<h2 id="CHXIV">CHAPTER XIV</h2>
<h3>THE BARSOOM!</h3></div>
<p>The city was already in flames in many places, and though
the people fought valiantly to extinguish them, it seemed to
me that they but spread the more rapidly with each succeeding
minute. And then, as suddenly as it had commenced,
the bombardment ceased. Nah-ee-lah and I crossed over to
the outer edge of the terrace to see if we could note any
new movement by the enemy, nor did we have long to wait.
We saw a hundred ladders raised as if by magic toward the
lowest terrace, which rose but a bare two hundred feet above
the base of the city. The men who carried the ladders were
not visible to us when they came close to the base of the wall,
but I guessed from the distant glimpses that I caught of the
ladders as they were rushed forward by running men that
here, again, Orthis’ earthly knowledge and experience had
come to the assistance of the Kalkars, for I was sure that only
some form of extension ladder could be successfully used to
reach even the lowest terrace.</p>
<p>When I saw their intention I ran quickly down into the palace
and out upon the terrace before the gates, where the remainder
of the guard were stationed, and there I told them
what was happening and urged them to hasten the people
to the lowest terrace to repulse the enemy before they had
secured a foothold upon the city. Then I returned to Nah-ee-lah,
and together we watched the outcome of the struggle,
but almost from the first I realized that Laythe was doomed,
for before any of her defenders could reach the spot, fully
a thousand Kalkars had clambered to the terrace, and there
they held their own while other thousands ascended in
safety to the city.</p>
<p>We saw the defenders rush forth to attack them, and for
a moment, so impetuous was their charge, I thought that I
had been wrong and that the Kalkars might yet be driven
from Laythe. Fighting upon the lower outer terrace far beneath
us was a surging mass of shouting warriors. The Kalkars
were falling back before the impetuous onslaught of the
Laytheans.</p>
<p>“They have not the blood in their veins,” whispered Nah-ee-lah,
clinging tightly to my arm. “One noble is worth ten
of them. Watch them. Already are they fleeing.”</p>
<p>And so it seemed, and the rout of the Kalkars appeared almost
assured, as score upon score of them were hurled over
the edge of the terrace, to fall mangled and bleeding upon
the ground hundreds of feet below.</p>
<p>But suddenly a new force seemed to be injected into the
strife. I saw a stream of Kalkars emerging above the edge
of the lower terrace—new men clambering up the ladders
from the plateau below, and as they came they shouted something
which I could not understand, but the other Kalkars
seemed to take heart and made once more the semblance
of a stand against the noble Laytheans, and I saw one, the
leader of the newcomers, force his way into the battling
throng. And then I saw him raise his hand above his head
and hurl something into the midst of the compact ranks of
the Laytheans.</p>
<p>Instantly there was a terrific explosion and a great, bloody
gap lay upon the terrace where an instant before a hundred of
the flower of the fighting men of Laythe had been so
gloriously defending their city and their honor.</p>
<p>“Grenades,” I exclaimed. “Hand grenades!”</p>
<p>“What is it, Julian? What is it that they are doing down
there?” cried Nah-ee-lah. “They are murdering my people.”</p>
<p>“Yes, Nah-ee-lah, they are murdering your people, and
well may Va-nah curse the day that Earth Men set foot upon
your world.”</p>
<p>“I do not understand, Julian,” she said.</p>
<p>“This is the work of Orthis,” I said, “who has brought from
Earth the knowledge of diabolical engines of destruction. He
first shelled the city with what must have been nothing more
than crude mortars, for it is impossible that he has had the
time to construct the machinery to build any but the simplest
of guns. Now his troops are hurling hand grenades among
your men. There is no chance, Nah-ee-lah, for the Laytheans
to successfully pit their primitive weapons against the modern
agents of destruction which Orthis has brought to bear against
them. Laythe must surrender or be destroyed.”</p>
<p>Nah-ee-lah laid her head upon my shoulder and wept
softly. “Julian,” she said at last, “this is the end, then. Take
me to the Jemadav, my mother, please, and then you must go
and make your peace with your fellow Earth Man. It is not
right that you, a stranger, who have done so much for me,
should fall with me and Laythe.”</p>
<p>“The only peace I can make with Orthis, Nah-ee-lah,” I replied,
“is the peace of death. Orthis and I may not live together
again in the same world.”</p>
<p>She was crying very softly, sobbing upon my shoulder,
and I put my arm about her in an effort to quiet her.</p>
<p>“I have brought you only suffering and danger, and now
death, Julian,” she said, “when you deserve naught but happiness
and peace.”</p>
<p>I suddenly felt very strange and my heart behaved
wretchedly, so that when I attempted to speak it pounded
so that I could say nothing and my knees shook beneath me.
