<h2 id="CHI">CHAPTER I</h2>
<h3> AN ADVENTURE IN SPACE</h3></div>
<p>“I had intended telling you my story of the days
of the twenty-second century, but it seems best, if you are
to understand it, to tell first the story of my great-great-grandfather
who was born in the year 2000.”</p>
<p>I must have looked up at him quizzically, for he smiled
and shook his head as one who is puzzled to find an explanation
suited to the mental capacity of his auditor.</p>
<p>“My great-great-grandfather was, in reality, the great-great-grandson
of my previous incarnation which commenced
in 1896. I married in 1916, at the age of twenty. My son
Julian was born in 1917. I never saw him. I was killed in
France in 1918—on Armistice Day.</p>
<p>“I was again reincarnated in my son’s son in 1937. I am
thirty years of age. My son was born in 1970—that is the son
of my 1937 incarnation—and his son, Julian 5th, in whom I
again returned to Earth, in the year 2000. I see you are confused,
but please remember my injunction that you are to try
to keep in mind the theory that there is no such thing as
Time. It is now the year 1967 yet I recall distinctly every
event of my life that occurred in four incarnations—the last
that I recall being that which had its origin in the year
2100. Whether I actually skipped three generations that
time or through some caprice of Fate I am merely unable to
visualize an intervening incarnation, I do not know.</p>
<p>“My theory of the matter is that I differ only from my
fellows in that I can recall the events of many incarnations,
while they can recall none of theirs other than a few important
episodes of that particular one they are experiencing;
but perhaps I am wrong. It is of no importance. I will tell you
the story of Julian 5th who was born in the year 2000, and
then, if we have time and you yet are interested, I will tell
you of the torments during the harrowing days of the twenty-second
century, following the birth of Julian 9th in 2100.”</p>
<p>I will try to tell the story in his own words in so far as
I can recall them, but for various reasons, not the least of
which is that I am lazy, I shall omit superfluous quotation
marks—that is, with your permission, of course.</p>
<p class="tb">
—————</p>
<p>My name is Julian. I am called Julian 5th. I come of an
illustrious family—my great-great-grandfather, Julian 1st, a
major at twenty-two, was killed in France early in The
Great War. My great-grandfather, Julian 2nd, was killed in
battle in Turkey in 1938. My grandfather, Julian 3rd, fought
continuously from his sixteenth year until peace was declared
in his thirtieth year. He died in 1992 and during the
last twenty-five years of his life was an Admiral of the Air,
being transferred at the close of the war to command of the
International Peace Fleet, which patrolled and policed the
world. He also was killed in line of duty, as was my father
who succeeded him in the service.</p>
<p>At sixteen I graduated from the Air School and was detailed
to the International Peace Fleet, being the fifth generation
of my line to wear the uniform of my country. That
was in 2016, and I recall that it was a matter of pride to me
that it rounded out the full century since Julian 1st
graduated from West Point, and that during that one hundred
years no adult male of my line had ever owned or
worn civilian clothes.</p>
<p>Of course there were no more wars, but there still was
fighting. We had the pirates of the air to contend with and
occasionally some of the uncivilized tribes of Russia, Africa
and central Asia required the attention of a punitive expedition.
However, life seemed tame and monotonous to us
when we read of the heroic deeds of our ancestors from
1914 to 1967, yet none of us wanted war. It had been too well
schooled into us that we must not think of war, and the
International Peace Fleet so effectively prevented all preparation
for war that we all knew there could never be
another. There wasn’t a firearm in the world other than those
with which we were armed, and a few of ancient design
that were kept as heirlooms, or in museums, or that were
owned by savage tribes who could procure no ammunition for
them, since we permitted none to be manufactured. There
was not a gas shell nor a radio bomb, nor any engine to
discharge or project one; and there wasn’t a big gun of any
calibre in the world. I veritably believed that a thousand
men equipped with the various engines of destruction that
had reached their highest efficiency at the close of the war in
1967 could have conquered the world; but there were not a
thousand men so armed—there never could be a thousand
men so equipped anywhere upon the face of the Earth. The
International Peace Fleet was equipped and manned to
prevent just such a calamity.</p>
<p>But it seems that Providence never intended that the world
should be without calamities. If man prevented those of
possible internal origin there still remained undreamed of
external sources over which he had no control. It was one
of these which was to prove our undoing. Its seed was sown
thirty-three years before I was born, upon that historic day,
June 10th, 1967, that Earth received her first message from
Mars, since which the two planets have remained in constant
friendly communication, carrying on a commerce of reciprocal
enlightenment. In some branches of the arts and sciences
the Martians, or Barsoomians, as they call themselves, were
far in advance of us, while in others we had progressed
more rapidly than they. Knowledge was thus freely exchanged
to the advantage of both worlds. We learned of
their history and customs and they of ours, though they had
for ages already known much more of us than we of them.
