<h2 id="CHVI">CHAPTER VI</h2>
<h3>THE MOON MAID</h3></div>
<p>Orthis, who was becoming the almost constant companion
of the chief, was standing beside the latter, while I was
twenty-five or thirty yards away, and directly between Ga-va-go
and the warriors who were approaching with the prisoner,
who would of necessity have to pass close beside me. I remained
where I was, therefore, in order to get a better look
at it, which was rather difficult because it was almost entirely
surrounded by No-vans. However as they came opposite me,
there was a little break momentarily in the ranks, and I had
my first opportunity, though brief, for a closer observation of
the captive; and my comprehension was almost staggered by
what my eyes revealed to me, for there before me, was as
perfectly formed a human female as I had ever seen. By
earthly standards, she appeared a girl of about eighteen, with
hair of glossy blackness, that suggested more the raven’s wing
than aught else and a skin of almost marble whiteness, slightly
tinged with a creamy shade. Only in the color of her skin,
did she differ from earthly women in appearance, except
that she seemed far more beautiful than they. Such perfection
of features seemed almost unbelievable. Had I seen
her first posed motionless, I could have sworn that she was
chiseled from marble, yet there was nothing cold about her
appearance. She fairly radiated life and feeling. If my first
impression had been startling, it was nothing to the effect that
was produced when she turned her eyes full upon me. Her
black brows were two thin, penciled arches, beneath which
were dark wells of light, vying in blackness with her raven
hair. On either cheek was just the faintest suggestion of a
deeper cream, and to think that these hideous creatures saw in
that form divine only flesh to eat! I shuddered at the thought
and then my eyes met hers and I saw an expression of incredulity
and surprise registered in those liquid orbs. She half-turned
her head as she was dragged past, that she might
have a further look at me, for doubtless she was as surprised
to see a creature like me as I was to see her.</p>
<p>Involuntarily I started forward. Whether there was an
appeal for succor in those eyes I do not know, but at least
they aroused within me instantly, that natural instinct of a
human male to protect the weak. And so it was that I was a
little behind her and to her right, when she was halted before
Ga-va-go.</p>
<p>The savage Va-gas’ chieftain eyed her coldly, while from
all sides there arose cries of “Give us flesh! Give us flesh! We
are hungry!” to which Ga-va-go paid not the slightest attention.</p>
<p>“From whence come you, U-ga?” he demanded.
Her head was high, and she eyed him with cold dignity
as she replied, “From Laythe.”</p>
<p>The No-van raised his brows. “Ah,” he breathed, “from
Laythe. The flesh of the women from Laythe is good,” and
he licked his thin lips.</p>
<p>The girl narrowed her eyes, and tilted her chin a bit higher.
“Rympth!” she ejaculated, disgustedly.</p>
<p>As rympth is the name of the four-legged snake of Va-nah,
the inner lunar world, and considered the lowest and most disgusting
of created things, she could not well have applied a
more opprobrious epithet to the No-van chieftain, but if it
had been her intent to affront him, his expression gave no
indication that she had succeeded.</p>
<p>“Your name?” he asked.</p>
<p>“Nah-ee-lah,” she replied.</p>
<p>“Nah-ee-lah,” he repeated, “Ah, you are the daughter of
Sagroth, Jemadar of Laythe.”</p>
<p>She nodded in indifferent affirmation, as though aught he
might say was a matter of perfect indifference to her.</p>
<p>“What do you expect us to do with you?” asked Ga-va-go,
a question which suggested a cat playing with a mouse before
destroying it.</p>
<p>“What can I expect of the Va-gas, other than that they will
kill me and eat me?” she replied.</p>
<p>A roar of savage assent arose from the creatures surrounding
her. Ga-va-go flashed a quick look of anger and displeasure
at his people.</p>
<p>“Do not be too sure of that,” he snapped. “This be little
more than a meal for Ga-va-go alone. It would but whet
the appetite of the tribe.”</p>
<p>“There are two more,” suggested a bold warrior, close
beside me, pointing at me and at Orthis.</p>
<p>“Silence!” roared Ga-va-go. “Since when did you become
chief of the No-vans?”</p>
<p>“We can starve without a chief,” muttered the warrior
who had spoken, and from two or three about him arose