What had come over me? Could it be possible that already
Orthis had loosed his poison gas? Then, at last, I managed
to gather myself together.</p>
<p>“Nah-ee-lah,” I said, “I do not fear death if you must die,
and I do not seek happiness except with you.”</p>
<p>She looked up suddenly, her great, tear-dimmed eyes wide
and gazing deep into mine.</p>
<p>“You mean—Julian? You mean—?”</p>
<p>“I mean, Nah-ee-lah, that I love you,” I replied, though
I must have stumbled through the words in a most ridiculous
manner, so frightened was I.</p>
<p>“Ah, Julian,” she sighed, and put her arms about my neck.</p>
<p>“And you, Nah-ee-lah!” I exclaimed incredulously, as I
crushed her to me, “can it be that you return my love?”</p>
<p>“I have loved you always,” she replied. “From the very
first, almost—way back when we were prisoners together in
the No-vans’ village. You Earth Men must be very blind, my
Julian. A Laythean would have known it at once, for it
seemed to me that upon a dozen occasions I almost avowed
my love openly to you.”</p>
<p>“Alas, Nah-ee-lah! I must have been very blind, for I had
not guessed until this minute that you loved me.”</p>
<p>“Now,” she said, “I do not care what happens. We have
one another, and if we die together, doubtless we shall live
together in a new incarnation.”</p>
<p>“I hope so,” I said, “but I should much rather be sure of
it and live together in this.”</p>
<p>“And I, too, Julian, but that is impossible.”</p>
<p>We were walking now through the corridors of the palace
toward the chamber occupied by her mother, but we did
not find her there and Nah-ee-lah became apprehensive as to
her safety. Hurriedly we searched through other chambers of
the palace, until at last we came to the little audience chamber
in which Sagroth had been slain, and as we threw open
the door I saw a sight that I tried to hide from Nah-ee-lah’s
eyes as I drew her around in an effort to force her back into
the corridor. Possibly she guessed what impelled my action, for
she shook her head and murmured: “No, Julian; whatever
it is I must see it.” And then she pushed her way gently past
me, and we stood together upon the threshold, looking at the
harrowing sight which the interior of the room displayed.</p>
<p>There were the bodies of the assassins Sagroth and I had
slain, and the dead Jemadar, too, precisely as he had fallen,
while across his breast lay the body of Nah-ee-lah’s mother, a
dagger self-thrust through her heart. For just a moment Nah-ee-lah
stood there looking at them in silence, as though in
prayer, and then she turned wearily away and left the
chamber, closing the door behind her. We walked on in
silence for some time, ascending the stairway back to the
upper terrace. Upon the inner side, the flames were spreading
throughout the city, roaring like a mighty furnace and vomiting
up great clouds of smoke, for though the Laythean terraces
are supported by tremendous arches of masonry, yet there is
much wood used in the interior construction of the buildings,
while the hangings and the furniture are all inflammable.</p>
<p>“We had no chance to save the city,” said Nah-ee-lah, with
a sigh. “Our people, called from their normal duties by the
false Ko-tah, were leaderless. The fire fighters, instead of
being at their posts, were seeking the life of their Jemadar.
Unhappy day! Unhappy day!”</p>
<p>“You think they could have stopped the fire?” I asked.</p>
<p>“The little ponds, the rivulets, the waterfalls, the great public
baths and the tiny lakes that you see upon every terrace
were all built with fire protection in mind. It is easy to divert
their waters and flood any tier of buildings. Had my people
been at their posts, this, at least, could not have happened.”</p>
<p>As we stood watching the flames we suddenly saw people
emerging in great numbers upon several of the lower terraces.