Martian news held always a prominent place in our daily
papers from the first.</p>
<p>They helped us most, perhaps, in the fields of medicine
and aeronautics, giving us in one, the marvelous healing lotions
of Barsoom and in the other, knowledge of the Eighth
Ray, which is more generally known on Earth as the Barsoomian
Ray, which is now stored in the buoyancy tanks of
every air craft and has made obsolete those ancient types of
plane that depended upon momentum to keep them afloat.</p>
<p>That we ever were able to communicate intelligibly with
them is due to the presence upon Mars of that deathless
Virginian, John Carter, whose miraculous transportation to
Mars occurred March 4th, 1866, as every school child of
the twenty-first century knows. Had not the little band of
Martian scientists, who sought so long to communicate with
Earth, mistakenly formed themselves into a secret organization
for political purposes, messages might have been exchanged
between the two planets nearly half a century before
they were, and it was not until they finally called upon John
Carter that the present inter-planetary code was evolved.</p>
<p>Almost from the first the subject which engrossed us all
the most was the possibility of an actual exchange of visits
between Earth Men and Barsoomians. Each planet hoped to
be the first to achieve this, yet neither withheld any information
that would aid the other in the consummation of the
great fact. It was a generous and friendly rivalry which about
the time of my graduation from the Air School seemed, in
theory at least, to be almost ripe for successful consummation
by one or the other. We had the Eighth Ray, the motors, the
oxygenating devices, the insulating processes—everything to
insure the safe and certain transit of a specially designed air
craft to Mars, were Mars the only other inhabitant of space.
But it was not and it was the other planets and the Sun that
we feared.</p>
<p>In 2015 Mars had dispatched a ship for Earth with a crew
of five men provisioned for ten years. It was hoped that with
good luck the trip might be made in something less than five
years, as the craft had developed an actual trial speed of one
thousand miles per hour. At the time of my graduation the
ship was already off its course almost a million miles and
generally conceded to be hopelessly lost. Its crew, maintaining
constant radio communication with both Earth and Mars,
still hoped for success, but the best informed upon both
worlds had given them up.</p>
<p>We had had a ship about ready at the time of the sailing
of the Martians, but the government at Washington had forbidden
the venture when it became apparent that the
Barsoomian ship was doomed—a wise decision, since our
vessel was no better equipped than theirs. Nearly ten years
elapsed before anything further was accomplished in the
direction of assuring any greater hope of success for another
interplanetary venture into space, and this was directly due
to the discovery made by a former classmate of mine,
Lieutenant Commander Orthis, one of the most brilliant men
I have ever known, and at the same time one of the most unscrupulous,
and, to me at least, the most obnoxious.</p>
<p>We had entered the Air School together—he from New
York and I from Illinois—and almost from the first day we
had seemed to discover a mutual antagonism that, upon his
part at least, must have been considerably strengthened by
numerous unfortunate occurrences during our four years
beneath the same roof. In the first place he was not popular
with either the cadets, the instructors, or the officers of the
school, while I was most fortunate in this respect. In those
various fields of athletics in which he considered himself
particularly expert, it was always I, unfortunately, who excelled
him and kept him from major honors. In the class room
he outshone us all—even the instructors were amazed at the
brilliancy of his intellect—and yet as we passed from grade
to grade I often topped him in the final examinations. I ranked
him always as a cadet officer, and upon graduation I took a
higher grade among the new ensigns than he—a rank that
had many years before been discontinued, but which had
recently been revived.</p>
<p>From then on I saw little of him, his services confining
him principally to land service, while mine kept me almost
constantly on the air in all parts of the world. Occasionally I
heard of him—usually something unsavory; he had married
a nice girl and abandoned her—there had been talk of an
investigation of his accounts—and the last that there was a
rumor that he was affiliated with a secret order that sought
to overthrow the government. Some things I might believe
of Orthis, but not this.</p>
<p>And during these nine years since graduation, as we had
drifted apart in interests, so had the breach between us been
