CHAINED IN WARHOON
It must have been several hours before
I regained consciousness and I well remember the feeling
of surprise which swept over me as I realized that
I was not dead.
I was lying among a pile of sleeping
silks and furs in the corner of a small room in which
were several green warriors, and bending over me was
an ancient and ugly female.
As I opened my eyes she turned to
one of the warriors, saying,
“He will live, O Jed.”
“’Tis well,” replied
the one so addressed, rising and approaching my couch,
“he should render rare sport for the great games.”
And now as my eyes fell upon him,
I saw that he was no Thark, for his ornaments and
metal were not of that horde. He was a huge
fellow, terribly scarred about the face and chest,
and with one broken tusk and a missing ear.
Strapped on either breast were human skulls and depending
from these a number of dried human hands.
His reference to the great games of
which I had heard so much while among the Tharks convinced
me that I had but jumped from purgatory into gehenna.
After a few more words with the female,
during which she assured him that I was now fully
fit to travel, the jed ordered that we mount and ride
after the main column.
I was strapped securely to as wild
and unmanageable a thoat as I had ever seen, and,
with a mounted warrior on either side to prevent the
beast from bolting, we rode forth at a furious pace
in pursuit of the column. My wounds gave me
but little pain, so wonderfully and rapidly had the
applications and injections of the female exercised
their therapeutic powers, and so deftly had she bound
and plastered the injuries.
Just before dark we reached the main
body of troops shortly after they had made camp for
the night. I was immediately taken before the
leader, who proved to be the jeddak of the hordes of
Warhoon.
Like the jed who had brought me, he
was frightfully scarred, and also decorated with the
breastplate of human skulls and dried dead hands which
seemed to mark all the greater warriors among the
Warhoons, as well as to indicate their awful ferocity,
which greatly transcends even that of the Tharks.
The jeddak, Bar Comas, who was comparatively
young, was the object of the fierce and jealous hatred
of his old lieutenant, Dak Kova, the jed who had captured
me, and I could not but note the almost studied efforts
which the latter made to affront his superior.
He entirely omitted the usual formal
salutation as we entered the presence of the jeddak,
and as he pushed me roughly before the ruler he exclaimed
in a loud and menacing voice.
“I have brought a strange creature
wearing the metal of a Thark whom it is my pleasure
to have battle with a wild thoat at the great games.”
“He will die as Bar Comas, your
jeddak, sees fit, if at all,” replied the young
ruler, with emphasis and dignity.
“If at all?” roared Dak
Kova. “By the dead hands at my throat but
he shall die, Bar Comas. No maudlin weakness
on your part shall save him. O, would that Warhoon
were ruled by a real jeddak rather than by a water-hearted
weakling from whom even old Dak Kova could tear the
metal with his bare hands!”
Bar Comas eyed the defiant and insubordinate
chieftain for an instant, his expression one of haughty,
fearless contempt and hate, and then without drawing
a weapon and without uttering a word he hurled himself
at the throat of his defamer.
I never before had seen two green
Martian warriors battle with nature’s weapons
and the exhibition of animal ferocity which ensued
was as fearful a thing as the most disordered imagination
could picture. They tore at each others’
eyes and ears with their hands and with their gleaming
tusks repeatedly slashed and gored until both were
cut fairly to ribbons from head to foot.
Bar Comas had much the better of the
battle as he was stronger, quicker and more intelligent.
It soon seemed that the encounter was done saving
only the final death thrust when Bar Comas slipped
in breaking away from a clinch. It was the one
little opening that Dak Kova needed, and hurling himself
at the body of his adversary he buried his single
mighty tusk in Bar Comas’ groin and with a last
powerful effort ripped the young jeddak wide open the
full length of his body, the great tusk finally wedging
in the bones of Bar Comas’ jaw. Victor
and vanquished rolled limp and lifeless upon the moss,
a huge mass of torn and bloody flesh.
Bar Comas was stone dead, and only
the most herculean efforts on the part of Dak Kova’s
females saved him from the fate he deserved.
Three days later he walked without assistance to the
body of Bar Comas which, by custom, had not been moved
from where it fell, and placing his foot upon the
neck of his erstwhile ruler he assumed the title of
Jeddak of Warhoon.
The dead jeddak’s hands and
head were removed to be added to the ornaments of
his conqueror, and then his women cremated what remained,
amid wild and terrible laughter.
The injuries to Dak Kova had delayed
the march so greatly that it was decided to give up
the expedition, which was a raid upon a small Thark
community in retaliation for the destruction of the
incubator, until after the great games, and the entire
body of warriors, ten thousand in number, turned back
toward Warhoon.
My introduction to these cruel and
bloodthirsty people was but an index to the scenes
I witnessed almost daily while with them. They
are a smaller horde than the Tharks but much more ferocious.
Not a day passed but that some members of the various
Warhoon communities met in deadly combat. I
have seen as high as eight mortal duels within a single
day.
We reached the city of Warhoon after
some three days march and I was immediately cast into
a dungeon and heavily chained to the floor and walls.
Food was brought me at intervals but owing to the
utter darkness of the place I do not know whether
I lay there days, or weeks, or months. It was
the most horrible experience of all my life and that
my mind did not give way to the terrors of that inky
blackness has been a wonder to me ever since.
The place was filled with creeping, crawling things;
cold, sinuous bodies passed over me when I lay down,
and in the darkness I occasionally caught glimpses
of gleaming, fiery eyes, fixed in horrible intentness
upon me. No sound reached me from the world
above and no word would my jailer vouchsafe when my
food was brought to me, although I at first bombarded
him with questions.
Finally all the hatred and maniacal
loathing for these awful creatures who had placed
me in this horrible place was centered by my tottering
reason upon this single emissary who represented to
me the entire horde of Warhoons.
I had noticed that he always advanced
with his dim torch to where he could place the food
within my reach and as he stooped to place it upon
the floor his head was about on a level with my breast.
So, with the cunning of a madman, I backed into the
far corner of my cell when next I heard him approaching
and gathering a little slack of the great chain which
held me in my hand I waited his coming, crouching
like some beast of prey. As he stooped to place
my food upon the ground I swung the chain above my
head and crashed the links with all my strength upon
his skull. Without a sound he slipped to the
floor, stone dead.
Laughing and chattering like the idiot
I was fast becoming I fell upon his prostrate form
my fingers feeling for his dead throat. Presently
they came in contact with a small chain at the end
of which dangled a number of keys. The touch
of my fingers on these keys brought back my reason
with the suddenness of thought. No longer was
I a jibbering idiot, but a sane, reasoning man with
the means of escape within my very hands.
As I was groping to remove the chain
from about my victim’s neck I glanced up into
the darkness to see six pairs of gleaming eyes fixed,
unwinking, upon me. Slowly they approached and
slowly I shrank back from the awful horror of them.
Back into my corner I crouched holding my hands palms
out, before me, and stealthily on came the awful eyes
until they reached the dead body at my feet.
Then slowly they retreated but this time with a strange
grating sound and finally they disappeared in some
black and distant recess of my dungeon.