grumblings of assent.</p>
<p>Swift, at that, Ga-va-go reared upon his hind feet, and
in the same motion, drew and hurled his spear, the sharp
point penetrating the breast of the malcontent, piercing his
heart. As the creature fell, the warrior closest to him slit his
throat, while another withdrew Ga-va-go’s spear from the
corpse, and returned it to the chief.</p>
<p>“Divide the carcass among you,” commanded the chief, “and
whosoever thinks that there is not enough, let him speak as
that one spoke, and there shall be more flesh to eat.”</p>
<p>Thus did Ga-va-go, chief of the No-vans, hold the obedience
of his savage tribesmen. There was no more muttering
then, but I saw several cast hungry eyes at me—hungry,
angry eyes that boded me no good.</p>
<p>In what seemed an incredibly short space of time, the
carcass of the slain warrior had been divided and devoured,
and once again we set out upon the march, in search of new
fields to conquer, and fresh flesh to eat.</p>
<p>Now Ga-va-go sent scouts far in advance of the point,
for we were entering territory which he had not invaded for
a long time, a truth which was evidenced by the fact that
there were only about twenty warriors in the tribe, besides
Ga-va-go, who were at all familiar with the territory. Naturally
quarrelsome and disagreeable, the No-vans were far from
pleasant companions upon that memorable march, since they
had not recovered from the fright and discomforts of the
storm and, in addition, were ravenously hungry. I imagine that
none, other than Ga-va-go, could have held them. What his
purpose was in preserving the three prisoners, that would
have made such excellent food for the tribe, I did not know.
However, we were not slain, though I judged the fellow who
carried me, would much sooner have eaten me, and to vent
his spite upon me he trotted as much as he could, and I can
assure you that he had the most devilishly execrable trot I
ever sat. I felt that he was rather running the thing into the
ground, for he had an easy rack, which would have made it
much more comfortable for both of us, and inasmuch as I
knew that I was safe as long as I was under Ga-va-go’s protection,
I made up my mind to teach the fellow a lesson,
which I finally did, although almost as much to my discomfort
as his, by making no effort to ease myself upon his
back so that at every step I rose high and came down
hard upon him, sitting as far back as possible so as to pound
his kidneys painfully. It made him very angry and he
threatened me with all kinds of things if I didn’t desist, but
I only answered by suggesting that he take an easier gait,
which at last he was forced to do.</p>
<p>Orthis was riding ahead with Ga-va-go, who as usual led
the point, while the new prisoner astride a No-van warrior
was with the main body, as was I.</p>
<p>Once the warriors that we bestrode paced side by side,
and I saw the girl eyeing me questioningly. She seemed
much interested in the remnants of my uniform, which must
have differed greatly from any clothing she had seen in her
own world. It seemed that she spoke and understood the
same language that Ga-va-go used, and so at last I made
bold to address her.</p>
<p>“It is unfortunate,” I said, “that you have fallen into the
hands of these creatures. I wish that I might be of service
to you, but I also am a prisoner.”</p>
<p>She acknowledged my speech with a slight inclination of
her head, and at first I thought that she was not going to
reply, but finally looking me full in the face she asked, “What
are you?”</p>
<p>“I am one of the inhabitants of the planet Earth.”</p>
<p>“Where is that, and what is planet?” she asked, for I had
had to use the Earth word, since there is no word of
similar meaning in the language of the Va-gas.</p>
<p>“You know, of course,” I said, “that space outside of Va-nah
is filled with other worlds. The closest to Va-nah is
Earth, which is many, many times larger than your world. It
is from Earth that I come.”</p>
<p>She shook her head. “I do not understand,” she said. She
closed her eyes, and waved her hands with a gesture that
might have included the universe. “All, all is rock,” she
said, “except here in the center of everything, in this space
we call Va-nah. All else is rock.”</p>
<p>I suppressed a smile at the vast egotism of Va-nah, but yet
how little different is it from many worldlings, who conceive
that the entire cosmos exists solely for the inhabitants of Earth.