widened by constantly increasing difference in rank. He was
a Lieutenant Commander and I a Captain, when in 2024 he
announced the discovery and isolation of the Eighth Solar
Ray, and within two months those of the Moon, Mercury,
Venus and Jupiter. The Eighth Barsoomian and the Eighth
Earthly Rays had already been isolated, and upon Earth
the latter erroneously called by the name of the former.</p>
<p>Orthis’ discoveries were hailed upon two planets as the
key to actual travel between the Earth and Barsoom, since
by means of these several rays the attraction of the Sun and
the planets, with the exception of Saturn, Uranus and Neptune,
could be definitely overcome and a ship steer a direct
and unimpeded course through space to Mars. The effect
of the pull of the three farther planets was considered
negligible, owing to their great distance from both Mars and
Earth.</p>
<p>Orthis wanted to equip a ship and start at once, but again
government intervened and forbade what it considered an
unnecessary risk. Instead Orthis was ordered to design a
small radio operated flier, which would carry no one aboard,
and which it was believed could be automatically operated
for at least half the distance between the two planets. After
his designs were completed, you may imagine his chagrin,
and mine as well, when I was detailed to supervise construction,
yet I will say that Orthis hid his natural emotions
well and gave me perfect cooperation in the work we were
compelled to undertake together, and which was as distasteful
to me as to him. On my part I made it as easy for him
as I could, working with him rather than over him.</p>
<p>It required but a short time to complete the experimental
ship and during this time I had an opportunity to get a still
better insight into the marvelous intellectual ability of Orthis,
though I never saw into his mind or heart.</p>
<p>It was late in 2024 that the ship was launched upon its
strange voyage, and almost immediately, upon my recommendation,
work was started upon the perfection of the larger
ship that had been in course of construction in 2015 at the
time that the loss of the Martian ship had discouraged our
government in making any further attempt until the then
seemingly insurmountable obstacles should have been overcome.
Orthis was again my assistant, and with the means at
our disposal it was a matter of less than eight months before
<i>The Barsoom</i>, as she was christened, was completely overhauled
and thoroughly equipped for the interplanetary
voyage. The various eighth rays that would assist us in
overcoming the pull of the Sun, Mercury, Venus, Earth,
Mars and Jupiter were stored in carefully constructed and
well protected tanks within the hull, and there was a smaller
tank at the bow containing the Eighth Lunar Ray, which
would permit us to pass safely within the zone of the moon’s
influence without danger of being attracted to her barren
surface.</p>
<p>Messages from the original Martian ship had been received
from time to time and with diminishing strength for
nearly five years after it had left Mars. Its commander in
his heroic fight against the pull of the sun had managed
to fall within the grip of Jupiter and was, when last heard
from far out in the great void between that planet and Mars.
During the past four years the fate of the ship could be
naught but conjecture—all that we could be certain of was
that its unfortunate crew would never again return to Barsoom.</p>
<p>Our own experimental ship had been speeding upon its
lonely way now for eight months, and so accurate had
Orthis’ scientific deductions proven that the most delicate
instrument could detect no slightest deviation from its prescribed
course. It was then that Orthis began to importune
the government to permit him to set out with the new craft
that was now completed. The authorities held out, however,
until the latter part of 2025 when, the experimental
ship having been out a year and still showing no deviation
from its course, they felt reasonably assured that the success
of the venture was certain and that no useless risk of human
life would be involved.</p>
<p><i>The Barsoom</i> required five men properly to handle it, and
as had been the custom through many centuries when an
undertaking of more than usual risk was to be attempted,
volunteers were called for, with the result that fully half the
personnel of the International Peace Fleet begged to be permitted
to form the crew of five.</p>
<p>The government finally selected their men from the great
number of volunteers, with the result that once more was I the
innocent cause of disappointment and chagrin to Orthis, as
I was placed in command, with Orthis, two lieutenants and
an ensign completing the roster.</p>
<p><i>The Barsoom</i> was larger than the craft dispatched by the
Martians, with the result that we were able to carry supplies