They were evidently in terrified flight, and then others appeared
upon terraces above them—Kalkars who hurled hand
grenades amongst the Laytheans beneath them. Men, women,
and children ran hither and thither, shrieking and crying and
seeking for shelter, but from the buildings behind them,
rushing them outward upon the terraces, came other Kalkars
with hand grenades. The fires hemmed the people of Laythe
upon either side and the Kalkars attacked them from the
rear and from above. The weaker fell and were trodden to
death, and I saw scores fall upon their own lances or drive
daggers into the hearts of their loved ones.</p>
<p>The massacre spread rapidly around the circumference of
the city and the Kalkars drove the people from the upper
terraces downward between the raging fires which were increasing
until the mouth of the great crater was filled with
roaring flames and smoke. In the occasional gaps we could
catch glimpses of the holocaust beneath us.</p>
<p>A sudden current of air rising from the crater lifted the
smoke pall high for a moment, revealing the entire circumference
of the crater, the edge of which was crowded with
Laytheans. And then I saw a warrior from the opposite side
leap upon the surrounding wall that bordered the lower terrace
at the edge of the yawning crater. He turned and called
aloud some message, to his fellows, and then wheeling, threw
his arms above his head and leaped outward into the yawning,
bottomless abyss. Instantly the others seemed to be inoculated
with the infection of his mad act. A dozen men leaped
to the wall and dove head foremost into the crater. The thing
spread slowly at first, and then with the rapidity of a prairie
fire, it ran around the entire circle of the city. Women hurled
their children in and then leaped after them. The multitude
fought one with another for a place upon the wall from
which they might cast themselves to death. It was a terrible—an
awe-inspiring sight.</p>
<p>Nah-ee-lah covered her eyes with her hands. “My poor
people!” she cried. “My poor people!” And far below her, by
the thousands now, they were hurling themselves into eternity,
while above them the screaming Kalkars hurled hand
grenades among them and drove the remaining inhabitants of
Laythe, terrace by terrace, down toward the crater’s rim.</p>
<p>Nah-ee-lah turned away. “Come, Julian,” she said, “I cannot
look, I cannot look.” And together we walked across the
terrace to the outer side of the city.</p>
<p>Almost directly beneath us upon the next terrace was a
palace gate and as we reached a point where we could see it, I
was horrified to see that the Kalkars had made their way up
the outer terraces to the very palace walls. The Jemadar’s
guard was standing there ready to defend the palace against
the invaders. The great stone gates would have held indefinitely
against spears and swords, but even the guardsmen must
have guessed that their doom was already sealed and that
these gates, that had stood for ages, an ample protection to
the Jemadars of Laythe, were about to fall, as the Kalkars
halted fifty yards away, and from their ranks a single individual
stepped forth a few paces.</p>
<p>As my eyes alighted upon him I seized Nah-ee-lah’s arm.
“Orthis!” I cried. “It is Orthis.” At the same instant the man’s
eyes rose above the gates and fell upon us. A nasty leer
curled his lips as he recognized us.</p>
<p>“I come to claim my bride,” he cried, in a voice that
reached us easily, “and to balance my account with you, at
last,” and he pointed a finger at me.</p>
<p>In his right hand he held a large, cylindrical object, and as
he ceased speaking he hurled it at the gates precisely as a
baseball pitcher pitches a swift ball.</p>
<p>The missile struck squarely at the bottom of the gates.
