in earth time—practically the entire male population
of Cupia gave him the United States Army present arms in
absolute unison. It was an inspiring sight.</p>
<p>I noticed that the king seemed extremely pale and nervous,
but I did not give this much thought at the time.</p>
<p>Then I yielded the sending set to him, and he began his
speech of welcome, a very different speech from what had been
expected, but one which will go down in history, and which
every Cupian school boy throughout the ages will commit to
memory, as American boys do the Gettysburg Address.</p>
<p>Thus spoke King Kew: “Three hundred and fifty-eight years
ago today our forefathers submitted to the indignities of the
treaty of Mooni, and the stigma of that infamous treaty attached
to the Kew dynasty, which was then founded. For
twelve generations, Cupia has been under the dominion of a
race of animals—animals possessed of human intelligence, it
is true, but still merely lower animals.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_115">115</div>
<p>“Now the parth of our deliverance is at hand. Those rifles
which you hold were designed not for play, but rather for the
killing of Formians. The bullets which have been issued to
you this day contain the highest explosive known to Porovian
science. With these weapons you are invincible. Today, with
your support, Cupia will become free, and the Kew Dynasty
will wipe out forever the stigma of its birth.</p>
<p>“Are you men or slaves? If you be slaves, you will bow to
Formis, your sons and descendants forever will wearily serve
out their time in her workshops, she will have veto power over
all your laws, your present king will give his body as food for
her maggots, and your future kings will cower before her. But
if you be men, you will today offer up your lives for your country,
that Cupia may at last be free!”</p>
<p>A murmur, as of an angry sea, arose from the crowd and
smote upon my antennae. The sporting nature of the proposition
appealed to them fully as much as any sentiments of
patriotism.</p>
<p>The king turned to me. I saluted. And, in front of that huge
assemblage, he pinned upon my breast the long-forgotten insignia
of field marshal of the armies of a nation. Simultaneously
Prince Toron and the three professors displayed the
insignia of general. Hah Babbuh stepped to my side as my chief
of staff, while the other three donned their selective tuners and
descended from the platform to take command of their several
corps. The stage was all set for the final denouement.</p>
<p>The king spoke again: “Let all Cupians who are willing to
die for king and country raise their hands aloft.”</p>
<p>Up shot every hand on the hill and plain below.</p>
<p>I seized the phones and shouted: “Then forward into ant
land, for Cupia, King Kew, and Princess Lilla!”</p>
<p>“For Cupia, King Kew, and Princess Lilla!” shouted my
army in reply and the march toward Formia began.</p>
<p>But some Cupian had betrayed us, for at this instant there
appeared, at the crest of the hill overlooking the city, a horde
of ant-men, who debouched in perfect order on the fields beyond
the plain. Thank God that they had not arrived before
the king’s speech!</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_116">116</div>
<p>But even as it was, things were bad enough; our advance
companies recoiled in terror before the black assault. Five
hundred years of servile peace are not well calculated to develop
a nation of fighters. I saw Toron frantically trying to
rally his troops, but in vain. It had been easy enough to plan
to attack the ant-men, but five hundred years of submission had
bred a tradition of Formian omnipotence, and this tradition at
once revived when the Formians appeared.</p>
<p>I gazed with horror at the scene. Here were thousands upon
thousands of presumably intelligent human beings, armed with
the most powerful weapons which modern science could produce,
and yet retreating in superstitious fear before a handful
of unarmed ants. Had the high resolves of a few paraparths ago
degenerated to this?</p>
<p>Why didn’t my men use their rifles? Let them fire a few
shots, and they would realize their power.</p>
<p>So seizing the phones again I tuned them to Toron’s wavelength,
and radiated: “For God’s sake stop! Never mind your
whole army. Just hold two or three men. Get them to use their
rifles on the enemy. Use your own pistol, too.”</p>
<p>Toron did not know who God was, but he sensed the agony
of my appeal, and he gathered the idea. Seizing the nearest
Cupian by the shoulder, he swung him around, at the same
time discharging his own revolver. An ant-man exploded.</p>
<p>The Cupian, fascinated, fired his own rifle with equal success.
Then, at Toron’s peremptory command, a few more of his men
halted long enough to try their rifles on the enemy.</p>
<p>At each shot, one Formian exploded. The effect was splendid.