I even know men in our own enlightened twenty-first century,
who insist that Mars is not inhabited and that the messages
that are purported to come from our sister planet, are either
the evidences of a great world hoax, or the voice of the devil
luring people from belief in the true God.</p>
<p>“Did you ever see my like in Va-nah?” I asked her.</p>
<p>“No,” she replied, “I never did, but I have not been to
every part of Va-nah. Va-nah is a very great world, and
there are many corners of it of which I know nothing.”</p>
<p>“I am not of Va-nah,” I told her again, “I am from another
world far, far away;” and then I tried to explain something
of the universe to her—of the sun and the planets and their
satellites, but I saw that it was as far beyond her as are the
conceptions of eternity and space beyond the finite mind of
Earth Men. She simply couldn’t get it, that was all. To her,
everything was solid rock that we know as space. She
thought for a long time, though, and then she said, “Ah,
perhaps after all there may be other worlds than Va-nah. The
great Hoos, those vast holes that lead into the eternal rock,
may open into other worlds like Va-nah. I have heard that
theory discussed, but no one in Va-nah believes it. It is true,
then!” she exclaimed brightly, “and you come from another
world like Va-nah. You came through one of the Hoos, did
you not?”</p>
<p>“Yes, I came through one of the Hoos,” I replied—the
word means hole in the Va-gas tongue—”but I did not come
from a world like Va-nah. Here you live upon the inside of
a hollow sphere. We Earth Men live upon the outside of a
similar though much larger sphere.”</p>
<p>“But what holds it up?” she cried, laughing. It was the first
time that she had laughed, and it was a very contagious
laugh, and altogether delightful. Although I knew that it
would probably be useless, I tried to explain the whole thing
to her, commencing with the nebular hypothesis, and winding
up with the relations that exist between the Moon and
the Earth. If I didn’t accomplish anything else, I at least gave
her something to distract her mind from her grave predicament,
and to amuse her temporarily, for she laughed often at
some of my statements. I had never seen so gay and vivacious
a creature, nor one so entirely beautiful as she. The single,
sleeveless, tunic-like garment that she wore, fell scarcely to
her knees and as she bestrode the No-van warrior, it often
flew back until her thighs, even, were exposed. Her figure
was divinely perfect, its graceful contours being rather accentuated
than hidden by the diaphanous material of her
dainty covering; but when she laughed, she exposed two
rows of even white teeth that would be the envy of the most
beautiful of Earth Maids.</p>
<p>“Suppose,” she said, “that I should take a handful of gravel
and throw it up in the air. According to your theory the
smaller would all commence to revolve about the larger and
they would go flying thus wildly around in the air forever, but
that is not what would happen. If I threw a handful of gravel
into the air it would fall immediately to the ground again,
and if the worlds you tell me of were cast thus into the air,
they too would fall, just as the gravel falls.”</p>
<p>It was useless, but I had known that from the beginning.
What would be more interesting would be to question her,
and that I had wished to do for some time, but she always
put me off with a pretty gesture and a shake of her head, insisting
that I answer some of her questions instead, but
this time I insisted.</p>
<p>“Tell me, please,” I asked, “how you came to the spot
where you were captured, how you flew, and what became
of your wings, and why, when they tore them from you, it
did not injure you?”</p>
<p>She laughed at that quite merrily.</p>
<p>“The wings do not grow upon us,” she explained, “we
make them and fasten them upon our arms.”</p>
<p>“Then you can support yourself in the air with wings
fastened to your arms?” I demanded, incredulously.</p>
<p>“Oh, no,” she said, “the wings we use simply for propelling
ourselves through the air. In a bag, upon our backs,
we carry a gas that is lighter than air. It is this gas which
supports us, and we carry it in such quantities as to maintain
a perfect equilibrium, so that we may float at any altitude,
or with our wings rise or fall gently; but as I hovered over
Laythe, came the air that runs, and seizing me with its strong
arms bore me off across the surface of Va-nah. Futilely I
fought against it until I was spent and weak, and then it
dropped me into the clutches of the Va-gas, for the gas in my
bag had become depleted. It was not intended to carry me
aloft for any great length of time.”</p>
<p>She had used a word which, when I questioned her, she
explained so that I understood that it meant time, and I asked
her what she meant by it and how she could measure it,
since I had seen no indication of the Va-gas having any
conception of a measurable aspect of duration.</p>
<p>Nah-ee-lah explained to me that the Va-gas, who were a
lower order, had no means of measuring time, but that the
U-ga, the race to which she belonged, had always been able
to compute time through their observation of the fact that
during certain periods the bottoms of the hoos, or craters,
were illuminated, and for another period they were dark, and
so they took as a unit of measure the total period from the
beginning of this light in a certain crater to its beginning
again, and this they called a <i>ula</i>, which corresponds with a
sidereal month. By mechanical means they divide this into a
hundred parts, called <i>ola</i>, the duration of each of which is
about six hours and thirty-two minutes earth time. Ten ulas
make a <i>keld</i>, which one might call the lunar year of about