for fifteen years. We were equipped with more powerful
motors which would permit us to maintain an average speed
of over twelve hundred miles an hour, carrying in addition
an engine recently developed by Orthis which generated
sufficient power from light to propel the craft at half-speed
in the event that our other engine should break down. None
of us was married, Orthis’ abandoned wife having recently
died. Our estates were taken under trusteeship by the
government. Our farewells were made at an elaborate ball at
the White House on December 24, 2025, and on Christmas
day we rose from the landing stage at which <i>The Barsoom</i>
had been moored, and amid the blare of bands and the
shouting of thousands of our fellow countrymen we arose
majestically into the blue.</p>
<p>I shall not bore you with dry, technical descriptions of our
motors and equipment. Suffice it to say that the former were
of three types—those which propelled the ship through the
air and those which propelled it through ether, the latter
of course represented our most important equipment, and
consisted of powerful multiple-exhaust separators which isolated
the true Barsoomian Eighth Ray in great quantities,
and, by exhausting it rapidly earthward, propelled the vessel
toward Mars. These separators were so designed that, with
equal facility, they could isolate the Earthly Eighth Ray
which would be necessary for our return voyage. The
auxiliary engine, which I mentioned previously and which
was Orthis’ latest invention, could be easily adjusted to
isolate the eighth ray of any planet or satellite or of the sun
itself, thus insuring us motive power in any part of the
universe by the simple expedient of generating and exhausting
the eighth ray of the nearest heavenly body. A fourth
type of generator drew oxygen from the ether, while another
emanated insulating rays which insured us a uniform temperature
and external pressure at all times, their action
being analogous to that of the atmosphere surrounding the
earth. Science had, therefore, permitted us to construct a little
world, which moved at will through space—a little world inhabited
by five soul.</p>
<p>Had it not been for Orthis’ presence I could have looked
forward to a reasonably pleasurable voyage, for West and
Jay were extremely likeable fellows and sufficiently mature to
be companionable, while young Norton, the ensign, though
but seventeen years of age, endeared himself to all of us
from the very start of the voyage by his pleasant manners,
his consideration and his willingness in the performance of
his duties. There were three staterooms aboard <i>The Barsoom</i>,
one of which I occupied alone, while West and Orthis had
the second and Jay and Norton the third. West and Jay
were lieutenants and had been classmates at the air school.
They would of course have preferred to room together, but
could not unless I commanded it or Orthis requested it. Not
wishing to give Orthis any grounds for offense I hesitated
to make the change, while Orthis, never having thought a
considerate thought or done a considerate deed in his life,
could not, of course, have been expected to suggest it. We
all messed together, West, Jay and Norton taking turns at
preparing the meals. Only in the actual operation of the ship
were the lines of rank drawn strictly. Otherwise we associated
as equals, nor would any other arrangement have
been endurable upon such an undertaking, which required
that we five be practically imprisoned together upon a small
ship for a period of not less than five years. We had books
and writing materials and games, and we were, of course, in
constant radio communication with both Earth and Mars,
receiving continuously the latest news from both planets. We
listened to opera and oratory and heard the music of two
worlds, so that we were not lacking for entertainment. There
was always a certain constraint in Orthis’ manner toward me,
yet I must give him credit for behaving outwardly admirably.
Unlike the others we never exchanged pleasantries with one
another, nor could I, knowing as I did that Orthis hated
me, and feeling for him personally the contempt that I felt
because of his character. Intellectually he commanded my
highest admiration, and upon intellectual grounds we met
without constraint or reserve, and many were the profitable
discussions we had during the first days of what was to prove
a very brief voyage.</p>
<p>It was about the second day that I noticed with some surprise
that Orthis was exhibiting a friendly interest in Norton.
It had never been Orthis’ way to make friends, but I saw that
he and Norton were much together and that each seemed
to derive a great deal of pleasure from the society of the
other. Orthis was a good talker. He knew his profession
thoroughly, and was an inventor and scientist of high distinction.
