WITH DEJAH THORIS
As we reached the open the two female
guards who had been detailed to watch over Dejah Thoris
hurried up and made as though to assume custody of
her once more. The poor child shrank against
me and I felt her two little hands fold tightly over
my arm. Waving the women away, I informed them
that Sola would attend the captive hereafter, and
I further warned Sarkoja that any more of her cruel
attentions bestowed upon Dejah Thoris would result
in Sarkoja’s sudden and painful demise.
My threat was unfortunate and resulted
in more harm than good to Dejah Thoris, for, as I
learned later, men do not kill women upon Mars, nor
women, men. So Sarkoja merely gave us an ugly
look and departed to hatch up deviltries against us.
I soon found Sola and explained to
her that I wished her to guard Dejah Thoris as she
had guarded me; that I wished her to find other quarters
where they would not be molested by Sarkoja, and I
finally informed her that I myself would take up my
quarters among the men.
Sola glanced at the accouterments
which were carried in my hand and slung across my
shoulder.
“You are a great chieftain now,
John Carter,” she said, “and I must do
your bidding, though indeed I am glad to do it under
any circumstances. The man whose metal you carry
was young, but he was a great warrior, and had by
his promotions and kills won his way close to the
rank of Tars Tarkas, who, as you know, is second to
Lorquas Ptomel only. You are eleventh, there
are but ten chieftains in this community who rank
you in prowess.”
“And if I should kill Lorquas Ptomel?”
I asked.
“You would be first, John Carter;
but you may only win that honor by the will of the
entire council that Lorquas Ptomel meet you in combat,
or should he attack you, you may kill him in self-defense,
and thus win first place.”
I laughed, and changed the subject.
I had no particular desire to kill Lorquas Ptomel,
and less to be a jed among the Tharks.
I accompanied Sola and Dejah Thoris
in a search for new quarters, which we found in a
building nearer the audience chamber and of far more
pretentious architecture than our former habitation.
We also found in this building real sleeping apartments
with ancient beds of highly wrought metal swinging
from enormous gold chains depending from the marble
ceilings. The decoration of the walls was most
elaborate, and, unlike the frescoes in the other buildings
I had examined, portrayed many human figures in the
compositions. These were of people like myself,
and of a much lighter color than Dejah Thoris.
They were clad in graceful, flowing robes, highly
ornamented with metal and jewels, and their luxuriant
hair was of a beautiful golden and reddish bronze.
The men were beardless and only a few wore arms.
The scenes depicted for the most part, a fair-skinned,
fair-haired people at play.
Dejah Thoris clasped her hands with
an exclamation of rapture as she gazed upon these
magnificent works of art, wrought by a people long
extinct; while Sola, on the other hand, apparently
did not see them.
We decided to use this room, on the
second floor and overlooking the plaza, for Dejah
Thoris and Sola, and another room adjoining and in
the rear for the cooking and supplies. I then
dispatched Sola to bring the bedding and such food
and utensils as she might need, telling her that I
would guard Dejah Thoris until her return.
As Sola departed Dejah Thoris turned
to me with a faint smile.
“And whereto, then, would your
prisoner escape should you leave her, unless it was
to follow you and crave your protection, and ask your
pardon for the cruel thoughts she has harbored against
you these past few days?”
“You are right,” I answered,
“there is no escape for either of us unless
we go together.”
“I heard your challenge to the
creature you call Tars Tarkas, and I think I understand
your position among these people, but what I cannot
fathom is your statement that you are not of Barsoom.”
“In the name of my first ancestor,
then,” she continued, “where may you be
from? You are like unto my people, and yet so
unlike. You speak my language, and yet I heard
you tell Tars Tarkas that you had but learned it recently.
All Barsoomians speak the same tongue from the ice-clad
south to the ice-clad north, though their written
languages differ. Only in the valley Dor, where
the river Iss empties into the lost sea of Korus,
is there supposed to be a different language spoken,
and, except in the legends of our ancestors, there
is no record of a Barsoomian returning up the river
Iss, from the shores of Korus in the valley of Dor.
Do not tell me that you have thus returned!
They would kill you horribly anywhere upon the surface
of Barsoom if that were true; tell me it is not!”
Her eyes were filled with a strange,
weird light; her voice was pleading, and her little
hands, reached up upon my breast, were pressed against
me as though to wring a denial from my very heart.
“I do not know your customs,
Dejah Thoris, but in my own Virginia a gentleman does
not lie to save himself; I am not of Dor; I have never
seen the mysterious Iss; the lost sea of Korus is still
lost, so far as I am concerned. Do you believe
me?”
And then it struck me suddenly that
I was very anxious that she should believe me.
It was not that I feared the results which would
follow a general belief that I had returned from the
Barsoomian heaven or hell, or whatever it was.
Why was it, then! Why should I care what she
thought? I looked down at her; her beautiful
face upturned, and her wonderful eyes opening up the
very depth of her soul; and as my eyes met hers I
knew why, and—I shuddered.
A similar wave of feeling seemed to
stir her; she drew away from me with a sigh, and with
her earnest, beautiful face turned up to mine, she
whispered: “I believe you, John Carter;
I do not know what a ‘gentleman’ is, nor
have I ever heard before of Virginia; but on Barsoom
no man lies; if he does not wish to speak the truth
he is silent. Where is this Virginia, your country,
John Carter?” she asked, and it seemed that
this fair name of my fair land had never sounded more
beautiful than as it fell from those perfect lips on
that far-gone day.
“I am of another world,”
I answered, “the great planet Earth, which revolves
about our common sun and next within the orbit of your
Barsoom, which we know as Mars. How I came here
I cannot tell you, for I do not know; but here I am,
and since my presence has permitted me to serve Dejah
Thoris I am glad that I am here.”