two hundred and seventy-two days earth time.</p>
<p>I asked her many questions and took great pleasure in her
answers, for she was a bright, intelligent girl, and although
I saw many evidences of regal dignity about her, yet her
manner toward me was most natural and unaffected, and I
could not help but feel that she occupied a position of importance
among her own people.</p>
<p>Our conversation was suddenly interrupted, however, by a
messenger from the point, who came racing back at tremendous
speed, carrying word from Ga-va-go that the scouts were
signaling that they had discovered a large village, and that
the warriors were to prepare to fight.</p>
<p>Immediately we moved up rapidly to Ga-va-go, and then
we all advanced toward the scout who could be seen upon
a knoll far ahead. We were cautioned to silence, and as
we moved at a brisk canter over the soft, pale lavender
vegetation of the inner Moon, the feet of the Va-gas giving
forth no sound, the picture presented to my earthly eyes was
weird and mysterious in the extreme.</p>
<p>When we reached the scout, we learned that the village
was situated just beyond a low ridge not far distant, so Ga-va-go
gave orders that the women, the children, and the
three prisoners should remain under a small guard where we
were until they had topped the ridge, when we were to advance
to a position where we might overlook the village, and
if the battle was against the No-vans we could retreat to a
point which he indicated to the warriors left to guard us.
This was to be the rendezvous, for following defeat the Va-gas
warriors scatter in all directions, thus preventing any considerable
body of them being attacked and destroyed by a
larger body of the pursuing enemy.</p>
<p>As we stood there upon the knoll, watching Ga-va-go and
his savage warriors galloping swiftly toward the distant ridge,
I could not but wonder that the inhabitants of the village
which they were about to attack had not placed sentinels
along the ridge to prevent just such a surprise as this, but
when I questioned one of the warriors who had been left to
guard us, he said that not all the Va-gas tribes were accustomed
to posting sentinels when they felt themselves
reasonably safe from attack. It had always been Ga-va-go’s
custom, however, and to it they attributed his supremacy
among the other Va-gas tribes over a large territory.</p>
<p>“After a tribe has made a few successful raids and returned
victorious, they are filled with pride,” the warrior
explained to me, “and presently they begin to think that no
one dares to attack them and then they grow careless, and
little by little the custom of posting sentinels drops into
disuse. The very fact that they have no sentinels indicates
that they are a large, powerful and successful tribe. We shall
feed well for a long time.”</p>
<p>The very idea of the thought that was passing through his
mind, was repellent in the extreme, and I fairly shuddered
when I contemplated the callousness with which this creature
spoke of the coming orgy, in which he hoped to devour
flesh of his own kind.</p>
<p>Presently we saw our force disappear beyond the ridge,
and then we too, advanced, and as we moved forward there
came suddenly to us, from the distance the fierce and
savage war cry of the No-vans and a moment later it was
answered by another no less terrible, rising from the village
beyond the ridge. Our guards hastened us then, to greater
speed, until, at a full run, we mounted the steep slope of the
ridge and halted upon its crest.</p>
<p>Below us lay a broad valley, and in the center a long,
beautiful lake, the opposite shore of which was clothed in
forest while that nearest us was open and park-like, dotted
here and there with beautiful trees, and in this open space
we descried a large village.</p>
<p>The ferocity of the scene below us was almost indescribable.
The No-vans warriors were circling the village at a rapid run,
attempting to keep the enemy in a compact mass within,
where it would present a better target for their spears. Already
the ground was dotted with corpses. There were no
wounded, for whenever one fell the nearest to him whether
friend or foe cut his throat, since the victors would devour
them all without partiality. The females and the young had
taken refuge in the huts, from the doorways of which they
watched the progress of the battle. The defenders attempted
repeatedly to break through the circling No-vans. The warrior
with whom I had been talking told me that if they were successful
the females and the young would follow them through
the break scattering in all directions, while their warriors attempted
to encircle the No-vans. It was almost immediately
evident that the advantage lay with the force that succeeded
in placing this swift-moving circle about its enemy, and
keeping the enemy within it until they had been dispatched,
for those in the racing circle presented a poor target, while
the compact mass of warriors milling in the center could
scarce be missed.</p>
<p>Following several unsuccessful attempts to break through
the ring of savage foemen the defenders suddenly formed
another smaller ring within, and moving in the opposite direction
to the No-vans, raced in a rapid circle. No longer did
they cast spears at the enemy, but contented themselves with
leaping and bounding at a rapid gait. At first it seemed to
me that they had lost their heads with terror, but at last I
realized that they were executing a strategic maneuver which
demonstrated both cunning and high discipline. In the
earlier stages of the battle each side had depended for its
weapons upon those hurled by the opposing force, but now
the defenders hurled no weapons, and it became apparent that
the No-vans would soon no longer have spears to cast at them.