Norton, though but a boy, was himself the possessor
of a fine mind. He had been honor-man in his graduating
class, heading the list of ensigns for that year, and I could not
help but notice that he was drinking in every word along
scientific lines that Orthis vouchsafed.</p>
<p>We had been out about six days when Orthis came to
me and suggested, that inasmuch as West and Jay had been
classmates and chums that they be permitted to room together
and that he had spoken to Norton who had said that he
would be agreeable to the change and would occupy West’s
bunk in Orthis’ stateroom. I was very glad of this for it now
meant that my subordinates would be paired off in the most
agreeable manner, and as long as they were contented, I
knew that the voyage from that standpoint at least would
be more successful. I was, of course, a trifle sorry to see a
fine boy like Norton brought under the influence of Orthis,
yet I felt that what little danger might result would be offset
by the influence of West and Jay and myself or counter-balanced
by the liberal education which five years’ constant
companionship with Orthis would be to any man with whom
Orthis would discuss freely the subjects of which he was
master.</p>
<p>We were beginning to feel the influence of the Moon rather
strongly. At the rate we were traveling we would pass closest
to it upon the twelfth day, or about the 6th of January,
2026.</p>
<p>Our course would bring us within about twenty thousand
miles of the Moon, and as we neared it I believe that the
sight of it was the most impressive thing that human eye
had ever gazed upon before. To the naked eye it loomed
large and magnificent in the heavens, appearing over ten times
the size that it does to terrestrial observers, while our powerful
glasses brought its weird surface to such startling proximity
that one felt that he might reach out and touch the
torn rocks of its tortured mountains.</p>
<p>This nearer view enabled us to discover the truth or
falsity of the theory that has been long held by some scientists
that there is a form of vegetation upon the surface of the
Moon. Our eyes were first attracted by what appeared to
be movement upon the surface of some of the valleys and in
the deeper ravines of the mountains. Norton exclaimed that
there were creatures there, moving about, but closer observation
revealed the fact of the existence of a weird
fungus-like vegetation which grew so rapidly that we could
clearly discern the phenomena. From the several days’ observation
which we had at close range we came to the
conclusion that the entire life span of this vegetation is
encompassed in a single sidereal month. From the spore it
developed in the short period of a trifle over twenty-seven
days into a mighty plant that is sometimes hundreds of feet
in height. The branches are angular and grotesque, the
leaves broad and thick, and in the plants which we discerned
the seven primary colors were distinctly represented. As each
portion of the Moon passed slowly into shadow the vegetation
first drooped, then wilted, then crumbled to the ground,
apparently disintegrating almost immediately into a fine,
dust-like powder—at least in so far as our glasses revealed, it
quite disappeared entirely. The movement which we discerned
was purely that of rapid growth, as there is no wind
upon the surface of the Moon. Both Jay and Orthis were
positive that they discerned some form of animal life, either
insect or reptilian. These I did not myself see, though I did
perceive many of the broad, flat leaves which seemed to have
been partially eaten, which certainly strengthened the theory
that there is other than vegetable life upon our satellite.</p>
<p>I presume that one of the greatest thrills that we experienced
in this adventure, that was to prove a veritable Pandora’s
box of thrills, was when we commenced to creep past
the edge of the Moon and our eyes beheld for the first time
that which no other human eyes had ever rested upon—portions
of that two-fifths of the Moon’s surface which is
invisible from the Earth.</p>
<p>We had looked with awe upon Mare Crisium and Lacus
Somniorum, Sinius Roris, Oceanus Procellarum and the four
great mountain ranges. We had viewed at close range the
volcanoes of Opollonius, Secchi, Borda, Tycho and their mates,
but all these paled into insignificance as there unrolled before
us the panorama of the vast unknown.</p>
<p>I cannot say that it differed materially from that portion
of the Moon that is visible to us—it was merely the glamour
of mystery which had surrounded it since the beginning of
time that lent to it its thrill for us. Here we observed other
great mountain ranges and wide undulating plains, towering
volcanoes and mighty craters and the same vegetation with
which we were now become familiar.</p>
<p>We were two days past the Moon when our first trouble
developed. Among our stores were one hundred and twenty
quarts of spirits per man, enough to allow us each a liberal
two ounces per day for a period of five years. Each night,
before dinner, we had drunk to the President in a cocktail
which contained a single ounce of spirits, the idea being to
conserve our supply in the event of our journey being unduly
protracted as well as to have enough in the event that it
became desirable fittingly to celebrate any particular occasion.</p>
<p>Toward the third meal hour of the thirteenth day of the
voyage Orthis entered the messroom noticeably under the
influence of liquor.</p>
<p>History narrates that under the regime of prohibition
drunkenness was common and that it grew to such proportions
as to become a national menace, but with the repeal of
the Prohibition Act, nearly a hundred years ago, the habit of
drinking to excess abated, so that it became a matter of
disgrace for any man to show his liquor, and in the service
it was considered as reprehensible as cowardice in action.