There was a terrific explosion, and the great stone portals
crumbled, shattered into a thousand fragments. The last defense
of the Empress of Laythe had fallen, and with it there
went down in bloody death at least half the remaining members
of her loyal guard.</p>
<p>Instantly the Kalkars rushed forward, hurling hand grenades
among the survivors of the guard.</p>
<p>Nah-ee-lah turned toward me and put her arms about my
neck.</p>
<p>“Kiss me once more, Julian,” she said, “and then the
dagger.”</p>
<p>“Never, never, Nah-ee-lah!” I cried. “I cannot do it.”</p>
<p>“But I can!” she exclaimed, and drew her own from its
sheath at her hip.</p>
<p>I seized her wrist. “Not that, Nah-ee-lah!” I cried. “There
must be some other way.” And then there came to me a mad
inspiration. “The wings!” I cried. “Where are they kept? The
last of your people have been destroyed. Duty no longer
holds you here. Let us escape, even if it is only to frustrate
Orthis’ plans and deny him the satisfaction of witnessing our
death.”</p>
<p>“But, where can we go?” she asked.</p>
<p>“We may at least choose our own manner of death,” I
replied, “far from Laythe and far from the eyes of an enemy
who would gloat over our undoing.”</p>
<p>“You are right, Julian. We still have a little time, for I
doubt if Orthis or his Kalkars can quickly find the stairway
leading to this terrace.” And then she led me quickly to one
of the many towers that rise above the palace. Entering it,
we ascended a spiral staircase to a large chamber at the
summit of the tower. Here were kept the imperial wings. I
fastened Nah-ee-lah’s to her and she helped me with mine,
and then from the pinnacle of the tower we arose above the
burning city of Laythe and flew rapidly toward the distant
lowlands and the sea. It was in my mind to search out, if possible,
the location of <i>The Barsoom</i>, for I still entertained the
mad hope that my companions yet lived—if I did, why not
they?</p>
<p>The heat above the city was almost unendurable and the
smoke suffocating, yet we passed through it, so that almost
immediately we were hidden from the view of that portion of
the palace from which we had arisen, with the result that
when Orthis and his Kalkars finally found their way to the upper
terrace, as I have no doubt they did, we had disappeared—whither
they could not know.</p>
<p>We flew and drifted with the wind across the mountainous
country toward the plains and the sea, it being my
intention upon reaching the latter to follow the coast line until
I came to a river marked by an island at its mouth. From
that point I knew that I could reach the spot where <i>The
Barsoom</i> had landed.</p>
<p>Our long flight must have covered a considerable period of
time, since it was necessary for us to alight and rest many
times and to search for food. We met, fortunately, with no
mishaps, and upon the several occasions when we were discovered
by roving bands of Va-gas we were able to soar far
aloft and escape them easily. We came at length, however,
to the sea, the coast of which I followed to the left, but
though we passed the mouths of many rivers, I discovered
none that precisely answered the description of that which
I sought.</p>
<p>It was borne in upon me at last that our quest was futile,
but where we were to find a haven of safety neither of us
could guess. The gas in our bags was losing its buoyancy
and we had no means wherewith to replenish it. It would still
maintain us for a short time, but how long neither of us
knew, other than that it had not nearly the buoyancy that
it originally possessed.</p>
<p>Off the coast we had seen islands almost continuously and
I suggested to Nah-ee-lah that we try to discover one upon
which grew the fruits and nuts and vegetables necessary
for our subsistence, and where we might also have a constant
supply of fresh water.</p>
<p>I discovered that Nah-ee-lah knew little about these islands,
practically nothing in fact, not even as to whether they
were inhabited; but we determined to explore one, and to
this end we selected an island of considerable extent that lay
about ten miles off shore. We reached it without difficulty
and circled slowly above it, scrutinizing its entire area carefully.
About half of it was quite hilly, but the balance was
rolling and comparatively level. We discovered three streams
and two small lakes upon it, and an almost riotous profusion
of vegetable growth, but nowhere did we discern the slightest
indication that it was inhabited. And so at last, feeling
secure, we made our landing upon the plain, close to the
beach.</p>
<p>It was a beautiful spot, a veritable Garden of Eden, where
we two might have passed the remainder of our lives in
peace and security, for though we later explored it carefully,
we found not the slightest evidence that it had ever known
the foot of man.</p>
<p>Together we built a snug shelter against the storms. Together
we hunted for food, and during our long periods of
idleness we lay upon the soft sward beside the beach, and
to pass the time away, I taught Nah-ee-lah my own language.