The defenders were also lessening their casualties by moving
in a rapid circle in a direction opposite to that taken by the
attackers, but it must have required high courage and considerable
discipline to achieve this result since it is difficult
in the extreme to compel men to present themselves continuously
as living targets for a foe while they themselves are
permitted to inflict no injury upon the enemy.</p>
<p>Ga-va-go apparently was familiar with the ruse, for suddenly
he gave a loud cry which was evidently a command.
Instantaneously, his entire force wheeled in their tracks and
raced in the opposite direction paralleling the defenders of
the village, and immediately thereafter cast their remaining
spears at comparatively easy targets.</p>
<p>The defenders, who were of the tribe called Lu-thans,
wheeled instantly to reverse the direction of their flight. Those
wounded in the sudden onslaught stumbled and fell, tripping
and impeding the others, with the result that for an
instant they were a tangled mass, without order or formation.
Then it was that Ga-va-go and his No-vans leaped in upon
them with their short, wicked sword-daggers. At once the
battle resolved itself into a ferocious and bloody hand-to-hand
conflict, in which daggers and teeth and three-toed
paws each did their share to inflict injury upon an antagonist.
In their efforts to escape a blow, or to place themselves in an
advantageous position, many of the combatants leaped high
into the air, sometimes between thirty and forty feet. Their
shrieks and howls were continuous and piercing. Corpses lay
piled so thick as to impede the movements of the warriors,
and the ground was slippery with blood, yet on and on they
fought, until it seemed that not a single one would be left
alive.</p>
<p>“It is almost over,” remarked the warrior at my side. “See,
there are two or three No-vans now attacking each Lu-than.”</p>
<p>It was true, and I saw that the battle could last but a
short time. As a matter of fact it ended almost immediately,
the remaining Lu-thans suddenly attempting to break away
and scatter in different directions. Some of them succeeded
in escaping, possibly twenty but I am sure that there were
not more than that, and the rest fell.</p>
<p>Ga-va-go and his warriors did not pursue the few who
had escaped, evidently considering that it was not worth the
effort, since there were not enough of them to menace the
village, and there was already plenty of meat lying fresh
and warm upon the ground.</p>
<p>We were summoned now, and as we filed down into the
village, great was the rejoicing of our females and young.</p>
<p>Guards were placed over the women and children of the
defeated Lu-thans, and then at a signal from Ga-va-go, the
No-vans fell upon the spoils of war. It was a revolting spectacle,
as mothers devoured their sons, and wives, their husbands.
I do not care to dwell upon it.</p>
<p>When the victors had eaten their fill, the prisoners were
brought forth under heavy guard, and divided by the Va-gas
between the surviving No-vans warriors. There was no
favoritism shown in the distribution of the prisoners, except
that Ga-va-go was given first choice, and received also those
that remained after as nearly equal a distribution as possible
had been made. I had expected that the male children
would be killed, but they were not, being inducted into the
tribe upon an equal footing with those that had been born
into it.</p>
<p>Being capable of no sentiments of either affection or
loyalty, it is immaterial to these creatures to what tribe they
belong, but once inducted into a tribe, the instinct of self-preservation
holds them to it, since they would be immediately
slain by the members of any other tribe.</p>
<p>I learned shortly after this engagement that Ga-va-go had
lost fully half his warriors, and that this was one of the most
important battles that the tribe had ever fought. The spoils,
however, had been rich, for they had taken over ten thousand
women and fully fifty thousand young, and great quantities
of weapons, harness, and apparel.</p>
<p>The flesh that they could not eat was wrapped up and
buried, and I was told that it would remain in excellent
condition almost indefinitely.</p>
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