Our men stopped, formed ranks again, opened fire, and advanced
once more toward Formia. The tradition of Formian
invincibility was destroyed forever.</p>
<p>Messengers now came with word that hundreds of kerkools
were bringing up ant reenforcements over all the roads leading
from the border. But what could jaws avail them against dumdum
bullets?</p>
<p>I learned later that the ants had attacked certain outlying
towns of our country earlier in the day, expecting to make
easy work of them, and to wreak a vengeance on the unprotected
inhabitants. But our casualties there had been surprisingly
light. In the village of Beem, in the Okarze Mountains,
rocks were used on the attackers, and the chance remark, “Fine
target practice!” had suggested to some bright local mind the
use of rifles, with which the ant-men had been repulsed with
ease. At Bartlap, one of the enemy had indiscreetly mentioned
that rifles were the cause of the war, and immediately rifles were
effectively produced. In most of the other instances the Formians
had been recalled to reenforce the attack on Kuana.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_117">117</div>
<p>Now a new development occurred, for a fleet of airships appeared
on the horizon, and presently high explosive bombs
began dropping with frightful havoc among my astounded
troops, who once more broke and ran. In a few paraparths the
planes would be over the city.</p>
<p>I dispatched Poblath on the run to the university, and soon
my human sense of hearing was rewarded by a sharp crack-crack-crack
from the Mechanics Building.</p>
<p>The first plane toppled and fell. The second. And then the
third. The others, sensing a power beyond their ability to
combat, wheeled and withdrew. Our armies reformed and
once more advanced toward Formia. The first of my huge
secret machines, an anti-aircraft gun, had spoken.</p>
<p>Soon messengers brought word that intense fighting was in
progress for the possession of the Third Gate. Of course it
would be many days before our forces could reach the western
two gates, but the bulk of the populations of both countries
lived near the Third Gate, due to the mountainous nature of
the country to the west.</p>
<p>Then came news that the Formians at the Third Gate had
been flanked by some of our men who had surmounted the
pale with scaling ladders. The Third Gate fell into the hands
of Cupia. Our victorious armies were on enemy soil.</p>
<p>It was war to the hilt! And the fact that the Formians had
invaded and attacked first, satisfied the sporting sense of all Cupia.</p>
<p>A special detachment of Mooni-trained aviators and mechanics
had gone at once to the three planes as soon as we had shot them
down, and now one of them arose into the air fully repaired.</p>
<p>The moment had arrived for the final master stroke in the
new Cupian national game—war. For the second huge machine
in the courtyard of the Department of Mechanics was a sixteen
inch barbette coast artillery rifle, which had been trained upon
the Imperial City of the ant queen, by exact elevation and
azimuth, carefully computed by Buh Tedn.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_118">118</div>
<p>The huge gun boomed forth. Again and again it boomed, as
our spotting plane reported for adjustment of fire. Finally,
just at nightfall, the signal came to cease firing. The Imperial
City, from which Queen Formis had been directing her troops,
had been totally destroyed, and with it presumably the queen
and her friend and ally, the renegade Yuri.</p>
<p>Our armies still pressed forward into Formia, protected from
air attack by the three repaired planes and by the anti-aircraft
gun, which had been sent forward by kerkool. I was jubilant.
But not so, apparently, King Kew.</p>
<p>“What is the matter, sir?” I asked. “Why do you look so
sad on this glorious day of deliverance? Are you thinking of
our poor boys who have fallen?”</p>
<p>“No,” he replied, “I did not dare tell you before, for fear
that your well known impetuosity would disrupt our plans.
But now you can know. The Princess Lilla has been missing
since morning. The fact that all of her clothes are intact, except
her sleeping robe, leads me to think that she must have been
kidnaped during the night.”</p>
<p>“My God!” I ejaculated in English. Then turning the command
over to Hah Babbuh, and instructing him to move his
headquarters to the Third Gate in the morning, I hastened to
the apartments of my sweetheart.</p>
<p>Bthuh met me there in tears and said: “My princess is dead!
My princess is dead! Last night, through connivance with me,
Prince Yuri drugged her with saffra root and spirited her away
to the Imperial City of Formia. I knew all your plans, except
the purposes of your two huge cannons, or I should have warned
Yuri of those, too. I thought merely to spoil your victory and so
gain my revenge. The old king, too, had spurned my amorous
advances, and so I declared war on Cupia. But Cupia has won
in spite of me, and as a punishment for my guilt my beloved
mistress has been killed.”</p>
<p>There could be no doubt of it. Every living thing in the
city of the queen had been destroyed. My victory was turned to
ashes. In despair I sank upon a couch.</p>
<p>But comforting arms stole around my shoulders, and a soft
voice spoke in my antennae: “Cabot, can you ever forgive me? I
love you so that I would willingly give back to you your princess,
just to make you happy. But, alas, she is lost to us forever.
Cannot we solace ourselves with love for each other? Cabot,
Cabot, I love you so, my dear.”</p>
<p>And her fragrant, voluptuous, intoxicating presence wrapped
itself around my tired body and despondent soul.</p>
<div class="pb" id="Page_119">119</div>
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