It was a lazy, indolent, happy life that we spent upon
this enchanted isle, and yet, though we were happy in our
love, each of us felt the futility of our existence, where our
lives must be spent in useless idleness.</p>
<p>We had, however, given up definitely hope for any other
form of existence. And thus we were lying one time, as was
our wont after eating, stretched in luxurious ease upon our
backs on the soft lunar grasses, I with my eyes closed, when
Nah-ee-lah suddenly grasped me by the arm.</p>
<p>“Julian,” she cried, “what is it? Look!”</p>
<p>I opened my eyes, to find her sitting up and gazing into the
sky toward the mainland, a slim forefinger indicating the
direction of the object that had attracted her attention and
aroused her surprised interest.</p>
<p>As my eyes rested upon the thing her pointing finger indicated,
I leaped to my feet with an exclamation of incredulity,
for there, sailing parallel with the coast at an altitude of not
more than a thousand feet, was a ship, the lines of which I
knew as I had known my mother’s face. It was <i>The Barsoom</i>.</p>
<p>Grasping Nah-ee-lah by the arm, I dragged her to her feet.
“Come, quick, Nah-ee-lah!” I cried, and urged her rapidly
toward our hut, where we had stored the wings and the gas
bags which we had never thought to use again, yet protected
carefully, though why we knew not.</p>
<p>There was still gas in the bags—enough to support us in
the air, with the assistance of our wings, but to fly thus for
long distances would have been most fatiguing, and there
was even a question as to whether we could cross the ten
miles of sea that lay between us and the mainland; yet I
was determined to attempt it. Hastily we donned the wings
and bags, and rising together, flapped slowly in the direction
of the mainland.</p>
<p><i>The Barsoom</i> was cruising slowly along a line that would
cross ours before we could reach the shore, but I hoped that
they would sight us and investigate.</p>
<p>We flew as rapidly as I dared, for I could take no chances
upon exhausting Nah-ee-lah, knowing that it would be absolutely
impossible for me to support her weight and my own,
with our depleted gas bags. There was no way in which I
could signal to <i>The Barsoom</i>. We must simply fly toward
her. That was the best that we could do, and finally, try
though we would, I realized that we should be too late to
intercept her and that unless they saw us and changed their
course, we should not come close enough to hail them. To
see my friends passing so near, and yet to be unable to apprise
them of my presence filled me with melancholy. Not one
of the many vicissitudes and dangers through which I had
passed since I left Earth depressed me more than the sight
of <i>The Barsoom</i> forging slowly past us without speaking. I saw
her change her course then and move inland still further
from us, and I could not but dwell upon our unhappy condition,
since now we might never again be able to reach the
safety of our island, there being even a question as to whether
the gas bags would support us to the mainland.</p>
<p>They did, however, and there we alighted and rested, while
<i>The Barsoom</i> sailed out of sight toward the mountains.</p>
<p>“I shall not give it up, Nah-ee-lah,” I cried. “I am going to
follow <i>The Barsoom</i> until we find it, or until we die in the attempt.