She gazed at me with troubled eyes,
long and questioningly. That it was difficult
to believe my statement I well knew, nor could I hope
that she would do so however much I craved her confidence
and respect. I would much rather not have told
her anything of my antecedents, but no man could look
into the depth of those eyes and refuse her slightest
behest.
Finally she smiled, and, rising, said:
“I shall have to believe even though I cannot
understand. I can readily perceive that you are
not of the Barsoom of today; you are like us, yet
different—but why should I trouble my poor
head with such a problem, when my heart tells me that
I believe because I wish to believe!”
It was good logic, good, earthly,
feminine logic, and if it satisfied her I certainly
could pick no flaws in it. As a matter of fact
it was about the only kind of logic that could be brought
to bear upon my problem. We fell into a general
conversation then, asking and answering many questions
on each side. She was curious to learn of the
customs of my people and displayed a remarkable knowledge
of events on Earth. When I questioned her closely
on this seeming familiarity with earthly things she
laughed, and cried out:
“Why, every school boy on Barsoom
knows the geography, and much concerning the fauna
and flora, as well as the history of your planet fully
as well as of his own. Can we not see everything
which takes place upon Earth, as you call it; is it
not hanging there in the heavens in plain sight?”
This baffled me, I must confess, fully
as much as my statements had confounded her; and I
told her so. She then explained in general the
instruments her people had used and been perfecting
for ages, which permit them to throw upon a screen
a perfect image of what is transpiring upon any planet
and upon many of the stars. These pictures are
so perfect in detail that, when photographed and enlarged,
objects no greater than a blade of grass may be distinctly
recognized. I afterward, in Helium, saw many
of these pictures, as well as the instruments which
produced them.
“If, then, you are so familiar
with earthly things,” I asked, “why is
it that you do not recognize me as identical with the
inhabitants of that planet?”
She smiled again as one might in bored
indulgence of a questioning child.
“Because, John Carter,”
she replied, “nearly every planet and star having
atmospheric conditions at all approaching those of
Barsoom, shows forms of animal life almost identical
with you and me; and, further, Earth men, almost without
exception, cover their bodies with strange, unsightly
pieces of cloth, and their heads with hideous contraptions
the purpose of which we have been unable to conceive;
while you, when found by the Tharkian warriors, were
entirely undisfigured and unadorned.
“The fact that you wore no ornaments
is a strong proof of your un-Barsoomian origin, while
the absence of grotesque coverings might cause a doubt
as to your earthliness.”
I then narrated the details of my
departure from the Earth, explaining that my body
there lay fully clothed in all the, to her, strange
garments of mundane dwellers. At this point Sola
returned with our meager belongings and her young
Martian protege, who, of course, would have to share
the quarters with them.
Sola asked us if we had had a visitor
during her absence, and seemed much surprised when
we answered in the negative. It seemed that as
she had mounted the approach to the upper floors where
our quarters were located, she had met Sarkoja descending.
We decided that she must have been eavesdropping,
but as we could recall nothing of importance that
had passed between us we dismissed the matter as of
little consequence, merely promising ourselves to be
warned to the utmost caution in the future.
Dejah Thoris and I then fell to examining
the architecture and decorations of the beautiful
chambers of the building we were occupying.
She told me that these people had presumably flourished
over a hundred thousand years before. They were
the early progenitors of her race, but had mixed with
the other great race of early Martians, who were very
dark, almost black, and also with the reddish yellow
race which had flourished at the same time.
These three great divisions of the
higher Martians had been forced into a mighty alliance
as the drying up of the Martian seas had compelled
them to seek the comparatively few and always diminishing
fertile areas, and to defend themselves, under new
conditions of life, against the wild hordes of green
men.
Ages of close relationship and intermarrying
had resulted in the race of red men, of which Dejah
Thoris was a fair and beautiful daughter. During
the ages of hardships and incessant warring between
their own various races, as well as with the green
men, and before they had fitted themselves to the
changed conditions, much of the high civilization
and many of the arts of the fair-haired Martians had
become lost; but the red race of today has reached
a point where it feels that it has made up in new
discoveries and in a more practical civilization for
all that lies irretrievably buried with the ancient
Barsoomians, beneath the countless intervening ages.
These ancient Martians had been a
highly cultivated and literary race, but during the
vicissitudes of those trying centuries of readjustment
to new conditions, not only did their advancement and
production cease entirely, but practically all their
archives, records, and literature were lost.
Dejah Thoris related many interesting
facts and legends concerning this lost race of noble
and kindly people. She said that the city in
which we were camping was supposed to have been a center
of commerce and culture known as Korad. It had
been built upon a beautiful, natural harbor, landlocked
by magnificent hills. The little valley on the
west front of the city, she explained, was all that
remained of the harbor, while the pass through the
hills to the old sea bottom had been the channel through
which the shipping passed up to the city’s gates.
The shores of the ancient seas were
dotted with just such cities, and lesser ones, in
diminishing numbers, were to be found converging toward
the center of the oceans, as the people had found it
necessary to follow the receding waters until necessity
had forced upon them their ultimate salvation, the
so-called Martian canals.
We had been so engrossed in exploration
of the building and in our conversation that it was
late in the afternoon before we realized it.
We were brought back to a realization of our present
conditions by a messenger bearing a summons from Lorquas
Ptomel directing me to appear before him forthwith.
Bidding Dejah Thoris and Sola farewell, and commanding
Woola to remain on guard, I hastened to the audience
chamber, where I found Lorquas Ptomel and Tars Tarkas
seated upon the rostrum.