There was therefore but one thing for me to do. I ordered
Orthis to his quarters.</p>
<p>He was drunker than I had thought him, and he turned
upon me like a tiger.</p>
<p>“You damned cur,” he cried. “All my life you have stolen
everything from me; the fruits of all my efforts you have
garnered by chicanery and trickery, and even now, were we
to reach Mars, it is you who would be lauded as the hero—not
I whose labor and intellect have made possible this
achievement. But by God we will not reach Mars. Not again
shall you profit by my efforts. You have gone too far this
time, and now you dare to order me about like a dog and
an inferior—I, whose brains have made you what you are.”</p>
<p>I held my temper, for I saw that the man was unaccountable
for his words. “Go to your quarters, Orthis,” I repeated
my command. “I will talk with you again in the morning.”</p>
<p>West and Jay and Norton were present. They seemed momentarily
paralyzed by the man’s condition and gross insubordination.
Norton, however, was the first to recover.
Jumping quickly to Orthis’ side he laid his hand upon his arm.
“Come, sir,” he said, and to my surprise Orthis accompanied
him quietly to their stateroom.</p>
<p>During the voyage we had continued the fallacy of night
and day, gauging them merely by our chronometers, since
we moved always through utter darkness, surrounded only
by a tiny nebula of light, produced by the sun’s rays impinging
upon the radiation from our insulating generator. Before
breakfast, therefore, on the following morning I sent for Orthis
to come to my stateroom. He entered with a truculent
swagger, and his first words indicated that if he had not
continued drinking, he had at least been moved to no regrets
for his unwarranted attack of the previous evening.</p>
<p>“Well,” he said, “what in hell are you going to do about it?”</p>
<p>“I cannot understand your attitude, Orthis,” I told him. “I
have never intentionally injured you. When orders from
government threw us together I was as much chagrined as
you. Association with you is as distasteful to me as it is to
you. I merely did as you did—obeyed orders. I have no
desire to rob you of anything, but that is not the question
now. You have been guilty of gross insubordination and of
drunkenness. I can prevent a repetition of the latter by confiscating
your liquor and keeping it from you during the
balance of the voyage, and an apology from you will atone
for the former. I shall give you twenty-four hours to reach
a decision. If you do not see fit to avail yourself of my
clemency, Orthis, you will travel to Mars and back again in
irons. Your decision now and your behavior during the
balance of the voyage will decide your fate upon our return
to Earth. And I tell you, Orthis, that if I possibly can do so I
shall use the authority which is mine upon this expedition
and expunge from the log the record of your transgressions
last night and this morning. Now go to your quarters; your
meals will be served there for twenty-four hours and at the
end of that time I shall receive your decision. Meanwhile
your liquor will be taken from you.”</p>
<p>He gave me an ugly look, turned upon his heel and left
my stateroom.</p>
<p>Norton was on watch that night. We were two days past
the Moon. West, Jay and I were asleep in our staterooms,
when suddenly Norton entered mine and shook me violently
by the shoulder.</p>
<p>“My God, Captain,” he cried, “come quick. Commander
Orthis is destroying the engines.”</p>
<p>I leaped to my feet and followed Norton amidships to the
engine-room, calling to West and Jay as I passed their stateroom.
Through the bull’s-eye in the engine-room door, which
he had locked, we could see Orthis working over the auxiliary
generator which was to have proven our salvation in an
emergency, since by means of it we could overcome the pull
of any planet into the sphere of whose influence we might
be carried. I breathed a sigh of relief as my eyes noted that
the main battery of engines was functioning properly, since,
as a matter of fact, we had not expected to have to rely at all
upon the auxiliary generator, having stored sufficient quantities
of the Eighth Ray of the various heavenly bodies by which
we might be influenced, to carry us safely throughout the
entire extent of the long voyage. West and Jay had joined us
by this time, and I now called to Orthis, commanding him
to open the door. He did something more to the generator
and then arose, crossed the engine-room directly to the door,
unbolted it and threw the door open. His hair was dishevelled,
his face drawn, his eyes shining with a peculiar light, but
withal his expression denoted a drunken elation that I did
not at the moment understand.</p>
<p>“What have you been doing here, Orthis?” I demanded.
“You are under arrest, and supposed to be in your quarters.”</p>
<p>“You’ll see what I’ve been doing,” he replied truculently,
“and it’s done—it’s done—it can’t ever be undone. I’ve seen
to that.”</p>
<p>I grabbed him roughly by the shoulder. “What do you
mean? Tell me what you have done, or by God I will kill you
with my own hands,” for I knew, not only from his words
but from his expression, that he had accomplished something
which he considered very terrible.</p>
<p>The man was a coward and he quailed under my grasp.
“You wouldn’t dare to kill me,” he cried, “and it don’t make
any difference, for we’ll all be dead in a few hours. Go and
look at your damned compass.”</p>
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