I doubt if we ever can reach the island again, but we
can make short flights here on land, and by so doing, we
may overtake my ship and my companions.”</p>
<p>After resting for a short time, we arose again, and when we
were above the trees I saw <i>The Barsoom</i> far in the distance,
and again it was circling, this time toward the left, so we altered
our course and flew after it. But presently we realized
that it was making a great circle and hope renewed within
our breasts, giving us the strength to fly on and on, though
we were forced to come down often for brief rests. As we
neared the ship we saw that the circles were growing smaller,
but it was not until we were within about three miles of her
that I realized that she was circling the mouth of a great
crater, the walls of which rose several hundred feet above the
surrounding country. We had been forced to land again to
rest, when there flashed upon my mind a sudden realization
of the purpose of the maneuvers of <i>The Barsoom</i>—she was
investigating the crater, preparatory to an attempt to pass
through it into outer space and seek to return to Earth again.</p>
<p>As this thought impinged upon my brain, a wave of almost
hopeless horror overwhelmed me as I thought of being
definitely left forever by my companions and that in but a
few brief minutes Nah-ee-lah was to be robbed of life and
happiness and peace, for at that instant the hull of <i>The
Barsoom</i> dropped beneath the rim of the crater and disappeared
from our view.</p>
<p>Rising quickly with Nah-ee-lah, I flew as rapidly as my
tired muscles and exhausted gas bag would permit toward
the rim of the crater. In my heart of hearts I knew that I
should be too late, for once they had decided to make the
attempt, the ship would drop like a plummet into the depths,
and by the time I reached the mouth of the abyss it would
be lost to my view forever.</p>
<p>And yet I struggled on, my lungs almost bursting from
the exertion of my mad efforts toward speed. Nah-ee-lah
trailed far behind, for if either of us could reach <i>The Barsoom</i>
in time we should both be saved, and I could fly faster than
Nah-ee-lah; otherwise, I should never have separated myself
from her by so much as a hundred yards.</p>
<p>Though my lungs were pumping like bellows, I venture
to say that my heart stood still for several seconds before
I topped the crater’s rim.</p>
<p>At the same instant that I expected the last vestige of my
hopes to be dashed to pieces irrevocably and forever, I
crossed the rim and beheld <i>The Barsoom</i> not twenty feet below
me, just over the edge of the abyss, and upon her deck
stood West and Jay and Norton.</p>
<p>As I came into view directly above them, West whipped
out his revolver and leveled it at me, but the instant that his
finger pressed the trigger Norton sprang forward and struck
his hand aside.</p>
<p>“My God, sir!” I heard the boy cry, “it is the Captain.”
And then they all recognized me, and an instant later I almost
collapsed as I fell to the deck of my beloved ship.</p>
<p>My first thought was of Nah-ee-lah, and at my direction
<i>The Barsoom</i> rose swiftly and moved to meet her.</p>
<p>“Great Scott!” cried my guest, leaping to his feet and
looking out of the stateroom window, “I had no idea that
I had kept you up all night. Here we are in Paris already.”</p>
<p>“But the rest of your story,” I cried. “You have not
finished it, I know. Last night, as you were watching them
celebrating in the Blue Room, you made a remark which
led me to believe that some terrible calamity threatened the
world.”</p>
<p>“It does,” he said, “and that was what I meant to tell you
about, but this story of the third incarnation of which I
am conscious was necessary to an understanding of how the
great catastrophe overwhelmed the people of the earth.”</p>
<p>“But, did you reach Earth again?” I demanded.</p>
<p>“Yes,” he said, “in the year 2036. I had been ten years
within Va-nah, but did not know whether it was ten months
or a century until we landed upon Earth.”</p>
<p>He smiled then. “You notice that I still say I. It is sometimes
difficult for me to recall which incarnation I am in.
Perhaps it will be clearer to you if I say Julian 5th returned
to Earth in 2036, and in the same year his son, Julian 6th,
was born to his wife, Nah-ee-lah the Moon Maid.”</p>
<p>“But how could he return to Earth in the disabled <i>Barsoom</i>?”</p>
<p>“Ah,” he said, “that raises a point that was of great interest
to Julian 5th. After he regained <i>The Barsoom</i>, naturally
one of the first questions he asked was as to the condition of
the ship and their intentions, and when he learned that they
had, in reality, been intending to pass through the crater
toward the Earth he questioned them further and discovered
that it was the young ensign, Norton, who had repaired the
engine, having been able to do it by information that he had
gleaned from Orthis, after winning the latter’s friendship.
Thus was explained the intimacy between the two, which
Julian 5th had so deplored, but which he now saw that
young Norton had encouraged for a patriotic purpose.</p>
<p>“We are docked now and I must be going. Thank you for
your hospitality and for your generous interest,” and he
held out his hand toward me.</p>
<p>“But the story of Julian 9th,” I insisted, “am I never to
hear that?”</p>
<p>“If we meet again, yes,” he promised, with a smile.</p>
<p>“I shall hold you to it,” I told him.</p>
<p>“If we meet again,” he repeated, and departed, closing
the stateroom door after him.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />